Books by Eamon Maher

Eamon Maher is a leading commentator on contemporary Irish culture, literature, and religion. His writing blends academic insight with accessible language, exploring how faith, identity, and modernity intersect in Ireland's evolving social landscape. As both a scholar and storyteller, Maher brings a distinctly humane perspective to questions of belief and belonging.

Readers value his balanced approach and deep understanding of Irish authors, from canonical figures to emerging voices. His works are ideal for those interested in the interplay between tradition and change, offering thoughtful analysis that resonates beyond the Irish context and invites reflection on the wider European experience.

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61 products


  • From prosperity to austerity A Sociocultural

    Manchester University Press From prosperity to austerity A Sociocultural

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisExamines the Celtic Tiger, the once much-vaunted Irish economic phenomenon, and the subsequent financial disaster, from a socio-cultural perspectiveTrade ReviewThe Irish economic crisis was as much sociopolitical as it was economic. So it is surprising that we have had so little analysis from outside economics. This book on the role of culture, particularly the way it has reflected the fall, is therefore extremely welcome... This book is invaluable... the first serious attempt to cast a sociocultural net over what has happened'The book is full of wonderful insights. . . This book is invaluable, if only for the fact that it is the first serious attempt to cast a sociocultural net across what has happened. It is not always easy or comfortable reading, but it is rewarding. As we move towards the upswing, with the inevitable consequence that that also shall end, we need to reflect on what happened and on how we responded to it. This book helps us to do that. -- .Table of ContentsIntroduction – Eamon Maher and Eugene O’Brien1. Crisis, what crisis? The Catholic Church during the Celtic Tiger – Eamon Maher2. The Celtic Tiger and the new Irish religious market – Catherine Maignant3. Shattered assumptions: a tale of two traumas – Brendan O’Brien4.‘Tendency–Wit’: the cultural unconscious of the Celtic Tiger in the writings of Paul Howard – Eugene O’Brien5. Popular music and the Celtic Tiger – Gerry Smyth6. ‘What does a woman want?’: Irish contemporary women’s fiction and the expression of desire in an era of plenty – Sylvie Mikowski7. Topographies of terror: photography and the post-Celtic Tiger landscape – Justin Carville8. Immigration and Celtic Tiger – Bryan Fanning9. ‘What Rough Beast’? Monsters of post-Celtic Tiger Ireland – Kieran Keohane and Carmen Kuhling10. Women, fictional messages and a crucial decade – Mary Pierse11. ‘A hundred thousand welcomes’: food and wine as cultural signifiers – Brian Murphy12. Contemporary Irish fiction and the Indirect Gaze – Neil Murphy 13 ‘Holes in the Ground’: theatre as critic and conscience of Celtic Tiger Ireland – Vic Merriman14. ‘Ship of Fools’: The Celtic Tiger and poetry as social critique – Eóin Flannery15. Between modernity and marginality: Celtic Tiger cinema – Ruth BartonConclusionIndex

    Out of stock

    £18.99

  • Tracing the Cultural Legacy of Irish Catholicism:

    Manchester University Press Tracing the Cultural Legacy of Irish Catholicism:

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThis book traces the steady decline in Irish Catholicism from the visit of Pope John Paul II in 1979 up to the Cloyne report into clerical sex abuse in that diocese in 2011. The young people awaiting the Pope’s address in Galway were entertained by two of Ireland’s most charismatic clerics, Bishop Eamon Casey and Fr Michael Cleary, both of whom were subsequently revealed to have been engaged in romantic liaisons at the time.The decades that followed the Pope’s visit were characterised by the increasing secularisation of Irish society. Boasting an impressive array of contributors from various backgrounds and expertise, the essays in the book attempt to trace the exact reasons for the progressive dismantling of the cultural legacy of Catholicism and the consequences this has had on Irish society.Trade Review‘A new book on the issue, Tracing the Cultural Legacy of Irish Catholicism, is highly readable…this timely study is to be recommended.’Mark Patrick Henderman is a monk of Glanstal Abbey in Limerick, The Irish Times, 27/05/2017‘We’ve heard the constituent elements of the process denied and exaggerated ad nauseam but this book provides them with a context and an analysis that raises the debate to another level y providing thirteen articles, mainly by academics, that help to interpret what’s happened, what’s happening and what may happen in the future to the ‘lost legacy’ of a Catholic culture…For anyone interested in the cultural legacy of Irish Catholicism, this book is a must-read.’Brendan Hoban, priest of the Diocese of Killala, The Furrow, Vol. 68, No. 9, September 2017‘Maher and O’Brien, who lectures in English Language and Literature at Mary Immaculate College in Limerick, have assembled a fascinating series of contributions. In most chapters, the writing and argumentation are accessible to both popular and academic audiences.’Gladys Ganiel, Slugger -- .Table of ContentsIntroduction - Eamon Maher and Eugene O'BrienPart I: Tracing change and setting the context1. 'The times they are a changin'': Tracing the transformation of Irish Catholicism through the eyes of a journalist - Patsy McGarry2. Revisiting the faith of our fathers ... and reimagining its relevance in the context of twenty-first-century Ireland - Louise Fuller3. Dethroning Irish Catholicism: Church, State and modernity in contemporary Ireland - David Carroll Cochran4. Refracted visions: Street photography, humanism and the loss of innocence - Justin Carville5. Contemporary Irish Catholicism: A time of hope! - Vincent TwomeyPart II: Going against the tide6. The poetry of accumulation: Irish-American fables of resistance - Eamonn Wall7. Prophetic voices or complicit functionaries? Irish priests and the unravelling of a culture - Eamon Maher8. Tony Flannery: A witness in an age of witnesses - Catherine Maignant9. 'Belief shifts': Ireland's referendum and the journey from Gemeinschaft to Gesellschaft - Eugene O'BrienPart III: Challenges in the here and now10. Faith, hope and clarity? A new church for the unhoused - Michael Cronin11. The people in the pews: Silent and betrayed - Patricia Casey12. Irreconcilable differences? The fraught relationship between women and the Catholic Church in Ireland - Sharon Tighe-Mooney13. The Catholic twilight - Joe ClearyIndex

    Out of stock

    £81.00

  • Tracing the Cultural Legacy of Irish Catholicism:

    Manchester University Press Tracing the Cultural Legacy of Irish Catholicism:

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book traces the steady decline in Irish Catholicism from the visit of Pope John Paul II in 1979 up to the Cloyne report into clerical sex abuse in that diocese in 2011. The young people awaiting the Pope’s address in Galway were entertained by two of Ireland’s most charismatic clerics, Bishop Eamon Casey and Fr Michael Cleary, both of whom were subsequently revealed to have been engaged in romantic liaisons at the time.The decades that followed the Pope’s visit were characterised by the increasing secularisation of Irish society. Boasting an impressive array of contributors from various backgrounds and expertise, the essays in the book attempt to trace the exact reasons for the progressive dismantling of the cultural legacy of Catholicism and the consequences this has had on Irish society.Trade Review‘A new book on the issue, Tracing the Cultural Legacy of Irish Catholicism, is highly readable…this timely study is to be recommended.’Mark Patrick Henderman is a monk of Glanstal Abbey in Limerick, The Irish Times, 27/05/2017‘We’ve heard the constituent elements of the process denied and exaggerated ad nauseam but this book provides them with a context and an analysis that raises the debate to another level y providing thirteen articles, mainly by academics, that help to interpret what’s happened, what’s happening and what may happen in the future to the ‘lost legacy’ of a Catholic culture…For anyone interested in the cultural legacy of Irish Catholicism, this book is a must-read.’Brendan Hoban, priest of the Diocese of Killala, The Furrow, Vol. 68, No. 9, September 2017‘Maher and O’Brien, who lectures in English Language and Literature at Mary Immaculate College in Limerick, have assembled a fascinating series of contributions. In most chapters, the writing and argumentation are accessible to both popular and academic audiences.’Gladys Ganiel, Slugger -- .Table of ContentsIntroduction - Eamon Maher and Eugene O'BrienPart I: Tracing change and setting the context1. 'The times they are a changin'': Tracing the transformation of Irish Catholicism through the eyes of a journalist - Patsy McGarry2. Revisiting the faith of our fathers ... and reimagining its relevance in the context of twenty-first-century Ireland - Louise Fuller3. Dethroning Irish Catholicism: Church, State and modernity in contemporary Ireland - David Carroll Cochran4. Refracted visions: Street photography, humanism and the loss of innocence - Justin Carville5. Contemporary Irish Catholicism: A time of hope! - Vincent TwomeyPart II: Going against the tide6. The poetry of accumulation: Irish-American fables of resistance - Eamonn Wall7. Prophetic voices or complicit functionaries? Irish priests and the unravelling of a culture - Eamon Maher8. Tony Flannery: A witness in an age of witnesses - Catherine Maignant9. 'Belief shifts': Ireland's referendum and the journey from Gemeinschaft to Gesellschaft - Eugene O'BrienPart III: Challenges in the here and now10. Faith, hope and clarity? A new church for the unhoused - Michael Cronin11. The people in the pews: Silent and betrayed - Patricia Casey12. Irreconcilable differences? The fraught relationship between women and the Catholic Church in Ireland - Sharon Tighe-Mooney13. The Catholic twilight - Joe ClearyIndex

    1 in stock

    £21.00

  • The Life and Work of Richard King: Religion,

    Peter Lang Ltd The Life and Work of Richard King: Religion,

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThis book on the Irish liturgical artist Richard King (1907-74), examines his career in the context of religion, nationalism and modernism. The book focuses on the interdisciplinary relationship between religion and art during pre- and post-Vatican II Ireland. The importance of Irishness and nationalism is shown by the artist's early secular work of the 1930s and 1940s. His apprenticeship under Harry Clarke (1889-1931) was pivotal for his principal career as a stained glass artist. However, his departure from the Harry Clarke Stained Glass Studios in 1940 allowed him to gradually move away from Clarke's influence and to develop his own artistic identity. King was also a talented illustrator for The Capuchin Annual and The Father Mathew Record. From the late 1940s to the early 1970s, his awareness of the work of other artists in Ireland, England and Europe led him to engage with modernism. The Documents of Vatican II and his interest in the Scriptures and theology enabled King to grow at the spiritual level which was reflected in his religious art of the mid to late 1960s and early 1970s. His study of the theological writings of French palaeontologist, philosopher and theologian Pierre Teilhard de Chardin (1881-1955) was crucial for King's more intellectual approach to matters of Christian faith.

    Out of stock

    £42.56

  • Memorialising the Magdalene Laundries: From Story

    Peter Lang Ltd Memorialising the Magdalene Laundries: From Story

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisSince the publication of James Smith's groundbreaking book on the Magdalene laundries in 2007, many developments have made the issue even more topical. Even though the lack of access to archives and records of religious orders remains a major obstacle to writing a comprehensive history of the Magdalene laundries, the accessibility of witness testimony and the publication of the McAleese report in 2013 have opened up new avenues of research and methodology.Written from the perspective of a French academic using French theory, holocaust studies and memory studies to analyze an eminently Irish question, the present publication proposes to make an assessment of the way the issue has evolved from being a media story at the onset of the twenty-first century to becoming a subject worthy of historians' attention. If the McAleese report was a formative moment in anchoring the Magdalene laundries into the national narrative, this book will show how it also contributed to dis-remembering the laundries by offering a doctored and state-sponsored version of what really happened within the institutions and contributed to preventing proper memorialization. It will show how in the absence of official memorialization, cultural and activist memorial practices have emerged and developed to ensure that this particularly painful and infamous episode in the history of the nation state does not fall into oblivion.

    Out of stock

    £37.08

  • The Reimagining Ireland Reader: Examining Our

    Peter Lang Ltd The Reimagining Ireland Reader: Examining Our

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisTo mark the fact that the Reimagining Ireland series will soon have one hundred volumes in print, this book brings together a selection of essays from the first fifty volumes, carefully chosen to give a flavour of the diversity and multidisciplinary nature of the series. Following a chronological order, it begins with an essay by Luke Gibbons tracing the roots of modernity from the middle decades of the nineteenth century and concludes with Michael Cronin?s discussion of time and place in global Ireland. In between, the reader will find a rich variety of essays on literary criticism, poetry, drama, photography, modernity, advertising, visual culture, immigration and feminism.This is a collection that will appeal to anyone with a scholarly or personal interest in the cultural forces that have shaped modern Ireland. It is also a testament to the rude good health of contemporary Irish studies, showcasing the work of a talented array of established and emerging scholars currently working in the area.

    Out of stock

    £23.42

  • Writing Slums: Dublin, Dirt and Literature

    Peter Lang Ltd Writing Slums: Dublin, Dirt and Literature

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisDublin's slums were once considered the worst in Europe. The city's tenements were omnipresent and their inhabitants were plagued by poverty. Illuminating the intricate relationship between the dirty cityscape and Dublin literature from 1880 to 1920, this seminal book offers new socio-historical, cultural and political insights into one of the most interesting periods of Irish literature and history. As well as delineating the characteristics of Dublin slum literature as a genre, the book challenges general assumptions about the Literary Revival as a mainly rural movement and discusses representations of slums in a variety of texts by Alpha and Omega, James Connolly, Fannie Gallaher, May Laffan, Seumas O'Sullivan, Frederick Ryan, James Stephens, Katharine Tynan and many others. In addition, it reassesses W. B. Yeats's and James Joyce's literary genealogy in the context of the urban literary-historical discourse and analyses the impact of slums on their writing strategies. This work will be essential reading for scholars and students of Irish literature and cultural history.

    Out of stock

    £47.70

  • The Picture Postcard: A new window into Edwardian

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers The Picture Postcard: A new window into Edwardian

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThe Picture Postcard, a new window into Edwardian Ireland uses the material culture of the picture postcard as a lens through which to examine life on the island of Ireland during the Edwardian period (1902-10). Picture postcards became extremely popular worldwide at the start of the twentieth century, when literally hundreds of billions of them were produced and sold. This book draws on postcard collections to access the everyday lives of people who rarely make it into conventional historical narratives, and to make connections in an Irish context between their «small histories» and broader, well-studied discourses such as identity, nationalism, empire, modernity, emigration, tourism and the roles of women.  Trade Review«This is a strikingly original, absorbing and evocative account of a neglected aspect of life in early twentieth century Ireland. In vividly portraying the impact of picture postcards, Ann Wilson has done justice to a communications revolution that revealed so much about identity, consumption, the status of women, religion, humour, politics, social anxieties and networks, celebrity culture, travel, emigration and tourism. Here we have on display the various Irelands, sometimes contradictory, that were constructed during the Edwardian era through postcard imagery.» (Diarmaid Ferriter, Professor of Modern History, University College Dublin) «A fresh, lively, and beautifully illustrated investigation of the culture of «picture postcards» and their circulation in early 20th century Ireland. Wilson convincingly argues how these supposedly «ephemeral» objects are anything but: mining a rich (but previously untapped) vein of social history, she explores postcards’ relationship to Irish identity, gender, consumption, and class in this fascinating and intelligent account.» (Emily Mark-FitzGerald, Head of School of Art History and Cultural Policy, University College Dublin)Table of ContentsContents: Edwardian Ireland and the picture postcard craze: Responses, debates and anxieties – Collections, collectors and collecting – Postcards: A medium of private and public communication – Irish identity: Empire, modernity and revival – Ireland and the wider world: Travel, emigration and tourism – A suitable hobby for young ladies: Postcards and women’s lives in Edwardian Ireland.

    Out of stock

    £37.08

  • The Great Irish Famine and Social Class:

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers The Great Irish Famine and Social Class:

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThe sesquicentenary of the Great Irish Famine saw the emergence of seminal, often revisionist, scholarship addressing the impact of the catastrophe on Ireland’s economy (including its relations with Britain) and investigating topics such as the suffering of the rural classes, landlord and tenant relations, Poor Laws and relief operations. The Great Irish Famine and Social Class represents a significant new stage in Irish Famine scholarship, adopting a broader interdisciplinary approach that includes ground-breaking demographical, economic, cultural and literary research on poverty, poor relief and class relations during one of Europe’s most devastating food crises. The volume incorporates a comparative European framework, as well as exploring the issue of class in relation to the British and North American Famine diaspora.Table of ContentsCONTENTS: Melissa Fegan: How the Other Three-Quarters Lived: The Cabin in Famine Literature – Paweł Hamera: «[W]orse than the Great Polish and Russian Proprietors»: Landlord-Tenant Relations in Ireland and Partitioned Poland in the Pre-Famine Period – Ciarán Reilly: «A Vast Waste of Pauperism»: An Examination of Irish Famine Eviction – Declan Curran: Organizational Narrative and Memory in Social Context: Representations of the Great Irish Famine in Official Publications of Irish Joint-Stock Banks – Peter Gray: William Sharman Crawford, the Famine and County Down – Christopher Cusack: Transformative Nationalism and Class Relations in Irish Famine Fiction, 1896–1909 – Andrés Eiríksson: «Paupers and Beggars Brats»: Governance and Mortality in the Parsonstown Workhouse during the Great Famine – Marguérite Corporaal: Workhouses as Heterotopic Spaces in Early Famine Fiction – Lewis Darwen/Brian Gurrin: «Bad As It Is, We Were Better Off in England»: Locating the Famine Irish Experience in Britain through Deposition estimony – Jason King: «The Atrocious Avarice of the Irish Landlords»: Canadian Public Sentiment and the Irish Famine Migration of 1847 – Peter D. O’Neill: The Famine Irish, the Catholic Church, and the Cultural Dynamics of the American Middle Class.

    Out of stock

    £45.36

  • Une révolutionnaire irlandaise en France: Maud

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Une révolutionnaire irlandaise en France: Maud

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisMuse du poète W.B. Yeats mais aussi activiste anglaise au service de l'indépendance de l'Irlande, Maud Gonne n'était pas à un paradoxe près. Le plus frappant et le moins étudié est sans doute qu'elle fut une révolutionnaire irlandaise en France. C'est à Paris qu'elle passa les années les plus intenses de son engagement politique, au tournant des XIXe et XXe siècle. L'objet de cet ouvrage est donc de considerer la France, son environnement politique, culturel et social,non pas comme un décor mais comme l'explication majeure au militantisme etaux choix politiques de Maud Gonne. Maud Gonne fut boulangiste avant d'être muse, avant même d'être une nationaliste irlandaise. Au travers d'approches historique et culturelle qui se complètent et se renforcent, le portrait de Maud Gonne devient aussi le récit d'un imaginaire nationaliste où la place accordée à la femme et à son lien avec la terre est essentielle. Cet imaginaire, basé en grande partie sur une pensée mythique, engendra des circulations d'idées et de personnes et fit des nationalismes français et irlandais de proches parents.En mots et en actes, par l'enthousiasme ou l'irritation qu'elle provoquait, Maud Gonne était l'un des membres les plus en vue de l'internationale nationaliste.

    Out of stock

    £39.60

  • Ireland and the British Empire: Essays on Art and

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Ireland and the British Empire: Essays on Art and

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis«This dazzling collection of essays draws out the complexity of Ireland’s connections with British imperialism. The volume takes an admirably wide-ranging and generous approach to Irish visual culture, showing how features such as Irish fashion, architecture, and museum display have been affected by empire. Those interested in Irish art, in Irish culture, and in the legacies of imperialism more generally will find this book insightful, illuminating, and provocative.» (James Moran, Professor of English, University of Nottingham)   «Ranging across a broad chronological span, this stimulating collection’s focus on the role of the British empire within Irish art and visuality is much-needed. This book will be invaluable not just for scholars of Irish culture, but for the study of the crucial significance of the visual in the historical formation of empire more generally.» (Fionna Barber, Reader in Art History, Manchester Metropolitan University) This collection of essays discusses how the British empire resonates in a huge array of visual culture in Ireland from the late eighteenth century to the middle of the twentieth. The book is about the way empire has pervaded and continues to pervade Irish art and visual culture. The collection of essays expands the analysis of things visual in terms of Ireland and the British empire to include a broad range of cultural matter: art exhibitions, museums and their displays, architecture, photography, illustrated books, fashion, public and private performances and entertainments, as well as paintings, sculpture, prints and book illustration. The essays only touch on some of the issues that need to be discussed in relation to Ireland and the visual culture of imperialism, but it is hoped that this volume will spark others to investigate the topic and thus greatly expand Irish visual historiography.Table of ContentsContents: Fintan Cullen: Introduction: Ireland, the Visual and the British Empire – Niamh NicGhabhann: An Index of Civility: Ireland, Imperialism and Histories of Medieval Architecture – Angela Griffith: Seeing the Second City of the Empire: The Engraved Illustration in Dublin Travel Guides (c.1820–30) – Justin Carville: «Pilgrims of the Sun»: John Shaw Smith and the Practice of Empire in Early Irish Photography – Rachel Hand: Museums and Empire: Reconnecting Uncomfortable Colonial Histories – Joseph McBrinn: From Parnell’s Suit to Casement’s Closet: Masculinity, Homosexuality and the Fashioning of the Irish Nation – Elaine Sisson: Fancy Dress and the «Colleen» as Imperial Signifier – Luke Gibbons: «Figures Suddenly Leap from Frames»: Myles na gCopaleen, Modernism and Irish Art.

    Out of stock

    £36.00

  • Voices from the Margins: Gender and the Everyday

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Voices from the Margins: Gender and the Everyday

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisVoices from the Margins explores the particular emphasis that women writers of Troubles short fiction have placed on gender and the everyday, two areas which have often been relegated to the margins of the «official story» about the Northern Irish conflict and peace process. Women’s Troubles short stories integrate the domestic plot into the larger historical framework of political violence, reconceptualizing and blurring the boundaries between the private and the public and capturing the many ways in which the conflict has impacted and been disruptive of the private space. This book shows how these women have rewritten the «official story» with narratives that foreground the personal histories of the Troubles over a public History which has largely been based on the division between the pro-state and anti-state nationalisms in Northern Ireland.Table of ContentsContents: «Almost beneath notice»: Northern Irish Women Writers and Troubles Short Fiction in Context – The «Other» Victims: Women’s Lives amidst Intimidation, Segregation and Murder – Forbidden Love: The Romance- across- the- Divide Short Story – Narratives of Incarceration: Life behind Bars and beyond the Barbed Wires – Perpetrators of Violence: Gender and Paramilitary Characterizations – Dealing with the Past and Moving towards a New Future: Troubles Short Fiction after the Good Friday Agreement – «Let the smells of mint go heady and defenceless»: Reshaping the «Official Story» through Gender and the Everyday – Selected Bibliography of Women’s Troubles Literary Works, 1969 to Present.

    Out of stock

    £37.08

  • Irish-Argentine Identity in an Age of Political

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Irish-Argentine Identity in an Age of Political

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThe Irish immigrants who arrived in Argentina between 1840 and 1890 were welcomed. Argentina was different from the English-speaking destinations familiar to other Irish emigrees: the historical antagonism between Catholicism and Protestantism was absent, and Irish immigrants were spared the discrimination experienced by those who settled in America. Argentina was regarded as part of Britain’s «informal empire», and the Irish benefitted economically and socially from being designated ingleses. The co-incidence of interest that developed between Irish-Argentines and British and American capital produced an economically successful community that was keen to protect its social status. This book is the first comprehensive analysis of the Irish-Argentine community in a hundred years. Using the archive of the Southern Cross, the Irish-Argentine newspaper, it analyses the divisions that opened up in this community as it responded to 1916, the two World Wars, Peronism, the military dictatorship, and the Falklands/Malvinas war. For generations the Southern Cross reflected and reinforced the conservative values of the community. But in 1968 a new editor would challenge the community over its failure to live up to what he considered to be the essence of being Irish: support for human rights and empathy with the poor.Trade Review«A fascinating excursion into a still relatively little-known part of the Irish diaspora, which explores, with assuredness and insight, how the Irish retained an identity into the post-WWII period. An excellent contribution to both diaspora history and the history of Argentina.» (Professor Don MacRaild, Professor of British and Irish History, University of Roehampton)Table of ContentsCONTENTS: Identity formation in the Irish-Argentine diaspora – The background to Irish emigration to Argentina – The Irish put down roots in Argentina – The Southern Cross equivocates between assimilation andethnic separatism – World affairs through the lens of the Southern Cross – The Irish and Peronism – The Irish-Argentines the Southern Cross ignored – Tensions between the Irish and Irish-Argentine Pallottines – Fr Richards and the Southern Cross during the Dirty War.

    Out of stock

    £40.32

  • L'autrefois et l'ailleurs: Poétique de la rupture

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers L'autrefois et l'ailleurs: Poétique de la rupture

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisC'est la qualité transculturelle, atemporelle et transgénérique des textes de Colum McCann qui intéresse cet ouvrage. L'auteur n'ancre complètement son oeuvre dans aucune tradition, aucun courant ou mode défini, et propose des textes récalcitrants à toute tentative de classification. En invitant régulièrement le symbole dans un univers vraisemblable, McCann ébranle parfois le réalisme de ses textes. De plus, en logeant dans son oeuvre celles et ceux qui ne trouvent pas leur place au centre du tourbillon de l'ère qui est la nôtre, il prend le contrepied du discours historiographique dominant. Ainsi, la notion de rupture apparaît comme une clé de lecture, et son étude permet de comprendre qu'au plan métatextuel, elle inclut plus aisément les lecteurs au sein même des textes, lesquels représentent des espaces d'accueil, de véritables forces centripètes qui les ramènent au coeur de l'expérience littéraire. Cet ouvrage ne s'intéresse donc pas seulement à la création et à la constitution des textes, mais également à leur réception. Ils pourraient être perçus comme autant de synapses assurant la transmission de l'expérience, qui constituent des outils permettant aux lecteurs de repenser leur être-au-monde, notamment à travers l'expérience de l'empathie.

    Out of stock

    £58.28

  • Patrimoine/Cultural Heritage in France and

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Patrimoine/Cultural Heritage in France and

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThis collection of essays explores the concept of patrimoine, a French word used to denote cultural heritage, traditional customs and practices – the Gaelic equivalent is dúchas – and the extent to which it impacts on France and Ireland. Borrowing from disciplines as varied as sociology, cultural theory, literature, marketing, theology, history, musicology and business, the contributors to the volume unearth interesting manifestations of how patrimoine resonates across cultural divides and bestows uniqueness and specificity on countries and societies, sometimes in a subliminal manner. Issues covered include debt as heritage, Guinness as a cultural icon of «Irishness», faith-based tourism, the Huguenot heritage in Ireland, Irish musical inheritances since Independence, Skellig Michael and the commodification of Irish culture. With a Foreword by His Excellency M. Stéphane Crouzat, French Ambassador to Ireland, this collection breaks new ground in assessing the close links between France and Ireland, links that will become all the more important in light of the United Kingdom’s withdrawal from the European Union.Table of ContentsCONTENTS: Eugene O’Brien: Metanoia and Reflexive Thinking: Towards a Deconstruction of Patrimoine/Cultural Heritage – Eóin Flannery: Debt as Inheritance – Harry White: «We did not choose this patrimony»: Irish Musical Inheritances since Independence – Tony Kiely: «Protestant Strangers and Others»: Re-imagining the Contribution of French Huguenots and their Descendants to Ireland’s Ancient «Patrimoine» – Catherine Maignant: The Reification of Sceilg Mhichíl – Déborah Vandewoude: Faith-based Tourism in Ireland and France – Patricia Medcalf: Irish Cultural Heritage through the Prism of Guinness’s Ads in the 1980s – Brian Murphy: A Traditional Irish Family Butcher Shop: «Harnessing the power of Patrimoine» – Julien Guillaumond: «Butter them up»: When Marketing Meets Heritage – The Case of Irish Butter in Germany – Maguy Pernot-Deschamps: «Enfants d’ici, parents d’ailleurs» – Mary Pierse: George Moore: A Case of Dúchas/Patrimoine in Flux? – Grace Neville: «I don’t think I could have made a decent living without the French»: An Analysis of Reviews of Irish Literature in Le Monde, 1950–2017.

    Out of stock

    £43.56

  • Recalling the Celtic Tiger

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Recalling the Celtic Tiger

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThis book looks at various effects, symptoms and consequences of the period in Irish culture known as the Celtic Tiger. It will trace the critical pathway from boom to bust – and up to the current beginnings of a similar, smaller boom – through events, personalities and products. The short entries offer a sense of the lived experience of this seismic period in contemporary Irish society. While clearly not all aspects of the period could realistically be covered, the book does contain essential information about the central actors, events, themes, and economic trends, which are discussed in a readable and accessible manner. Each entry is linked to the overall Celtic Tiger phenomenon and its immediate aftermath. The book also provides a comprehensive account of what happened in this period and will be a factual resource for anyone anxious to discover information on the areas most commonly connected to it. All entries are written by experts in the area. The contributors include broadcasters, economists, cultural theorists, sociologists, literary critics, journalists, politicians and writers, each of whom brings particular insights to some aspect of the Celtic Tiger.Trade Review«Recalling the Celtic Tiger offers a much needed reappraisal of a hugely important sea change in modern Irish society. By tackling issues surrounding religion, literature and culture, in addition to the financial and economic factors, the short essays provide a comprehensive analysis of how Ireland was affected by the years of boom and bust.» (Declan Kiberd, Keough Professor of Irish Studies at Notre Dame University) «‘The Celtic Tiger was a dramatic period in Irish history when a troubled and economically backward country suddenly seemed to have discovered Aladdin's lamp and all its wishes came true. It was liberating, exhilarating, self-delusional and ultimately disastrous and we are still living with its dodgy legacy. This brilliantly conceived kaleidoscope of a book, with its constantly shifting perspectives and superbly succinct mini-essays, is full of information, insight, wit and judgement and amounts to the best overview of the excitement and the madness we are ever likely to get.» (Fintan O’Toole, Irish Times journalist and writer) «Recalling the Celtic Tiger is full of short, digestible reads which remind us of the sheer breadth of the collapse and the socio-cultural context which was often drowned out by an overconcentration on economic analysis.» (Miriam O’Callaghan, Broadcaster and Journalist.) «a timely and useful reminder that the Tiger and its demise was not just, or even primarily, an economic phenomenon, but had profound socio-cultural roots and ongoing impact» (Sarah Carey, Columnist and Broadcaster)Table of ContentsCONTENTS: Accidental Landlords – Advertising – Ahern, Bertie – Anglo-Irish Tapes – Ansbacher Accounts –Auditors – Bailout – Balanced Regional Development – Banks – Bank Regulation – Bank Solvency Crisis – Banville, John – Barrett, Sean – Black Economy – Bondholders – Browne, Vincent – Buy-to-lets – Cardiff, Kevin – Chopra, Ajai – Cinema and the Celtic Tiger – Coffee Culture – Commission on the Private Rented Sector – Communications – Contracts for Difference (CFD) – Craft beer – Credit Rating Agencies – Credit Default Swap – Cross, Dorothy – Debt – Design and the Celtic Tiger – Dining Out – Divorce – ECB – Economists – Electric Gates in the Celtic Tiger – Emergency Liquidity Assistance (ELA) – Entrepreneurship – ESRI – Euro – Fianna Fáil – Fianna Fáil and Social Partnership: The Boom – Fianna Fáil and Social Partnership: The Bust – Free Market – Gastro-tourism – Ghost Estates – Golf Clubs – Harney, Mary – Hillen, Sean – Higgins, Michael D. – Honohan, Patrick – Howard, Paul – Human Resource Management – IAS 39 – IFAC – IMMA – Independent Politicians – International Monetary Fund – International Context – Internet – Irish Fiscal Advisory Council – Kelly, Morgan – Liquidity crisis – Media and the Celtic Tiger, the watch-dog that didn’t bark – Merkel, Angela – Mobile Technology – Mortgages – Murphy Report – National Accounts – National Treasury Management Agency NAMA – Neary, Patrick – Negative Equity – Neoliberalism – Novels of the Celtic Tiger – Nyberg Report – One Hundred Per Cent mortgages – Oireachtas Joint Committee Report – Peace Process and Anglo Irish Relations… – Peace Process (A French Perspective) – Photography – PIIGS Countries – Poetry – Political Economy – Professional service firms – Progressive Democrats – Property boom – Public Finances in the CT – Publishing – The Irish Pub – Quinn, Sean – Ratings Agencies – Referendums – Regling-Watson report – Repossessions – Riverdance – Road network – Ryan, Donal The Spinning Heart – Ryan Report – Second Houses – Shopping Trips to New York – Short Selling – Single Currency – Social Housing – Solvency crisis – Sports – SSIA – Saint Patrick’s Day Massacre Of Shares – Suburban Literature – Theatre of the Celtic Tiger – TARGET2 – The Euro – Trade Unions – Tourism – The Troika – U2 – Unemployment – Unfinished Estates – Universities – ‘We all partied’ – Wine Culture – Women and the Church – Women in the Celtic Tiger – Women Writers

    Out of stock

    £20.90

  • Advertising the Black Stuff in Ireland 1959-1999:

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Advertising the Black Stuff in Ireland 1959-1999:

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis1959 to 1999 was a pivotal time in the Republic of Ireland’s short history. This book’s journey commences in 1959 when the country had just taken its first steps on the road to internationalization. It concludes 40 years later in 1999, by which time Ireland had metamorphosed into one of the most globalized countries in the world. Inevitably, many of the country’s cultural and societal norms were challenged. The author charts many of the changes that occurred over the course of those years by piecing together a large number of the ads held in the Guinness Archive. Just as Irishness, cultural specificity and the provenance of Guinness formed an integral part of these ads, so too did the growing prevalence of international cultural tropes. The book seeks to interrogate the following: the influence of the Guinness brand’s provenance on advertising campaigns aimed at consumers living in Ireland; the evolution of cultural signs used in Guinness’s advertising campaigns aimed at consumers in Ireland between 1959 and 1999; the extent to which Ireland’s social and economic history might be recounted through the lens of Guinness’s ads; the extent to which Guinness’s advertising might have influenced Irish culture and society. Trade Review« For most Irish people, Christmas really starts when the Guinness advertisements, from the home of the ‘black stuff’, appears on television with the haunting music and the imagery of snow-covered urban and rural scenes. Just as the product has become a synecdoche of Irishness, so the advertisements have become iconic signifiers of both the product and of a sense of Irishness. In this original and thought-provoking study, Trish Medcalf traces and analyses Guinness advertisements from 1959-1999. As well as looking at the advertisements themselves, she provides a telling critique of how they both responded to, and at times led, the changes in Irish society over that period. » (Eugene O’Brien, Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick)Table of ContentsForeword by Patrick Guinness Introduction 1. 959–1969: New beginnings 2. 1970–1979: Emerging voices 3. 1980–1989: Economic hardship 4. 1990–1999: A period of unprecedented change Concluding thoughts Bibliography Index

    Out of stock

    £21.94

  • Trauma and Identity in Contemporary Irish Culture

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Trauma and Identity in Contemporary Irish Culture

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThe last two centuries of Irish history have seen great traumas that continue to affect Irish society. Through constructing cultural trauma, Irish society can recognize human pain and its source/s and become receptive to the idea of taking significant and responsible measures to remedy it. The intention of this volume is to show the mediating role of the literature and film scholar, the archivist, the social media professional, the historian, the musician, the artist and the poet in identifying Irish cultural trauma past and present, in illuminating Irish national identity (which is shifting so much today), in paying tribute to the memory and suffering of others, in showing how to do things with words and, thus, how concrete action might be taken. Trauma and Identity in Contemporary Irish Culture makes a case for the value of trauma and memory studies as a means of casting new light on the meaning of Irish identity in a number of contemporary Irish cultural practices, and of illuminating present-day attitudes to the past. The critical approaches herein are of a very interdisciplinary nature, since they combine aspects of sociology, philosophy and anthropology, among other fields. This collection is intended to lead readers to reconsider the connections between trauma, Irish cultural memory, identity, famine, diaspora, gender, history, revolution, the Troubles, digital media, literature, film, music and art.Table of ContentsIntroduction Melania Terrazas Gallego Part Literature and Film 1. From Undoing: Silence and the Challenge of Individual Trauma in John Boyne’s The Heart’s Invisible Furies (2017) Asier Altuna-García de Salazar 2. Trauma and Irish Female Migration through Literature and Ethnography María Amor Barros-del Río 3. Avenging the Famine: Lance Daly’s Black ’47, Genre and History Ruth Barton Part II Memory and Digital Archives 4. Reflection of Trauma in the Prisons Memory Archive: How Information Literacy, Human Experience and Place Are Impacted by Conflict Lorraine Dennis 5. From the Maze to Social Media: Articulating the Trauma of "the Blanket Protest" in the Digital Space Patrick J. Mahoney Part III History 6. "The Women Who Had Been Straining Every Nerve": Gender-Specific Medical Management of Trauma in the Irish Revolution (1916–1923) Síobhra Aiken 7. Personal Loss and the "Trauma of Internal War": The Cases of W. T. Cosgrave and Seán Lemass Eunan O’Halpin Part IV Music 8. Di-rum-ditherum-dan-dee: Trauma and Prejudice, Conflict and Change as Reflections of Societal Transformation in the Modern-Day Consolidation of Irish Traditional Music Fintan Vallely 9. Traumatic Childhood Memories and the Adult Political Visions of Sinéad O’Connor, Bono and Phil Lynott David Clare Part V Creative Writing 10. Hungry Ghosts: Trauma and Addiction in Irish Literature Emer Martin 11. Fellow Travellers Pat Boran 12. Identity Issues in Pat Boran’s Work: An Interview Melania Terrazas Gallego

    Out of stock

    £39.60

  • Sounding the Margins: Literary examples from

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Sounding the Margins: Literary examples from

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisSounding the Margins is the second of two publications to emerge from the highly successful AFIS conference hosted by the Université de Lille in 2019. Concentrating on the literary manifestations of marginality in Ireland and France, the essays treat of various texts that demonstrate the extent to which marginality is a recurring trope. This may well be because writers tend to situate themselves at a distance from the centre or status quo in their desire to maintain a certain degree of artistic objectivity. But it is also the case that literary practitioners tend to identify more easily with others living on the margins, either through choice or circumstances. The collection is a mixture of comparative studies and essays on individual authors but, in all cases, marginality is presented as a liberating experience once it is freely chosen and embraced.Table of ContentsContents: Engaging the Margins – Grace Neville: Ça mange comme les Irlandais des pommes de terre: The Great Irish Famine Comes in from the Margins in French Literature – Joseph Heininger: Representing the Marginalized in Micheal O’Siadhail’s The Chosen Garden, Globe and The Five Quintets: Perspectives on Jean Vanier and Dietrich Bonhoeffer – Eamon Maher: Ministering on the Margins: Fictional Priests in the Work of Jean Sulivan and Colum McCann – Joan Dargan: Seeing and Surveillance: Periscope and Watchtower in Susan Howe and Paul Muldoon – Voicing the Margins – Sylvie Mikowski: Space, Place and the Non-human in Sara Baume’s Spill Simmer Falter Wither (2016) – Marie Mianowski: Margins and Marginalities in Ireland: Being Jewish and Irish in Ruth Gilligan’s Nine Folds Make a Paper Swan – Helen Penet: Hugo Hamilton’s Hand in the Fire: Exploring Ireland’s Marginalities through the Prism of Immigration – Eugene O’Brien: Paul Howard and the Celtic Tiger: A Voice from the «Morgins» – Pilar Villar-Argáiz: The Ethical Implications of Irish Transcultural Fiction: Representations of the Immigrant in Roisín O’Donnell’s Wild Quiet and Donal Ryan’s From a Low and Quiet Sea.

    Out of stock

    £38.88

  • Northern Ireland: Challenges of Peace and

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Northern Ireland: Challenges of Peace and

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisMore than twenty years after the peace agreement signed in Belfast on 10 April 1998, an assessment is overdue, particularly given the current political context in Northern Ireland. A serious political crisis led to the suspension of the regional institutions from January 2017 to January 2020, and the Brexit negotiations did not facilitate the search for a solution, especially as the confidence-and-supply agreement between the British Conservative Party and the DUP prevented London from acting as an honest broker between Sinn Féin and the DUP. At the same time, the issue of the Irish border created tensions between Dublin and London. This situation was compounded by the resurgence of rioting, mostly in Loyalist areas of Belfast and Derry/Londonderry, in April 2021, against the backdrop of Brexit’s Northern Ireland Protocol and communal resentment. Emanating from a conference jointly organised at the University of Caen Normandy and La Rochelle University, this collection of essays – bringing together academic and independent scholars from various disciplines and nationalities – takes a critical look at the implementation of the Good Friday Agreement, from the collaboration between Dublin and London to the new political configurations in Northern Ireland, as well as interfaith, cultural, social and economic developments. Divided into three main parts, it furnishes an opportunity to better understand the reasons for the apparent deterioration in inter-community understanding since 1998, but also to study the numerous initiatives that have sought to promote reconciliation, be it in the economy, the working environment, in the literary and artistic spheres, in schools or in the urban landscape.Table of ContentsContents: Olivier Coquelin, Brigitte Bastiat, Frank Healy: Introduction: Twenty Years of Peace and Reconciliation? – Political and Economic Developments – David Mitchell: Facets of the Unionist Experience since 1998: From the Agreement to Brexit and Beyond – Agnès Maillot: War by Other Means? Sinn Féin and Reconciliation since the GFA – Christophe Gillissen: Brexit and the Irish Border: An Historical Overview – Anne Groutel: Twenty Years after the Good Friday Agreement: Achievements, Prospects and Limits of Economic Cooperation between the Two Irelands – Religion, Urbanism and Education – Brian Mac Cuarta SJ: Reconciliation in Northern Ireland: One Jesuit’s Personal Experience – Gladys Ganiel: Protestants and Peacebuilding in Northern Ireland: Overcoming Opposition, Apathy and a Loss of Legitimacy? – Charlotte Barcat: The Peace Bridge and the Re- branding of the River Foyle in Derry- Londonderry: From a «Divided City» to a «Shared Space»? – Nadège Dumaux: Integrated Education and the Shared Education Programme: A Dichotomy in the Northern Irish Education System – Literature and the Arts – Bertrand Cardin: Troubles Never Come Singly: Paul McVeigh’s The Good Son and Northern Irish Pioneering Fiction about Gender Trouble – Brigitte Bastiat: Connecting with the «Nation» in Northern Ireland: Violence and Reconciliation in Four Plays by Owen McCafferty – Billy Gray: «You Can’t Grab Anything with a Closed Fist»: Reflections on Ulster Protestant Identity in Derek Lundy’s Men That God Made Mad: A Journey through Truth, Myth and Terror in Northern Ireland – Fabrice Mourlon: Beyond Trauma? The Expression of Survivors in Post- Conflict Northern Ireland – Hélène Alfaro- Hamayon: Art and Conflict Transformation: Models of Participation and Collaboration in the Shankill.

    Out of stock

    £37.08

  • Irish Lesbian Writing Across Time: A New

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Irish Lesbian Writing Across Time: A New

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisFollowing the recent advancements in Irish lesbian politics, North and South, lesbian writing is attracting more attention from scholarly audiences, making this body of work particularly timely. Irish Lesbian Writing Across Time is an attestation of a historical presence of lesbians in Irish literature, as it analyses the progression of Irish lesbian narrative over the past two centuries, while verifying key characteristics of time periods that correspond with the model of development. It also investigates Irish lesbian activist literature, writing from diaspora, and fiction published around the time of the decriminalisation of homosexual acts and later the inclusion of same-sex marriage in Irish and Northern Irish laws. The book examines authors such as Maria Edgeworth, Sarah Grand, George Egerton, Elizabeth Bowen, Kate O’Brien, Edna O’Brien, Emma Donoghue, Mary Dorcey, Anna Livia, Shani Mootoo, and Hilary McCollum, whose inclusion of lesbian desire to the Irish literary canon proves an invaluable contribution.Table of ContentsContents: Covert Representations of Lesbian Desire in Fin- de- siècle Fictions by Irish New Woman Writers and the Historical Antecedents in Earlier Irish Literature: 1801– 1910 – Lesbian Continuum and Lesbian Desire as Implicitly Encoded in the Works of Elizabeth Bowen, Kate O’Brien and Molly Keane: 1927– 1934 – Lesbian Existence in the Post- War Writings of Elizabeth Bowen, Kate O’Brien and Edna O’Brien: 1949– 1988 – Towards More Overt Representations of Lesbian Desire: 1989– 2007 – Lesbian Writing from Irish Diaspora: 1982– 2008 – Twenty- First- Century Representations of Lesbian Desire in Northern Irish Fiction and Drama: 1922– 2018 – Some Conclusions: Into the Future of (Irish) Lesbian Writing.

    Out of stock

    £37.08

  • One Hundred Years of Irish Language Policy,

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers One Hundred Years of Irish Language Policy,

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisFollowing the significant advance of English in Ireland during the 18th century, the restoration of Irish as the vernacular language formed a key part of a broad cultural Revival movement from the late 19th century. Many of those who fought figuratively or literally for independence learned Irish to varying degrees of success or broadly supported the aims of the Revival movement. Significant policy measures to promote Irish were adopted following independence in 1922, particularly in the fields of education, legal status and public administration. Despite decades of contestation around revitalisation, Irish continues to enjoy institutional supports denied to many other European minority languages but remains weak as a community language.   Published in the centenary year of the foundation of the Irish state, this book reviews one hundred years of government policy on Irish and assesses its relative success or failure. Based on theoretical perspectives on language policy and revitalisation of minority languages, it analyses the development and implementation of Irish language initiatives in five thematic areas: speakers, the Gaeltacht, education, legislation and broadcasting. Each chapter includes an overview of the topic and a detailed case study on an aspect of it, drawing heavily on archival sources related to both the state and civil society organisations.Table of ContentsContents: Speakers – Gaeltacht – Education – Legislation – Broadcasting.

    Out of stock

    £23.75

  • Reimagining the Jews of Ireland: Historiography,

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Reimagining the Jews of Ireland: Historiography,

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis«This collection marks the coming of age of Irish Jewish Studies. Beautifully curated by Zuleika Rodgers and Natalie Wynn, it brings together the best of recent scholarship, covering history, politics, literature and everyday life. Taken together these essays show the complexity of both the Irish Jewish experience and responses to them.» (Tony Kushner, James Parkes Professor of Jewish/non-Jewish relations, University of Southampton) «A refreshingly nuanced exploration of perceptions and self-perceptions of Irish Jews. The authors interrogate political, religious, economic, social and cultural discourses from the eighteenth century to contemporary times to unravel less-familiar expressions of antisemitism, alongside occasional philosemitism, and offer critical insights on the many reimaginations of Christian Ireland’s long-standing migrant Other minority.» (Guy Beiner, Sullivan Chair of Irish Studies, Boston College) Discourse, both scholarly and popular, around the Jews of Ireland has increased in recent years and this volume of essays takes up the challenge of placing it within the framework of Jewish historiography and the study of Jewish history and culture. The focus of the volume is to provide a critical re-evaluation of the study of Irish Jews looking at key areas such as Irish Jewish historiography, communal traditions, antisemitism, nationalism (Jewish and Irish) and representations in popular media. Underlying the contributions is the desire to reassess the ways in which traditional scholarship and representation of Irish Jews have been shaped by uninterrogated narratives and a lack of understanding and sensitivity to the context of Jewish history and the Jewish experience.Trade ReviewThis collection marks the coming of age of Irish Jewish Studies. Beautifully curated by Natalie Wynn and Zuleika Rodgers, it brings together the best of recent scholarship, covering history, politics, literature and everyday life. Taken together these essays show the complexity of both the Irish Jewish experience and responses to them. Tony Kushner, James Parkes Professor of Jewish/non-Jewish relations, University of SouthamptonTable of ContentsContents: Zuleika Rodgers and Natalie Wynn: Introduction – Zuleika Rodgers, Natalie Wynn and Katrina Goldstone: Jews in Ireland and Multiple Invisibilities: Some Reflections on Historiography, Identity and Representation – Philip Alexander: Christian Restorationism in Ireland in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries and the Image of the Jew in the Irish Imagination – Colum Kenny: Two Irish Zionists and Their Antisemitism: Michael Davitt (1846–1906) and Arthur Griffith (1871–1922) – Peter Garry: «They Thought It Was New York»: Deconstructing the Communal Narrative of the Cork Jewish Community – Barbara Lisa Hillers: Portrayals of Jews in Irish Folk Narrative – Trisha Oakley Kessler: Jews as the «Economic Other»: Negotiating Modernity, Identity and Industrial Change in the Irish Free State Commission on Vocational Organisation, 1939–1944 – Katrina Goldstone: «Where Are the Radical Irish Jews?»: Leslie Daiken and Michael Sayers, Negotiating Irish Jewish Leftist Identities in the 1930s and 1940s – Seán William Gannon: «The Old Sinister Enemies Have found a New Ally»: The Judaeo- Bolshevik Myth in Mid- twentieth- century Irish Catholic Culture – Natalie Wynn: Nine Folds Make a Paper Jew: The Representation, Identity and Legacy of Irish Jews as Reflected in the Popular Media – Bryan Cheyette: Young Turks: An Afterword.

    Out of stock

    £36.00

  • Travel Narratives of the Irish Famine: Politics,

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Travel Narratives of the Irish Famine: Politics,

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisIreland’s Great Famine generated Western Europe’s most devastating social crisis of the nineteenth century, a crisis that created enormous and transformational upheaval. In Travel Narratives of the Irish Famine: Politics, Tourism, and Scandal, 1845-1853, author Catherine Nealy Judd proposes that a new literary genre emerged from the crucible of the Great Famine, that is, the Irish Famine travelogue. In her keenly argued and thoroughly researched book, Judd contends that previous scrutiny of Famine travel narratives has been overly broad, peripheral, or has tended to group Famine travelogues into an undi erentiated whole. Judd invites us to consider Famine-era travel narratives as comprising a unique subgenre within the larger discursive - eld of travel literature. Here Judd argues that the immensity of the Famine exerted great pressure on the form, topics, themes, and goals of Famine-era travelogues, and for this reason, Famine travel narratives deserve detailed and organized consideration, as well as critical recognition of their status as an unprecedented subgenre. Drawing on an extensive array of underutilized sources, Travel Narratives of the Irish Famine adumbrates the Irish Famine travelogue canon.Table of ContentsContents: Introduction – Early Famine Travelers, 1845–1846 – «An Acre of Stony Ground»: Orangeism, Wastelands, and Agriculture in Thomas Campbell Foster’s Letters, 1845–1846 –Theresa Cornwallis West’s 1846 Summer Visit: United Irishmen, Young Ireland, and Mazzini’s Risorgimento – Relief Work and Infrastructure, 1847–1848 – Peripatetic Charity in 1847: Pilgrimage, Soup Kitchens, and Skibbereen – Athlone, the Bog of Allen, and Famine Civil Engineering, 1846 to 1847 – Revolution and Compassion Fatigue, 1848–1850 – Revolutionary Ireland, 1848: New York City Tourists and the John Mitchel Trial – Celebrity Tourists, 1848–1849: De Vere and Tennyson – Duffy and Carlyle – Sidney Godolphin Osborne, the Irish Famine, and the Illustrated London News, 1849–1850 – Late Famine Ireland, 1849–1853 – «Obliterated, Never to Return»: Travel Literature in Late and Post Famine Ireland, 1849–1853.

    Out of stock

    £39.60

  • A Dangerous Pursuit: The anti-sectarian work of

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers A Dangerous Pursuit: The anti-sectarian work of

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThis is the untold story of Counteract, the trade union sponsored anti-sectarian unit tackling violent sectarianism in the workplace in the Northern Ireland conflict. As the death toll mounted through the 1980s key union women and men started what was planned as a campaign to support workers and became a ground-breaking facility for mediating sectarian disputes in the workplace in these violent times. People were shot for challenging flags at work, drivers hijacked at gun point and forced to drive bombs, taxi drivers murdered in tit-fortat sectarian killings, and workers were forced out of jobs because of sectarian threats and intimidation. This is a hidden part of the peace process, showing the path from «Shipyard confetti» to nuanced expressions of sectarian hostility. Trade Review«In the narrative of the Northern Ireland conflict, the role of the trade unions in combatting sectarian intimidation is rarely given the prominence it deserves. In telling the remarkable story of Counteract, Roz Goldie has done much to remedy that. This book is a revelation and a reminder that so much more needs to be done.» (Keith Baker, former Head of News and Current Affairs, BBC Northern Ireland) «A fascinating insight into courageous and largely unsung efforts to tackle deeplyembedded sectarian attitudes and intimidation affecting employees in Northern Ireland. Roz Goldie’s thorough research also provides serious lessons for all those striving on the long and winding road to fair employment and diversity in their workplace, wherever it is.» (John Conway, former Head of News and Current Affairs, BBC Northern Ireland) «The struggle against sectarianism in Northern Ireland has found an important chronicler in Roz Goldie.» (Lord Bew, historian and Emeritus Professor of Irish Politics at Queen’s University Belfast)Table of ContentsContents: Living in War – Working for Peace – Meeting the Challenge – 1991– 92: Early Work –1993: Building Strong Foundations – 1994: Developing Work in a Changing World – 1995– 96: Peace Breaks Out for a While – 1996– 97: Strategic Development to Change Organisations – 1997: The Poppy and Black Ribbon Disputes – 1998– 99: New Dispensation – New Mainstream Vocabulary – 1998– 99: Consolidating Alliances – Building on Networks – 2000: If You Do What You’ve Always Done, You Get What You’ve Always Got – The Limits, the Lessons and the Legacy.

    Out of stock

    £24.46

  • Reimagining Irish Studies for the Twenty-First

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Reimagining Irish Studies for the Twenty-First

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    Book SynopsisThis landmark collection marks the publication of the 100th book in the Reimagining Ireland series. It attempts to provide a «forward look» (as opposed to what Frank O’Connor once referred to as the « backward look») at what Irish Studies might look like in the third millennium. With a Foreword by Declan Kiberd, it also contains essays by several other leading Irish Studies experts on (among other areas) literature and critical theory, sport, the Irish language, food and beverage studies, cinema, women’s writing, Brexit, religion, Northern Ireland, the legacy of the Great Famine, Ireland in the French imagination, archival research, musicology, and Irish Studies in North America. The book is a tribute to Irish Studies’ foundational commitment to revealing and renewing Irishness within and beyond the national space.Trade Review«This engrossing, sharply argued, and diverse collection of essays captures the dynamic nature of Irish Studies as it changes and reformulates itself in response to current but also abiding concerns. The multi-disciplinary interventions in this volume brilliantly succeed in revisiting and interrogating the field of Irish Studies, broadening its ambit, and mapping trajectories for future engagement. This is an insightful and explorative collection that expertly takes stock of Irish Studies whilst driving it forward.» (Anne Fogarty, Professor of James Joyce Studies, University College Dublin) «From Famine stories to food studies, nineteenth-century travel narratives to contemporary film studies, Fenian invasions to TV stations, the Reimagining Ireland series has pioneered adventurous and enterprising versions and visions of Irish literature, society and culture. This milestone hundredth volume in the series contains essays that reimagine the potential future of Irish Studies in a new century and is remarkable for its diversity, disciplinary range, and dash.» (Joe Cleary, Professor of English, Yale University.)Table of ContentsCONTENTS: Eamon Maher: Introduction: Reimagining Irish Studies for the Twenty-First Century – Máirtín Mac Con Iomaire: Applying a Food Studies Perspective to Irish Studies – Barry Houlihan: Archives in Irish Studies: Locating Memory and the Archival Space – Katy Hayward: Between Britain and Europe Once More: The Significance of Brexit for the Reimagination of Ireland – Mary S. Pierse: Catching the Mood: George Moore’s Fin- de- Siècle Involvements – Brian Murphy: Drinking Spaces in Strange Places: New Directions in Irish Beverage Research – Eóin Flannery: Ecotheory and Criticism – Grace Neville: Poverty Trapped: French Traveller Accounts of Poverty in Ireland over the Centuries – Eamonn Wall: Irish Studies in North America: Reflections – Maureen O’Connor: Irish Women’s Writing – Harry White: «Monuments of Its Own Magnificence»: Musicology within Irish Studies – Elke d’Hoker: New Directions in Short Fiction – Sylvie Mikowski: No Country for Young Girls?: Representations of Gender Based Violence in Some Recent Fiction by Irish Women Writers – Colin Coulter and Peter Shirlow: Northern Ireland’s Future(s) – John Walsh: «Real» Language Policy in a Time of Crisis: Covid 19, the State and the Irish Language – Ruth Barton: Reimagining Irish Film Studies for the Twenty-First Century – Catherine Maignant: Religion in Irish Studies – Paul Rouse: Sport and the Irish – Eugene O’Brien: The Dawning of Difference: Literary and Cultural Theory in Irish Studies – Marguérite Corporaal: «The Words Will Come»: Today’s Legacies of the Great Irish Famine – Michael Cronin: Language, Time and the Improbable in Contemporary Ireland – Derek Hand: «What Would I Say, if I Had a Voice?»: The Irish Novel and the Articulation of Modernity.

    Out of stock

    £20.57

  • The Salley Gardens: Women, Sex, and Motherhood in

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers The Salley Gardens: Women, Sex, and Motherhood in

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisBy the early 2000s, women in Ireland were arguably freer than any past generation to shape their sexual lives amidst the social freedoms of a globalised society. The Salley Gardens presents reflections from seventy-three heterosexual young women on growing up, forming sexual relationships and some becoming mothers in the last years of the «Celtic Tiger». The authors explore their hope and despair about what it means to be a woman, to use their agency, within the inescapable tensions of newly wealthy Ireland. Their efforts to build their sexual lives are complex and the significant problems they encountered remain unresolved. Women’s search for agency is woven into our complex history and continues to reverberate. The bewildering juxtapositions young women faced fifteen years ago have intensified in the present. Then and now, we face conflicts with social expectations of our lives as sexual women, caring women, partners, wives, and mothers. Turning our older history in Ireland towards an exuberant resistance enables us to illuminate the limitations of the female identities imposed by contemporary Ireland. The Salley Gardens helps us rethink what we mean by agency and resistance, revaluing women’s actions as we endeavour to value our own lives.Table of ContentsContents: «In a field by the river my love and I did stand»: Changing Social Forms, Modernity and Resistance – «Young women saying «I love having lots of one- night stands» is still not quite acceptable»: Making Sense of Sexual Experiences – «And she didn’t know what to do»: The Many Obstacles to Sexual Freedom – «It’s not the right time for me, I can’t go through with this pregnancy. And it should be free choice»: Abortion as the Loneliest Decision – «It’s not just about having children – how can you build a life?»: Motherhood Becomes Another Country – Loss, Athwartness, Resistance – Note on the Cover Artist.

    Out of stock

    £24.46

  • Telling Truths: Evelyn Conlon and the Task of

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Telling Truths: Evelyn Conlon and the Task of

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisEvelyn Conlon is one of Ireland’s most important writers. She has published four collections of short stories, My Head is Opening (1987), Taking Scarlet as a Real Colour (1993), Telling: New and Selected Short Stories (2000) and Moving about the Place (2021) and four novels, Stars in the Daytime (1989), A Glassful of Letters (1998) Skin of Dreams (2003) and Not the Same Sky (2013). She has also edited Later On: The Monaghan Bombing Memorial Anthology (2004). Telling Truths: Evelyn Conlon and the Task of Writing is the first book to provide a critical assessment of her work. Drawing on a variety of perspectives such as feminism, ethics, famine studies, mobility studies, translation studies, short fiction, narratology and historiographic metafiction, the essays gathered in this volume reveal that Conlon’s writing, characterised by sharp observation, insistently questions the predetermined course of female existence, explores alternative forms of freedom and ultimately reflects her commitment to seek and tell truths. The intersectional approach of the book is part of a current endeavour in Irish Studies to keep interrogating well established topics, to examine the elusiveness of others and to explore new boundaries through renewed epistemological and ethical positions.Table of ContentsContents: "Women Behaving Badly" in Evelyn Conlon’s Short Fiction – Moving about the Irish Short Story: An Exploration of Evolving Style and Themes in Evelyn Conlon’s Fiction – Women’s Mobility in Evelyn Conlon’s Fiction – Hurtful Intimacy: Kinds of Knowing in a Pair of Evelyn Conlon’s Short Stories – Riffraff: Evelyn Conlon’s "Two Gallants Getting Caught" – Translating Evelyn Conlon – Rites of Return: Evelyn Conlon’s Not the Same Sky – Later On, Later on, and in Another Country – Prisons, Prisoners, the Death Penalty and Resurrection in Skin of Dreams and A Glassful of Letters, by Evelyn Conlon – Ethical Encounters with the Spectral in Evelyn Conlon’s Fictions – The Lookout: A Conversation with Evelyn Conlon.

    Out of stock

    £36.00

  • The Irish Catholic Diaspora: Five centuries of

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers The Irish Catholic Diaspora: Five centuries of

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis«The Irish missionary momentum in the 19th century attests to the vitality of a Christian community whose richness and great diversity this book illustrates, with particular emphasis placed on the considerable effort made in the field of education, a privileged way for human promotion and the proclamation of the Gospel.» (Bernard Ardura, President, Pontifical Committee for Historical Sciences) «This book is a wonderful read: well researched, fascinating, clear, insightful and learned. It is an exceptional testimony of the achievements of the Irish Religious Diaspora. It is fundamental reading during a period in which our country has become a destination country, hosting so many from all parts of the globe. Although a small country on the periphery of Europe, Ireland was capable of projecting its values and culture globally through its diaspora. The Irish religious diaspora, as illustrated so deftly in this book, is a notable example of this throughout the ages. This book informs us and reminds us so well of the extraordinary efforts and tireless endeavours of the Hiberno-Roman missionaries in exporting Irish Catholic values globally over past centuries. The book is a pleasure to read.» (Patricia O’Brien, Ambassador of Ireland in Rome) Sourcing the circulation, settlement and influence of the Irish religious groups in continental Europe, the Americas, Australia and South Africa, the volume starts in Lisbon in the sixteenth century. How did Lisbon become the hub of Irish trade and the seat of the Irish Catholic Church in exile after the Reformation? Where did it move on from there in modern and contemporary times? At a time when Irish missionaries have largely returned home to a country that has often been described as «post-Catholic», this collection brings together historians and literary critics who trace the trajectories, destinies, acculturation and shifting senses of identity of Irish Catholic clerics and missionaries across the globe from the sixteenth to the twenty-first centuries. Studies of postwar Europe, Latin America and South Africa show the modern expression of the Irish Catholic missionary movement, as well as some of the same spiritual and ethical preoccupations that are captured in the literary works of some of the most famous French, Irish and Irish-American authors.Table of ContentsContents: Thomas O’Connor: Lisbon and Counter-Reformation Ireland: Trade, Community and Religious War, 1558–1615 – Mícheál Mac Craith: Leuven, the New Donegal, Twinned with Prague and Rome – Brian Mac Cuarta SJ: Francis Slingsby and Rome, 1633–1642: From Irish Protestant to Jesuit Novice – Liam Chambers: Irish Colleges, the Irish Mission and Migration to France, 1691–1789 – Eamon Maher: Sins of the Flesh: Tracing a Filiation between Liam O’Flaherty and Two French Novelists – Timothy G. McMahon: «Spiritual Empire» in the Age of New Imperialism: Catholic Missions Shaping the Nation – Dermot Keogh: Irish Catholic Missionaries in Nineteenth-Century Argentina – Thérèse Osborne: Pastoral Work in a Limit Situation: Mission Experiences in Eastern El Salvador, 1979–1984 – Bertrand Cardin: The Gospel of Faith, Hope and Charity According to Colum McCann – Jérôme aan de Wiel: Ireland’s Post-War Humanitarian Aid to Europe, 1945–1950: Catholic Networking, Remembrance and Missionary Tradition in Action – Ciarán Reilly: «Being with the People»: Irish Missionaries in Twentieth-Century South Africa and Their Role in the Anti-Apartheid Struggle – Alexandra Maclennan: Owen McCann, Son of Ireland and South Africa’s First Prince of the Church.

    Out of stock

    £36.00

  • Neil Jordan écrivain-scénariste: L'imaginaire de

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Neil Jordan écrivain-scénariste: L'imaginaire de

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisSi son nom est d'emblée associé aux films à succès qu'il a réalisés ( The Crying Game , Entretien avec un vampire , Michael Collins ), Neil Jordan est également un homme de lettres. Son oeuvre littéraire, composée de huit romans et d'un recueil de nouvelles, est riche, complexe et foisonnante. Elle manifeste un intérêt pour l'histoire et la politique irlandaises, mais aussi pour le surnaturel et l'irrationnel. Elle crée un univers où le temps et l'espace peuvent s'abolir, le matériel et le spirituel se confondre, le visible et l'invisible s'interpénétrer. Aussi transgresse-t-elle les frontières à plus d'un titre. A la fois réaliste et fantastique, elle établit de nombreuses connexions avec la psychanalyse, la religion chrétienne, la mythologie ou la tradition culturelle qu'elle revisite de manière originale. La présente étude aborde l'oeuvre littéraire de Neil Jordan dans toute sa diversité. Elle s'intéresse essentiellement au romancier, mais aussi au nouvelliste et au scénariste, la production cinématographique de l'artiste ne pouvant être ignorée. Ce premier ouvrage en français consacré à l'écrivain a pour objectif de rendre justice à une grande figure de la vie culturelle irlandaise contemporaine dont tout un pan de la création artistique reste encore largement méconnu.

    Out of stock

    £37.08

  • The Mandarin, the Musician and the Mage: T. K.

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers The Mandarin, the Musician and the Mage: T. K.

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisIn spite of recession, austerity and pandemics, Ireland has demonstrated an extraordinary degree of resilience, becoming one of the most successful economies in Europe and developing into a society remarkably at ease with itself. This book argues that the seeds of this achievement were sown between the mid-1950s and 1960s, when a Second Irish Revival took place which was comparable to the earlier Celtic Revival of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. At the heart of this revival were three men: T. K. Whitaker, the youthful Secretary of the Department of Finance, Seán Ó Riada, musician and composer, and Thomas Kinsella, poet, translator and academic. Ó Riada and Kinsella were close friends in Dublin’s emerging artistic world of the 1950s but Kinsella was also Whitaker’s private secretary in the Department of Finance. The three men, although very different in background and personality, shared a deep knowledge and love of Irish culture, heritage, history and language, but they were also determined to study and absorb the best of what the world could offer in their respective fields of endeavour and it is argued that this combination was a critical factor in their contribution to Irish society. The book will review the arguments of the sceptics who disagreed with Ireland’s embrace of globalisation and will conclude with a speculative account of how the Mandarin, the Musician and the Mage might like to see Ireland develop in the 2020s.Table of ContentsContents: The Contribution of Whitaker, Ó Riada and Kinsella to the Second Revival of the Mid- Twentieth Century – How Three Young Irishmen Shouted ‘Stop’ in the 1950s – T. K. Whitaker and the Second Revival – Seán Ó Riada: Musical Regeneration – Thomas Kinsella: The Poetic Muse – Ireland 1956–2020: From Emigrants’ to Immigrants’ Remittances – Ireland 1960–2020: Statistical Analysis of the Transformation – The World in the 2020s and How Ireland Might Respond – The Sceptics: Globalisation, Contents and Discontents – The World from the Perspective of the 2020s – Possible Lessons from the Mandarin, the Musician and the Mage for a New Revival.

    Out of stock

    £36.00

  • Northern Windows/Southern Stars: Selected Early

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Northern Windows/Southern Stars: Selected Early

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisNorthern Windows/Southern Stars is a valuable, accessible and thought-provoking gathering of essays by the distinguished Irish poet and Professor Emeritus, Gerald Dawe. Re-tracing the issues and questions of poetry and politics in the Ireland of the 1980s and 1990s, the collection provides energetic and unexpected views of one poet’s critical readings, including the work of several overlooked poets of the time. While offering fascinating insights into the early processes of reimagining the canon of Irish poetry, Northern Windows/Southern Stars is full of thoughtful and telling reports from a very different Ireland at the point of significant transition by the turn of the millennium. Trade Review«Gerald Dawe is both acute and judicious in dealing with the poet’s role in a politically-tattered society. And even if some of Dawe’s views are mistaken, time will surely pardon him for writing well.» (Neil Powell, PN Review (UK))Table of ContentsContents: Brief Confrontations – A Gritty Prod Baroque: Tom Paulin – Northern Windows/ Southern Stars – A Question of Imagination – How’s the Poetry Going? – Invocation of Powers: John Montague – Potent Music: Yeats’s Legacy – Critical Mass – The Parochial Idyll: W. R. Rodgers – An Unmoved Mind: John Millington Synge – Our Secret Being: Padraic Fiacc – Breathing Spaces: Brendan Kennelly.

    Out of stock

    £23.75

  • Dreaming of Home: Seven Irish Writers

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Dreaming of Home: Seven Irish Writers

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis«Gerald Dawe observes in the concluding lines of Dreaming of Home that the writers he admires most are those who convey a sense of ‹the sheer joy in witnessing the world for its own sake.› Those same words could apply to Dawe himself. His readings of seven writers here – Sean O’Casey, W.B. Yeats, John Montague, Patrick Kavanagh, Derek Mahon, Colette Bryce, and Gail McConnell – are animated as much by the sheer joy of reading as by the need to analyse or explain. This is not just a wise book, but a joyous one.» (Chris Morash, MRIA, FTCD Seamus Heaney Professor of Irish Writing, TCD)   In this vibrant and accessible sequence of readings, Gerald Dawe explores the meaning of home in the work of Irish writers, including W. B. Yeats, Sean O’Casey, Derek Mahon and Gail McConnell. Providing ample encouragement to think about literary questions in a fresh and engaging way, Dreaming of Home concludes with an afterword of praise for the example of the great American poet William Carlos Williams, who mattered greatly to Dawe’s own development as a poet. Scholarly and stylish in approach, Dreaming of Home is an invaluable study for the general reader and student alike.Table of ContentsContents: Precarious Refuges: Sean O’Casey – In the Mind’s Eye: W. B. Yeats – Self- Portraits: Patrick Kavanagh – The Cage: John Montague – Dreaming of Home: Derek Mahon – Our Words: Colette Bryce – Without a City Wall: Gail McConnell.

    Out of stock

    £23.75

  • The Politics of Irish Primary Education: Reform

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers The Politics of Irish Primary Education: Reform

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis This book provides a comprehensive study of educational policy reform as growing calls for further reducing the role of the Catholic Church in Irish primary schools gains traction in a rapidly evolving Irish society. Drawing upon lessons from the same-sex marriage and abortion reform campaigns, this study provides several policy case studies that demonstrate how the interplay of civil society activists and organisations, the media, public opinion, and political parties and elites determines how policy reforms live or die. The book contains a rich and novel set of data, including interviews with leaders and elites from the major actors and institutions, numbers and trends from previously unreleased data from the Church and Department of Education, evidence from the authors’ originally designed and implemented parliamentary surveys, an original analysis of media coverage of educational issues and actors involved in the main educational reform debates, and detailed case studies of divestment, admissions, and curriculum policy reforms. Scholars, policy gurus, activists, politicians and teachers, students, and parents each have something to learn from this compelling study.Trade Review«McGraw and Tiernan have produced a powerful scholarly interrogation of the changing face of Irish Primary Education. History conferred dominance of the sector on a powerful Catholic Church. The future will be different for a weakened Church that faces new actors, new voices, new aspirations, in fact an emerging new secular, liberal Ireland. This study calmly and convincingly explores this transitioning landscape, asking “What Next?”. It is an invitation to one of the most crucial and profound debates in the story of modern Ireland and a welcome exemplary, fresh contribution to that debate.» (Mary McAleese, former President of Ireland Current Professor of Children, Law & Religion at the University of Glasgow and Chancellor of Trinity College, Dublin)Table of ContentsContents: Primary Education Reform: Background and Context – What’s Next? A Campaign to Limit the Catholic Church’s Role in Primary Education – Control in Irish Primary Education: Who Controls What and When – Demand for Change in the Irish Primary Sector – Key Actors in Primary Education Reform – The Catholic Church and Education Reform – Educate Together – Community National Schools – Irish Media and Primary Education Reform – The Politics of Primary Education Reform and Policy Case Studies – Policy Evolution: LGBTQ and Abortion Rights as Precursors of Educational Reform – Political Parties and Education Reform – Divestment – Admissions – Curriculum – What’s Next in Irish Primary Education Reform? – Media Analysis Notes.

    Out of stock

    £27.55

  • The Cultural Politics of In/Difference: Irish

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers The Cultural Politics of In/Difference: Irish

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisFrom the perspective of Irish Studies, this book seeks to interrogate the discourses and processes that produce and reproduce «Ireland’s cultural politics of in/difference», and its effects both in the material experience of Othered subjects and in their representation in cultural and literary forms. At the same time, it also examines strategies of dissent or resistance and possible alternatives that are being articulated both in the socio-political and the cultural arena, contributing to our communal thinking and imaginative creation of more effective forms of building community based on solid equity and social justice grounds.Table of ContentsContents: – Introduction – Systemic Crime and Social Disaffection in Benjamin Black’s Quirke Series: A Struggle for Difference – Erin’s Sons and Decent Daughters: The Biopolitics of Rural Masculinities in Patrick Kavanagh’s Tarry Flynn (1948) – Anne Griffin’s When All Is Said (2019): A Different Haunting Ageing Masculinity in Irish Fiction – The Guts (2013): The Quintessence of Roddy Doyle’s Art of Fiction – ‘Girls just wanna have fun’: Female Adolescence and Joyful Insurrection in Éilís Ní Dhuibhne’s The Dancers Dancing (1999) and Lisa McGee’s Derry Girls (2018– ) – Girls and Women in Rosaleen McDonagh’s Mainstream: Celebrating Difference – Bridging Differences or Burning Bridges: Transforming the Chorus in Irish Versions of Greek Tragedy – Death- worlds and Necropolitics of Abjection in Emma Donoghue’s ‘Counting the Days’ – From Virtual to Aborted Citizens: Childbirth and Citizenship in the Republic of Ireland – ‘New energies’ on ‘the threshold of an old art’: Democratic Sparkles in Contemporary Irish Poetry – The Violent Othering of Women and Animals in Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill’s and Luz Pichel’s Poetry – ‘Cork is very much male – and so is working class’: An Interview with Lisa McInerney.

    Out of stock

    £36.00

  • Honest Claret : The Social Meaning of Georgian

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Honest Claret : The Social Meaning of Georgian

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisIn the eighteenth century, Ireland’s elite could choose from a wide range of wines, but their favourite was claret – the red wine of Bordeaux. Whereas Britain’s wine drinkers turned to port in this period, and America’s elite filled their glasses with Madeira, in Ireland, claret flowed in the social world of the privileged classes. This book looks back to earliest times to trace the story of how and why a French wine became what Jonathan Swift fondly called «Irish wine». Exploring the social life of claret in Georgian Ireland through a range of period sources reveals the social meanings attached to this wine and expands our knowledge of Ireland’s fascinating food history.Table of ContentsContents: Wine in Ireland from Pre- Christian Times to the Late – The World of Ireland’s Georgian Elite – Claret in Eighteenth- Century Ireland

    Out of stock

    £31.50

  • New Beginnings: Perspectives from France and

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers New Beginnings: Perspectives from France and

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThis collection emerged from a conference held in TU Dublin at a time when the theme of «New Beginnings» seemed particularly apposite. In the few years prior to the gathering, COVID-19 had brought the world to almost a complete standstill. The need to recalibrate, to find new and more effective ways of dealing with the climate crisis, domestic and international politics, literary expression, and technology, was clearly felt by everyone. The fourteen essays deal with literary figures such as Jonathan Swift, George Moore, Colm Tóibín, Richard Murphy, Seamus Heaney, Michael O’Siadhail, Sally Rooney and Doireann Ní Ghríofa. Other issues broached are the diplomatic work carried out by Seán T. O’Kelly as Ireland’s envoy to Paris when an independent Ireland was seeking international recognition; depictions of the AIDS crisis in Irish theatre; the Neganthropocene in the French TV series Zone Blanche; new opportunities for learning through digital archives; strategies to save the rural Irish pub; innovative strategies employed by Ireland on the world stage, and the use of science to manipulate the French public’s beliefs about COVID-19. The diversity of material and approaches guarantees that New Beginnings will appeal to a large number of readers.Table of ContentsContents: Máirtín Mac Con Iomaire and Eamon Maher: Introduction: New Beginnings: Perspectives from France and Ireland – Wording New Beginnings – Anne Goarzin: From Gulliver’s Travels to The Quick: Trans-Temporal Literature as Life Form in a Pandemic – Anke Klitzing: New Beginnings in Reading (Irish) Literature: A Gastrocritical Look at George Moore’s «Home Sickness» and Colm Tóibín’s Brooklyn – Brian A. Murphy: An Irishman in Paris: Seán T. O’Kelly as Dáil Envoy, February 1919–April 1922 – Benjamin Keatinge: «A taste for black sole»: Richard Murphy, Patricia Avis, Tony White and the Red Bank Restaurant – Ian Hickey: Seamus Heaney’s New Beginnings in «The Riverbank Field» and «Route 110» – Contemporary Representations of New Beginnings – Eugene O’Brien: «Welcoming the Difference»: Michael O’Siadhail and the Gift of Tongues – J. Javier Torres-Fernández: Disrupting the Stigmatizing Cultural Narrative of AIDS through Contemporary Irish Theatre – Sylvie Mikowski: «So What Else Is New?» The Case of Sally Rooney’s Normal People – Sarah Nolan: «This is a female text, I think»: «New Words» and Franco-Gaelic Sources in Doireann Ní Ghríofa’s A Ghost in the Throat – New Beginnings in the Post-Digital Age – Maria Parsons: Nature, the Post-Digital, and the Neganthropocene in Zone Blanche (Black Spot) – Caitríona Nic Philibín and Máirtín Mac Con Iomaire: Surfing the Irish Folklore Commission’s Schools’ Collection: New Beginnings in the Democratisation of Learning through Digital Archives – Gráinne Murphy: Learning from the UK Experience: How the Social Entrepreneurship Model Can Help Save the Rural Irish Pub – Julien Guillaumond: Ireland’s Newly Found Influence in the Twenty-First Century: New Beginnings on the World Stage? – Brigitte Bastiat and Frank Healy: Hold-Up: A Conspiracy of Lies, Damned Lies and Statistics.

    Out of stock

    £36.00

  • A Deep Well of Want: Visualising the World of

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers A Deep Well of Want: Visualising the World of

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis«Paul Butler’s monograph is a wonderful illustration of how a visual reading of McGahern can reveal previously undiscovered aspects of the writer’s aesthetic approach. ‘The Deep Well of Want’ of the title is an expression that captures the pain and hurt at the core of the life journey of both writer and photographer. Paul’s exquisite photos allow us a special entry into ‘McGahern Land’, whose landscape and people nurtured the writer’s creative inspiration. This indispensable study will deepen McGahern readers’ understanding of what lies at the core of his artistic quest.» (Eamon Maher, TU Dublin) This book represents a unique visualisation of the world of Irish writer John McGahern through his words and the imagery of artist Paul Butler. Traumatic events in the lives of both McGahern and Butler shaped their paths, creating a want to write in McGahern and a want to create imagery in Butler. Butler explores the difficult and complex childhood that the two shared, and through a series of beautiful images that he himself has created in McGahern’s own part of Ireland, he draws parallels between them and, as Eamonn Wall says in his Preface, produces a rich and life-affirming appreciation of literature, art and imagery. Table of ContentsContents: Introduction – Landscape – A sense of place – Ritual – Conclusion.

    Out of stock

    £28.50

  • Dark Green: Irish Crime Fiction 1665-2000

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Dark Green: Irish Crime Fiction 1665-2000

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThe book deals diachronically with Irish crime fiction, from the picaresque of the 17th century up to the late 1990s when the «Emerald Noir» boom began. Irish writers, often without due recognition, have been instrumental in the development of the genre on an international level, and figures such as Le Fanu, Meade, Childers, Wills Crofts have been responsible for many of the innovations in crime fiction which have later become standard. This book examines Irish crime writing in its widest sense, from the detective mystery to the spy thriller, and seeks to vindicate the relevance of the Irish contribution to the field of crime fiction as well as stressing the importance of crime writing within the field of Irish Studies. This work traces Irish crime fiction from the early appropriation of the picaresque, which would gain resonance throughout Europe, through the gothic, the early detective tale, to the Irish contribution to the Golden Age mystery, to Irish hard-boiled pulp and inner-city police procedurals in which crimes committed by Irish criminals are investigated by Irish agents of detection.Table of ContentsContents: «that my Thefts might pafs undifcovered.» Picaresque, Rogue Tales, Broadsheets and Newgate Calendars – «The peasantry of Ireland have, for centuries, been at war with the laws by which they are governed.» The Early Nineteenth Century – «Wherever reserve exists there is mystery, and wherever mystery – guilt.» Le Fanu and the Gothic Crime Mystery – «Reader, you have seen the singular and extraordinary circumstances connected with the handkerchief, the sledge, and the sack.» Sensation and Mystery Fiction – «A history of crime seemed to be written on both their faces.» L. T. Meade and End of Century Detection – «I just go by the rule of thumb, and muddle and puzzle out my cases as best I can.» Detection and Mystery at the Turn of the Century – «Too sharp to be absolutely wholesome.» The Golden Age I: Freeman Wills Crofts – «A deceptive air of docility.» The Golden Age II: Nicholas Blake and Mrs Victor Rickard – «Among the poor the police are never regarded as the upholders of the common law, but as agents of the rich to oppress those without property.» Post-Revolutionary Ireland – «A kind of private eye and general trouble-shooter.» Irish Hard-Boiled and Pulp – «Not too quiet for crime.» Irish Crime Fiction in the Mid-Twentieth Century I – «The law after all is just a machine that suspects everyone on general principles.» Irish Crime Fiction in the Mid-Twentieth Century II – «His father had been on the wrong side in the Civil War.» Irish Spy Fiction in the 1960s and 1970s – «Being Irish, you had a certain innate guile that allowed you to think like a criminal and keep one step ahead of them.» Irish Crime Writing in the 1970s and 1980s – «It was the virus of my country’s illness that felled him.» Northern Ireland – «The authority to dispose of anyone who stands in my way.» The 1980s and Early 1990s – «A surly-looking cop lounging at the security desk.» Northern Irish Crime Fiction in the 1990s – «Technically a private investigator.» Thrillers and the Diversity of Irish Crime Writing in the 1990s – «People loved reading about crime in Ireland.» The Police and Private Detective Novel in the 1990s – «Killers who chop up their victims, that’s all very American, or at the very least English. In Ireland it would only happen by accident, like most things.» Towards the New Millennium.

    Out of stock

    £36.00

  • From Landscapes to Cityscapes: Towards a Poetics

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers From Landscapes to Cityscapes: Towards a Poetics

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis«Marjan Shokouhi’s new book attests to the ways in which Irish ecocritical scholarship has developed into more than a simple ‘subfield’ of Irish Studies. Shokouhi takes readers on a fascinating journey through the work of three iconic Irish poets in the modern period – Yeats, Kavanagh and MacNeice – from the burgeoning perspective of Irish ecological criticism, exhibiting the complexities of the Irish Literary Revival in addressing questions of place and identity and opening new avenues of research in relation to new voices and marginal identities.» (Pilar Villar-Argáiz, University of Granada, Spain) «From wild ancient forests to the Lagan riverside, From Landscapes to Cityscapes offers a new take on the sense of place in modern Irish poetry. Using Heidegger’s concept of dwelling, it examines the verse of Yeats, Kavanagh and MacNeice from an ecocritical perspective in a worthy contribution to the field.» (Audrey Robitaillié, Lecturer in Anglophone Literature and Irish Studies, Institut Catholique de Toulouse) The study of place and place attachments has been a staple subject of enquiry in the field of Irish Studies, which ever since the emergence of an Irish ecocritical scholarship in the early 2000s has acquired a new depth. Recent publications have integrated an environmental dimension that connects literary analyses to wider cultural and global concerns such as deforestation, urban sprawl, immigration, climate change and so on. Building on the existing scholarship, the present study offers readings from modern Irish verse in the light of Ireland’s natural and cultural landscapes. Simply put, From Landscapes to Cityscapes should be viewed as a minor ecocritical exercise in Irish Studies, hoping to inspire new perspectives that arise out of an environmental scrutiny of the age-old questions of place and identity in Irish literature. The textual analysis focuses on the works of three major Irish poets of the modern period: William Butler Yeats, Patrick Kavanagh and Louis MacNeice. Contesting the often politicized and historicist boundaries set for defining Irishness and arguing for a recognition of new voices and marginal identities, this book considers a range of land/cityscapes in terms of their significance to the development of a more comprehensive view of both culture and environment in Ireland.Trade ReviewMarjan Shokouhi’s new book From Landscapes to Cityscapes attests to the ways in which Irish ecocritical scholarship has developed into more than a simple “subfield” of Irish Studies. Shokouhi takes readers on a fascinating journey through the work of three iconic Irish poets in the modern period – Yeats, Kavanagh and MacNeice – from the burgeoning perspective of Irish ecological criticism, exhibiting the complexities of the Irish Literary Revival in addressing questions of place and identity and opening new avenues of research in relation to new voices and marginal identities. Pilar Villar-Argáiz University of Granada, Spain From wild ancient forests to the Lagan riverside, From Landscapes to Cityscapes offers a new take on the sense of place in modern Irish poetry. Using Heidegger’s concept of dwelling, it examines the verse of Yeats, Kavanagh and Macneice from an ecocritical perspective in a worthy contribution to the field. Audrey Robitaillié Lecturer in Anglophone Literature and Irish StudiesTable of ContentsContents: Wilderness Narratives: De- spirited Forests, Deforested Landscapes – The Land/ Mindscape of Yeats’s Ireland – Countryside Narratives: Rural Ireland in Irish Revival Literature – Towards a Poetics of Dwelling: Patrick Kavanagh and the Countryside – City Narratives: An Urban Sense of Place in Modern Irish Literature – Patrick Kavanagh in Dublin: The Irish Flâneur and the Big City – Louis MacNeice’s North: The ‘Incorrigibly Plural’ Sense of Place in Modern Irish Poetry.

    Out of stock

    £36.00

  • Neil Jordan, Author and Screenwriter: The

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Neil Jordan, Author and Screenwriter: The

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisNeil Jordan is immediately associated with the successful films he has directed (The Crying Game, Interview with the Vampire, Michael Collins...). And yet, he is also a man of letters. His literary work, composed of eight novels and a collection of short stories, is rich, dense and complex. It shows an interest in Irish history and politics, but also in the supernatural and the irrational. It creates a universe where time and space can abolish themselves, the material and the spiritual merge, the visible and invisible interpenetrate. Jordan’s fiction also transgresses the borders in more than one way. Both realistic and fantastic, it establishes numerous connections with psychoanalysis, Christian religion, mythology or cultural tradition, and revisits them in an original way. The present study approaches Neil Jordan’s literary work in all its diversity. It focuses primarily on the novelist, but also on the short story writer and the screenwriter, as his film making cannot be ignored. This book, devoted to the writer, aims to do justice to a major figure in contemporary Irish cultural life, whose artistic creation remains largely unexplored.Table of ContentsContents: Night in Tunisia and Other Stories: A Mysterious Collection between Tradition and Innovation – "There’s a kind of truth in fiction, isn’t there?" Family Memory and National History: The Past and Michael Collins – Demons of Darkness at Work: The Dream of a Beast and The Company of Wolves – The Fictitious Fulfilment of Oedipal Desires: Sunrise with Sea Monster – Troubles Never Come Singly: The Crying Game and Breakfast on Pluto – From the Page to the Screen: Interview with the Vampire, The Butcher Boy and The End of the Affair – Shade: A Beheaded Actress’s Narrative – Mistaken: Division, Duplication and Usurpation – A Necrophilic Romance: The Drowned Detective or the Magic Spell of the Cello – Through the Looking- Glass: The Marvellous World of Carnivalesque – "Drink, to the obliteration of all distinction!" and Sing The Ballad of Lord Edward and Citizen Small.

    Out of stock

    £36.00

  • Beyond Sustenance: An Exploration of Food and

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Beyond Sustenance: An Exploration of Food and

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis«An important contribution to understanding our culinary journey in Ireland from a time when food was regarded merely as sustenance. As a nation, we have grown in confidence. Up to relatively recently in Ireland, we had a serious inferiority complex and not just about our food and food culture. Brian documents through various prisms the growing pride in our tradition, the quality of our produce and the growing skills of our chefs. At last, we appreciate what we have here in Ireland and serve our Irish food proudly.» (Darina Allen, Ballymaloe Cookery School) Through concepts such as place and story, this work considers the cultural importance of the foods we eat and the drinks we imbibe in Irish society. While providing us with the necessary sustenance to survive, they also have something to say in terms of how we relate to each other and the world around us. The book examines the products we associate with gastronomy in Ireland and the uniquely Irish places in which they are consumed. Places considered include the Irish pub, the traditional Irish butcher shop and the Irish whiskey distillery. Both products and places are explored through the lens of terroir, experience and the impact of Third Place and Fourth Space paradigms. Though much of what is discussed here is anchored in the past, the book also examines how that past has impacted on more contemporary phenomena such as Irish café culture and social gastronomy. While the work is primarily focused on Ireland, it draws insights from lessons learned in countries like France that possess a widely renowned gastronomic legacy. In addition to the obvious food connections, the chapters in this work are all linked by a common thread of personal engagement that stems from a lifetime spent working in and around the food and drink sector.Table of ContentsContents: Beyond the Plate, Beyond the Glass – From Country of Origin to Irish Terroir: A Positioning of Place – A Hundred Thousand Welcomes: Food and Drink as Cultural Signifiers – Food, Wine, Art and Music – Places – Drinking Spaces in Strange Places – The Rural Irish Pub: From Beating Heart to Beaten Down and Back Again – The Traditional Irish Butcher Shop: Harnessing the Power of Patrimoine – The Whiskey Distillery: A Fourth Space Case Analysis – Products – Irish Single Pot Still Whiskey: Advertising in an Epicurean World – Cognac, Scotch and Irish: Lessons in Gastronomic Identity – French Wine: Exporting Gastronomic Identity Beyond Borders – Emerging Phenomena – Traditional Wine versus New Technology – From Penny Universities to Starbucks – From Soyer to Twenty-First-Century Social Gastronomy.

    Out of stock

    £31.50

  • The Great Pretenders: Genre, Form, and Style in

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers The Great Pretenders: Genre, Form, and Style in

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThis book focuses on the most successful feature films of John Carney, namely Once (2006), Begin Again (2013) and Sing Street (2016). Drawing on narrative, formalist and genre theories of film, the book presents an in-depth examination of how the formal and stylistic choices made by Carney allow each film to narrate a story in a coherent way. It shows how aural and visual contrivances are hidden behind a façade of realism, and how the films engage with universal, national and personal concerns and also how they relate to each other and to Irish and American film in general. It also explores the textual articulation of genre in each and the discrepancies between such articulation, the genre expectations set up by the promotional discourse coming from the publicity materials and events accompanying each release, and the genre labelling of each film in contemporary reviews by professional critics from the United States, Canada, Great Britain, and Ireland.Table of ContentsContents: Introduction – Once (2006): The Musical That Pretended It Was Not a Musical – Begin Again (2013): The Remake That Pretended It Was Not a Remake – Sing Street (2016): The Coming-of-Ager That Pretended It Was Just a Musical – Conclusion.

    Out of stock

    £36.00

  • Politic Words: Writing Women   Writing History

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Politic Words: Writing Women Writing History

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis«Politic Words is an invigorating mix of the personal, the political and the poetic. Gerry Dawe flings his net wide. From Eavan Boland’s ‘secret history’ of women to war memoirist Christabel Bielenberg’s luminous prose; from the vaulting ambition of Éilís Dillon’s historical fiction to hunger striker’s Bobby Sands’ favourite poet, the now unsung Ethna Carbery, he takes us on a bracing journey from the Troubles to Brexit. Drawing on contemporaneous criticism, Dawe revitalizes 35 years of cultural history into urgent news from the literary front.» (Mary Morrissy, Novelist and former associate director of the writing programme, University College Cork) Politic Words reflects five decades of writing about and discussing Irish literature, both inside the university classroom and in various literary and academic forums. Part one concentrates upon Irish women writers, their influence and example including Edna Longley, Eavan Boland and Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin alongside the achievements of younger contemporaries such as Lucy Caldwell and Leontia Flynn. Part two develops some of the historical settings and themes of part one while exploring the social and political legacies of traumatic Irish historical events such as the Great Famine, and its representation in the fiction of William Carleton and reimagined by later interpreters including Benedict Kiely. The collection concludes with a series of readings of Irish culture and politics in terms of the legacy of the Troubles, the impact on Ireland of Brexit and renewed calls for Irish reunification. Politic Words is the final part of a trilogy of studies by Gerald Dawe published by Peter Lang in their Reimagining Ireland series.Trade ReviewPolitic Words is an invigorating mix of the personal, the political and the poetic. Gerry Dawe flings his net wide. From Eavan Boland’s “secret history” of women to war memoirist Christabel Bielenberg’s luminous prose; from the vaulting ambition of Éilís Dillon’s historical fiction to hunger striker’s Bobby Sands’ favourite poet, the now unsung Ethna Carbery, he takes us on a bracing journey from the Troubles to Brexit. Drawing on contemporaneous criticism, Dawe revitalizes 35 years of cultural history into urgent news from the literary front. Mary MorrissyTable of ContentsContents: In the Wars: Edna Longley – Suburban Night: Eavan Boland – Exchanging Messages: Christabel Bielenberg – Ethna Carbery in H Block – Burned Countryside: Eavan Boland and Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin – Bashō, the River Moy and the Superser: Dorothy Molloy, Michelle O’Sullivan and Leontia Flynn – Native City: Geraldine Quigley and Lucy Caldwell – Lost and Found: Ethna MacCarthy – Politic Words: Eilís Dillon – Poor Scholar: Benedict Kiely – Carleton’s Address – A Real Life Elsewhere: Thomas Murphy and Thomas Kilroy – Post- colonial Confusions – A Bridge Too Far: Fintan O’Toole’s Brexit – A Nation Once Again? – Personal Epilogue.

    Out of stock

    £36.00

  • A ‘proper’ woman? One woman’s story of success

    Peter Lang International Academic Publishers A ‘proper’ woman? One woman’s story of success

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis«A fascinating, well-paced, beautifully written memoir.» (Professor Sarah Moore Fitzgerald, Author and Director, MA in Creative Writing, University of Limerick, Ireland) «A wonderfully honest, often witty, personal account from someone who experienced discrimination -and challenged it - at every level of academia. So much of what has changed for women in recent decades is chronicled through Pat’s life, research and actions. A tour de force.» (Micheline Sheehy Skeffington, plant ecologist and feminist activist) «This book evokes the lived experience of a woman who, out of her time, marshalled the brains, the courage and--I have to say it--the sheer bloody-minded and tireless determination to confront others with one question: ‘why?’. Asking the question came at no small personal cost, but--slowly and surely--it started to prise open some of the seemingly impenetrable male-centric power edifices that exist across academia; openings which now give so many others hope. Don’t be afraid of reading this book about the lifetime of someone who asked why, it may just inspire you to do the same.» (Paul Walton, Professor of Chemistry, University of York, UK and international gender equality advocate) This book, written by an insider, explores experiences over a 46-year career in five academic organisations in Ireland and the UK: moving from contract research assistant to full professor and line manager (Dean). Highlighting success and failure, strength and fragility, it challenges ideas about what it is to be a ‘proper' woman. It describes the subtle and relentless processes of devaluation, marginalisation and disempowerment that are often ‘normalised.’ Written in a clear accessible style, with flashes of humour, it asks whose interests are served by taken-for-granted ideas about what it is to be a woman – ideas which deny the reality of many women’s day-to-day experiences. Who wants us to think that all women find identity and satisfaction in housework and child care? Who wants us to think that universities are meritocratic institutions? The book will inspire and entertain all those who have struggled in any male-dominated organisation and wondered if they were the problem.Trade Review'a fascinating, well-paced, beautifully written memoir' (Professor Sarah Moore, Author and Director, MA in Creative Writing, University of Limerick, Ireland) ‘A wonderfully honest, often witty, personal account from someone who experienced discrimination -and challenged it - at every level of academia. So much of what has changed for women in recent decades is chronicled through Pat's life, research and actions. A tour de force’ (Micheline Sheehy Skeffington, plant ecologist and feminist activist) ‘This book evokes the lived experience of a woman who, out of her time, marshalled the brains, the courage and--I have to say it--the sheer bloody-minded and tireless determination to confront others with one question: 'why?'. Asking the question came at no small personal cost, but--slowly and surely--it started to prise open some of the seemingly impenetrable male-centric power edifices that exist across academia; openings which now give so many others hope. Don't be afraid of reading this book about the lifetime of someone who asked why, it may just inspire you to do the same’. (Paul Walton, Professor of Chemistry, University of York, UK and international gender equality advocate) An incredibly important and beautifully written account of perseverance and passion by one of the pioneers of research on gender in academia. In this book, Pat O’Connor continues to inspire new generations of feminist scholars and academic leaders with her honest and intimate story of her own gendered career path (Marieke van den Brink, Professor Gender & Diversity Studies, Radboud University, Nijmegen, the Netherlands) A ‘Proper’ Woman is a beautiful, beautifully grounded, and often moving and inspiring, text – combining (auto)biography, life writing, life story, story-telling, an accounting of a career, and a case study of a woman, and women, in and around the university world, and beyond. The book contributes to and across several areas, including Studies of Higher Education, Gender Studies, and Critical Studies on Men and Masculinities; it has been a personal privilege to read it (Jeff Hearn, Hanken School of Economics, Finland; author of: Age at Work; Knowledge, Power and Young Sexualities; and Men of the World).Table of ContentsContents: Like Dolmens round my childhood … sometimes – Making and not making choices – Coming home – Success? – Ten years in Management – Back to being a full- time professor again … – Reflections.

    Out of stock

    £23.75

  • John McGahern and the Art of Memory

    Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften John McGahern and the Art of Memory

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisIn 2005, when John McGahern published his Memoir, he revealed for the first time in explicit detail the specific nature of the autobiographical dimension of his fiction, a dimension he had hitherto either denied or mystified. Taking Memoir as a paradigmatic work of memory, confession, and imaginative recovery, this book is a close reading of McGahern’s novels that discovers his narrative poiēsis in both the fiction and the memoir to be a single, continuous, and coherent mythopoeic project concealed within the career of a novelist writing ostensibly in the realist tradition of modern Irish fiction. McGahern’s total body of work centres around the experiences of loss, memory, and imaginative recovery. To read his fiction as an art of memory is to recognize how he used story-telling to confront the extended grief and anger that blighted his early life and that shaped his sense of self and world. It is also to understand how he gradually, painfully and honestly wrote his way out of the darkness and despair of the early work into the luminous celebration of life and the world in his great last novel That They May Face the Rising Sun.Table of ContentsContents: John McGahern and the Art of Memory – Orpheus Triumphant - Recovering the Lost Beloved: Memoir – Reflections of the One Thing: The Barracks – In the Name of the Father: The Dark – Breaking the Moulds - Part I: The Leavetaking – Breaking the Moulds - Part II: The Pornographer – The End of Father History: Amongst Women – The Completed Circle: That They May Face the Rising Sun.

    Out of stock

    £49.05

  • Sons of Ulster: Masculinities in the Contemporary

    Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften Sons of Ulster: Masculinities in the Contemporary

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisBoth masculinity and the Northern Irish conflict have been the subjects of a great deal of recent scholarship, yet there is a dearth of material on Northern Irish masculinity. Northern Ireland has a remarkable literary output relative to its population, but the focus of critical attention has been on poetry rather than the fine novels that have been written in and about Ulster. This book goes some way towards remedying the deficiency in critical attention to the Northern Irish novel and the lack of gendered approaches to Northern Irish literature and society. Sons of Ulster explores the representation of masculinity within a number of Northern Irish novels written since the mid-1990s, focusing on works by Eoin McNamee, Glenn Patterson and Robert McLiam Wilson. One of the key aims of the book is to disrupt notions of a hegemonic Northern Irish masculinity based on violent conflict and hyper-masculine sectarian rhetoric. The author uses the three sections of the text to represent the three key facets of Northern Irish masculinity: bodies, performances and subjectivity bound up with violence.Table of ContentsContents: The Grotesque Feminine in the Northern Irish Imagination – The Problem of Gender and Vision in Northern Ireland – The Body Abject in Ripley Bogle – The Hermeneutics of the Tortured Body in Resurrection Man – Self Reflexivity and Performativity in Eureka Street and Ripley Bogle – Postmodern ‘Hard Men’ in the Novels of Jason Johnson and Eoin McNamee – Homophobia and the Homoerotic in Northern Irish Fiction – Patriarchy, Masculinity and Fatherhood – Problematising Male Violence in the Northern Irish Novel – Military Violence in Northern Ireland – Masculinity and Victimhood – The Battle for Hegemonic Masculinity in Transitional Northern Ireland – Appendices: Interviews on Masculinity with Robert McLiam Wilson, Glenn Patterson and Eoin McNamee.

    Out of stock

    £34.92

  • Back to the Future of Irish Studies: Festschrift

    Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften Back to the Future of Irish Studies: Festschrift

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThis Festschrift for Professor Tadhg Foley of the National University of Ireland, Galway, who retired in 2009, gathers together international contributors in the fields of poetry, politics and academia to honour this great man’s life and work. Professor Foley has not only been central in the development of Irish Studies and Colonial/Postcolonial Studies in Ireland and in the United States, but he has also enjoyed a long career as convivial host in his thatched cottage in Salthill, Galway. He remains one of the most popular and beloved figures in Irish academia. Among the eminent scholars included in the volume are Terry Eagleton, Robert Young, Penny Boumelha, David Lloyd, Luke Gibbons, Joep Leerssen and Maud Ellmann. The book is further enriched by poets Bernard O’Donoghue, Louis de Paor, Rita Ann Higgins, Michael D. Higgins and Tom Duddy. This collection is a rare and distinctive gathering of true and resonant voices, offering a unique portrait of late twentieth-century Irish literary and academic culture and its interplay with the United States.Table of ContentsContents: Maureen O’Connor: Introduction – Robert J.C. Young: Walking Westward – Penny Boumelha: The Leaving of Wessex: Thomas Hardy’s Emigrants – David Lloyd: Nomadic Figures: The ‘Rhetorical Excess’ of Irishness in Political Economy – Luke Gibbons: Roots of Modernity: Primitivism and Primitive Accumulation in Nineteenth-Century Ireland – Gordon Bigelow: Economy and Ascendancy in Nineteenth-Century Ireland – Ciara Boylan/Tom Boylan: The Art and Science of Political Economy: Nassau Senior and Ireland in the 1830s – Joep Leerssen: Some Notes on Hutcheson Macauley Posnett (1855-1927) – Michael Foley: From Bruff to the Balkans: James David Bourchier – Niamh O’Sullivan: Reading between the Lines – Helen O’Shea: The World, the Music, and the Critic: Some Thoughts on Said’s Musical Transgressions – Maud Ellmann: Noses and Monotheism – James H. Murphy: ‘Disgusted by the Details’: Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and the Dublin Castle Scandals of 1884 – Asier Altuna-García de Salazar: The Stage-Irishman Represented through Spain: The Castle of Andalusia (1782) by John O’Keeffe (1744-1833) – Robert Tracy: Waking the Dead: Brian Friel’s Post Mortems – James P. Walsh: Tadhg, Let’s Change the Subject – Rebecca Pelan: Hardy Women and Titanic Struggles – Tom Moylan: Irish Voyages and Visions: Pre-figuring, Re-configuring Utopia – Terry Eagleton: Revolution and Remembrance – Tom Duddy: One Summer – Michael D. Higgins: Of Possibility – Rita Ann Higgins: I’ll Have to Stop Thinking about Sex – Bernard O’Donoghue: Mere Planter and Fíor-Ghael – Louis de Paor: An Nuacht (Athchraoladh) – Louis de Paor: News Headlines (Repeat Broadcast) – Maureen O’Connor: Biographical Note – Anuradha Dingwaney Needham/Lawrence Needham: For Tadhg – Gabriela M. Steinke: Des Temps Perdus.

    Out of stock

    £43.38

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