Description

Book Synopsis
Examines the Celtic Tiger, the once much-vaunted Irish economic phenomenon, and the subsequent financial disaster, from a socio-cultural perspective -- .

Trade Review
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 Contents

Introduction – Eamon Maher and Eugene O’Brien
1. Crisis, what crisis? The Catholic Church during the Celtic Tiger – Eamon Maher
2. The Celtic Tiger and the new Irish religious market – Catherine Maignant
3. Shattered assumptions: a tale of two traumas – Brendan O’Brien
4.‘Tendency–Wit’: the cultural unconscious of the Celtic Tiger in the writings of Paul Howard – Eugene O’Brien
5. Popular music and the Celtic Tiger – Gerry Smyth
6. ‘What does a woman want?’: Irish contemporary women’s fiction and the expression of desire in an era of plenty – Sylvie Mikowski
7. Topographies of terror: photography and the post-Celtic Tiger landscape – Justin Carville
8. Immigration and Celtic Tiger – Bryan Fanning
9. ‘What Rough Beast’? Monsters of post-Celtic Tiger Ireland – Kieran Keohane and Carmen Kuhling
10. Women, fictional messages and a crucial decade – Mary Pierse
11. ‘A hundred thousand welcomes’: food and wine as cultural signifiers – Brian Murphy
12. Contemporary Irish fiction and the Indirect Gaze – Neil Murphy
13 ‘Holes in the Ground’: theatre as critic and conscience of Celtic Tiger Ireland – Vic Merriman
14. ‘Ship of Fools’: The Celtic Tiger and poetry as social critique – Eóin Flannery
15. Between modernity and marginality: Celtic Tiger cinema – Ruth Barton
Conclusion
Index

From Prosperity to Austerity

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A Hardback by Eamon Maher, Eugene O'Brien

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    View other formats and editions of From Prosperity to Austerity by Eamon Maher

    Publisher: Manchester University Press
    Publication Date: 31/07/2014
    ISBN13: 9780719091674, 978-0719091674
    ISBN10: 719091675

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Examines the Celtic Tiger, the once much-vaunted Irish economic phenomenon, and the subsequent financial disaster, from a socio-cultural perspective -- .

    Trade Review
    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 Contents

    Introduction – Eamon Maher and Eugene O’Brien
    1. Crisis, what crisis? The Catholic Church during the Celtic Tiger – Eamon Maher
    2. The Celtic Tiger and the new Irish religious market – Catherine Maignant
    3. Shattered assumptions: a tale of two traumas – Brendan O’Brien
    4.‘Tendency–Wit’: the cultural unconscious of the Celtic Tiger in the writings of Paul Howard – Eugene O’Brien
    5. Popular music and the Celtic Tiger – Gerry Smyth
    6. ‘What does a woman want?’: Irish contemporary women’s fiction and the expression of desire in an era of plenty – Sylvie Mikowski
    7. Topographies of terror: photography and the post-Celtic Tiger landscape – Justin Carville
    8. Immigration and Celtic Tiger – Bryan Fanning
    9. ‘What Rough Beast’? Monsters of post-Celtic Tiger Ireland – Kieran Keohane and Carmen Kuhling
    10. Women, fictional messages and a crucial decade – Mary Pierse
    11. ‘A hundred thousand welcomes’: food and wine as cultural signifiers – Brian Murphy
    12. Contemporary Irish fiction and the Indirect Gaze – Neil Murphy
    13 ‘Holes in the Ground’: theatre as critic and conscience of Celtic Tiger Ireland – Vic Merriman
    14. ‘Ship of Fools’: The Celtic Tiger and poetry as social critique – Eóin Flannery
    15. Between modernity and marginality: Celtic Tiger cinema – Ruth Barton
    Conclusion
    Index

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