Description

Book Synopsis
The study of crime and violence in all its multifarious forms remains one of the most productive areas of enquiry for Irish historians. Considered an inordinately violent and unruly society by many contemporaries, nineteenth-century Ireland was notorious for sectarian unrest, agrarian disorder, alcohol-fuelled casual fighting, the seditious activities of various illegal underground organisations, as well as a host of other ‘outrages’. The image of an Ireland in an almost perpetual state of tumult during the nineteenth century, however, is a false one, invariably pedalled by partisan observers with a particular political or religious agenda to satisfy. Modern historical scholarship has corrected many lingering assumptions about the extent and character of Irish violence, but much work remains to be done. This important collection of essays, based on original research delivered at one of the Society for the Study of Nineteenth-Century Ireland’s most successful annual conferences, draws together some of Ireland’s leading historians as well emerging talents to examine a broad range of topics under the banner of crime and violence. Irish secret societies, agrarian disorder, security and the law, sectarian violence, and a host of similar topics benefit from innovative methodological perspectives and advanced historical scholarship. List of contributors: Kyle Hughes, Donald M. MacRaild, Michael Huggins, Terence M. Dunne, Jess Lumsden Fisher, John McGrath, Richard J. Butler, Colin W. Reid, Richard A. Keogh, Ciara Breathnach, Laurence M. Geary, Ian d’Alton, Daragh Curran, Gemma Clark, Patrick Maume, Teresa O’Donnell and Virginia Crossman.

Trade Review
'An important and valuable collection.'
Dr. Richard Mc Mahon, Assistant Professor of History, Trinity College Dublin
'A thought-provoking collection by scholars who you sense really care about the topics they study.'
Books Ireland
Reviews 'An insightful, thought-provoking and valuable addition to the existing historiography of crime and violence in nineteenth-century Ireland.’
Regina Donlon, Irish Literary Supplement
'Delivers a detailed texture of crime, crime control, and everyday life... their attention to local, everyday contexts promotes an understanding of crime, criminals, and justice rooted in historical empathy for their subjects. That approach makes for good history.'
William Meier, Victorian Studies
'While it is impossible in a short review to do full justice to the many essays in this volume... This is an important addition to the study of crime and violence in Ireland in the nineteenth century and is highly recommended to scholars and students who are interested in the subject.'
Brian Griffin, Irish Studies Review

Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
List of Contributors

Introduction: Crime, Violence, and the Irish in the Nineteenth Century; Themes and Perspectives
Kyle Hughes and Donald M. MacRaild

Section 1 ‘Secret Societies’ and Collective Violence
1 Whiteboys and Ribbonmen: What’s in a Name?
Michael Huggins
2 The Law of Captain Rock
Terence M. Dunne
3 ‘Night Marauders’ and ‘Deluded Wretches’: Public Discourses on Ribbonism in Pre-Famine Ireland
Jess Lumsden Fisher
4 Organised Labour in Limerick City, 1819–1821: Violence and the Struggle for Legitimacy
John McGrath

Section 2 The Law and its Responses
5 Cork’s Courthouses, the Landed Elite, and the Rockite Rebellion: Architectural Responses to Agrarian Violence, 1820–1827
Richard J. Butler
6 Constitutional Rhetoric as Legal Defence: Irish Lawyers and the Languages of Political Dissent in 1848
Colin W. Reid
7 ‘Why, it’s like a ’98 trial’: The Irish Judiciary and the Fenian Trials, 1865–1866
Richard A. Keogh
8 Crime and Punishment: Whiteboyism and the Law in Late Nineteenth-Century Ireland
Ciara Breathnach and Laurence M. Geary

Section 3 Sectarianism and Violence
9 From Bandon to … Bandon: Sectarian Violence in Cork during the Nineteenth Century
Ian d’Alton
10 ‘Loyal to the Crown but not the Crown’s Government’: The Challenge to Policing Posed by the Orange Order in 1830s Ulster
Daragh Curran

Section 4 Manifestations of Crime and Violence
11 Arson in Modern Ireland: Fire and Protest before the Famine
Gemma Clark
12 The Head Pacificator and Captain Rock: Sedition, Suicide, and Honest Tom Steele
Patrick Maume
13 ‘Skin the Goat’s Curse’ on James Carey: Narrating the Story of the Phoenix Park Murders through Contemporary Broadside Ballads
Teresa O’Donnell
14 Attitudes and Responses to Vagrancy in Ireland in the Long Nineteenth Century
Virginia Crossman

Index

Crime, Violence and the Irish in the Nineteenth

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    A Hardback by Kyle Hughes, Professor Donald MacRaild

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      View other formats and editions of Crime, Violence and the Irish in the Nineteenth by Kyle Hughes

      Publisher: Liverpool University Press
      Publication Date: 31/10/2017
      ISBN13: 9781786940650, 978-1786940650
      ISBN10: 1786940655

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The study of crime and violence in all its multifarious forms remains one of the most productive areas of enquiry for Irish historians. Considered an inordinately violent and unruly society by many contemporaries, nineteenth-century Ireland was notorious for sectarian unrest, agrarian disorder, alcohol-fuelled casual fighting, the seditious activities of various illegal underground organisations, as well as a host of other ‘outrages’. The image of an Ireland in an almost perpetual state of tumult during the nineteenth century, however, is a false one, invariably pedalled by partisan observers with a particular political or religious agenda to satisfy. Modern historical scholarship has corrected many lingering assumptions about the extent and character of Irish violence, but much work remains to be done. This important collection of essays, based on original research delivered at one of the Society for the Study of Nineteenth-Century Ireland’s most successful annual conferences, draws together some of Ireland’s leading historians as well emerging talents to examine a broad range of topics under the banner of crime and violence. Irish secret societies, agrarian disorder, security and the law, sectarian violence, and a host of similar topics benefit from innovative methodological perspectives and advanced historical scholarship. List of contributors: Kyle Hughes, Donald M. MacRaild, Michael Huggins, Terence M. Dunne, Jess Lumsden Fisher, John McGrath, Richard J. Butler, Colin W. Reid, Richard A. Keogh, Ciara Breathnach, Laurence M. Geary, Ian d’Alton, Daragh Curran, Gemma Clark, Patrick Maume, Teresa O’Donnell and Virginia Crossman.

      Trade Review
      'An important and valuable collection.'
      Dr. Richard Mc Mahon, Assistant Professor of History, Trinity College Dublin
      'A thought-provoking collection by scholars who you sense really care about the topics they study.'
      Books Ireland
      Reviews 'An insightful, thought-provoking and valuable addition to the existing historiography of crime and violence in nineteenth-century Ireland.’
      Regina Donlon, Irish Literary Supplement
      'Delivers a detailed texture of crime, crime control, and everyday life... their attention to local, everyday contexts promotes an understanding of crime, criminals, and justice rooted in historical empathy for their subjects. That approach makes for good history.'
      William Meier, Victorian Studies
      'While it is impossible in a short review to do full justice to the many essays in this volume... This is an important addition to the study of crime and violence in Ireland in the nineteenth century and is highly recommended to scholars and students who are interested in the subject.'
      Brian Griffin, Irish Studies Review

      Table of Contents
      List of Illustrations
      List of Contributors

      Introduction: Crime, Violence, and the Irish in the Nineteenth Century; Themes and Perspectives
      Kyle Hughes and Donald M. MacRaild

      Section 1 ‘Secret Societies’ and Collective Violence
      1 Whiteboys and Ribbonmen: What’s in a Name?
      Michael Huggins
      2 The Law of Captain Rock
      Terence M. Dunne
      3 ‘Night Marauders’ and ‘Deluded Wretches’: Public Discourses on Ribbonism in Pre-Famine Ireland
      Jess Lumsden Fisher
      4 Organised Labour in Limerick City, 1819–1821: Violence and the Struggle for Legitimacy
      John McGrath

      Section 2 The Law and its Responses
      5 Cork’s Courthouses, the Landed Elite, and the Rockite Rebellion: Architectural Responses to Agrarian Violence, 1820–1827
      Richard J. Butler
      6 Constitutional Rhetoric as Legal Defence: Irish Lawyers and the Languages of Political Dissent in 1848
      Colin W. Reid
      7 ‘Why, it’s like a ’98 trial’: The Irish Judiciary and the Fenian Trials, 1865–1866
      Richard A. Keogh
      8 Crime and Punishment: Whiteboyism and the Law in Late Nineteenth-Century Ireland
      Ciara Breathnach and Laurence M. Geary

      Section 3 Sectarianism and Violence
      9 From Bandon to … Bandon: Sectarian Violence in Cork during the Nineteenth Century
      Ian d’Alton
      10 ‘Loyal to the Crown but not the Crown’s Government’: The Challenge to Policing Posed by the Orange Order in 1830s Ulster
      Daragh Curran

      Section 4 Manifestations of Crime and Violence
      11 Arson in Modern Ireland: Fire and Protest before the Famine
      Gemma Clark
      12 The Head Pacificator and Captain Rock: Sedition, Suicide, and Honest Tom Steele
      Patrick Maume
      13 ‘Skin the Goat’s Curse’ on James Carey: Narrating the Story of the Phoenix Park Murders through Contemporary Broadside Ballads
      Teresa O’Donnell
      14 Attitudes and Responses to Vagrancy in Ireland in the Long Nineteenth Century
      Virginia Crossman

      Index

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