Description

Book Synopsis
The essays in this collection all revolve around the notion of change in Ireland, whether by revolution or by evolution. Developments in the shared histories of Ireland and Great Britain are an important theme throughout the book. The volume begins by examining two remarkable Irishmen on the make in Georgian London: the boxing historian Pierce Egan and the extraordinary Charles Macklin, eighteenth-century actor, playwright and manslaughterer. The focus then moves to aspects of Hibernian influence and the presence of the Irish Diaspora in Great Britain from the medieval period up to the late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century celebrations of St Patrick’s Day in Manchester. The book also considers the very different attitudes to the British Empire evident in the career of the 1916 rebel Sir Roger Casement and the Victorian philologist and colonial servant Whitley Stokes. Further essays look at writings by Scottish Marxists on the state of Ireland in the 1920s and the pronouncements on the Troubles by John Lennon and Paul McCartney.
The book also examines change in the culture of the island of Ireland, from the development of the Irish historical novel in the nineteenth century, to ecology in contemporary Irish women’s poetry, to the present state of the Roman Catholic Church in Ireland. Contemporary Irish authors examined include Roddy Doyle, Joseph O’Connor and Martin McDonagh.

Table of Contents
Contents: Michael O’Neill: Foreword – Alison O’Malley-Younger/John Strachan: Introduction – John Strachan: Pierce Egan, West Briton – Alison O’Malley-Younger: ‘Oh Horrible! An Irish Man’: Macklin, Friel and the Politics of Mimicry – Paul Younger: Bryneich - Rìoghachd Ghàidhealach: The Gaelic Foundations of the Golden Age of Northumbria – Mervyn Busteed: ‘Plentiful Libations of Whisky, Perfervid Irish Oratory and Some Religious Sentiment’: Celebrating St Patrick’s Day in Manchester, 1825-1922 – Elizabeth Boyle: Whitley Stokes’s Immram: Evolution, Ireland and Empire – Willy Maley: ‘Their Song Is Over’ (and Other Familiar Refrains): Irish Revolutions, Gyrations and Ululations from Lenin to Lennon – Patrick Maume: Respectability against Ascendancy: The Banim Brothers and the Invention of the Irish Catholic Middle-Class Novel in the Age of O’Connell – Catherine Rees: Theatrical Representations of Easter 1916 and Sir Roger Casement: Flags, Walls and Cats – Sylvie Mikowski: Reimagining the Irish Historical Novel in Roddy Doyle’s A Star Called Henry and Joseph O’Connor’s Star of the Sea – Lucy Collins: Clearing the Air: Irish Women Poets and Environmental Change – Eamon Maher: Contemporary Irish Catholicism: Revolution or Evolution?

Ireland: Revolution and Evolution

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    A Paperback / softback by John Strachan, Alison O'Malley-Younger

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      View other formats and editions of Ireland: Revolution and Evolution by John Strachan

      Publisher: Verlag Peter Lang
      Publication Date: 07/12/2009
      ISBN13: 9783039118816, 978-3039118816
      ISBN10: 3039118811

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The essays in this collection all revolve around the notion of change in Ireland, whether by revolution or by evolution. Developments in the shared histories of Ireland and Great Britain are an important theme throughout the book. The volume begins by examining two remarkable Irishmen on the make in Georgian London: the boxing historian Pierce Egan and the extraordinary Charles Macklin, eighteenth-century actor, playwright and manslaughterer. The focus then moves to aspects of Hibernian influence and the presence of the Irish Diaspora in Great Britain from the medieval period up to the late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century celebrations of St Patrick’s Day in Manchester. The book also considers the very different attitudes to the British Empire evident in the career of the 1916 rebel Sir Roger Casement and the Victorian philologist and colonial servant Whitley Stokes. Further essays look at writings by Scottish Marxists on the state of Ireland in the 1920s and the pronouncements on the Troubles by John Lennon and Paul McCartney.
      The book also examines change in the culture of the island of Ireland, from the development of the Irish historical novel in the nineteenth century, to ecology in contemporary Irish women’s poetry, to the present state of the Roman Catholic Church in Ireland. Contemporary Irish authors examined include Roddy Doyle, Joseph O’Connor and Martin McDonagh.

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Michael O’Neill: Foreword – Alison O’Malley-Younger/John Strachan: Introduction – John Strachan: Pierce Egan, West Briton – Alison O’Malley-Younger: ‘Oh Horrible! An Irish Man’: Macklin, Friel and the Politics of Mimicry – Paul Younger: Bryneich - Rìoghachd Ghàidhealach: The Gaelic Foundations of the Golden Age of Northumbria – Mervyn Busteed: ‘Plentiful Libations of Whisky, Perfervid Irish Oratory and Some Religious Sentiment’: Celebrating St Patrick’s Day in Manchester, 1825-1922 – Elizabeth Boyle: Whitley Stokes’s Immram: Evolution, Ireland and Empire – Willy Maley: ‘Their Song Is Over’ (and Other Familiar Refrains): Irish Revolutions, Gyrations and Ululations from Lenin to Lennon – Patrick Maume: Respectability against Ascendancy: The Banim Brothers and the Invention of the Irish Catholic Middle-Class Novel in the Age of O’Connell – Catherine Rees: Theatrical Representations of Easter 1916 and Sir Roger Casement: Flags, Walls and Cats – Sylvie Mikowski: Reimagining the Irish Historical Novel in Roddy Doyle’s A Star Called Henry and Joseph O’Connor’s Star of the Sea – Lucy Collins: Clearing the Air: Irish Women Poets and Environmental Change – Eamon Maher: Contemporary Irish Catholicism: Revolution or Evolution?

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