From the Treaty to the present

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From the Treaty to the present

(Ireland and Anglo-Irish relations since 1800 : critical essays / edited by N.C. Fleming and Alan O'Day, v. 3)

Ashgate, c2008

Available at  / 6 libraries

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Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This landmark series of three volumes brings together selected essays from leading and specialist journals that have made a significant or original contribution to Irish historiography. The purpose of the volumes is to make these thoughtful contributions readily accessible to scholars and students. The three volumes cover key time periods, 'The Union to the Land War' (volume 1), 'Parnell and his legacy to the Treaty' (volume 2), and 'From the Treaty to the present' (volume 3). Each volume contains a range of articles reappraising the major political themes of the period, but also offering new interpretations on social, economic, cultural and religious history, as well as women's history and historical geography. Introductions in each volume explain the specific and wider significance of the articles.

Table of Contents

  • Series preface
  • Introduction, Vol III
  • Part I Partition, the Treaty and Civil war: The Irish Free State passport and the question of citizenship, 1921-4, Joseph P. O'Grady
  • The Irish civil war, 1922-1923, Brian P. Murphy
  • The Catholic Church and partition, 1918-22, O.P. Rafferty.
  • Part II Establishing Irish Free State, 1922-1932: The politics of reaction: the dynamics of Treatyite government and policy, 1922-33, John M. Regan
  • The Irish Free State and the League of Nations, 1922-32, Michael Kennedy
  • The construction and destruction of a colonial landscape: monuments to British monarchs in Dublin before and after independence, Y. Whelan.
  • Part III The Age of Eamon De Valera, 1932-1948: Final exit? Britain, Eire, the Commonwealth and the repeal of the External Relations Act, 1945-1949, D.W. Dean
  • 'Putting new wine into old bottles': the Irish Right and the embrace of European social thinking in the early 1930s, Mike Cronin
  • 'Burn everything British but their coal': the Anglo-Irish economic war of the 1930s, Kevin H. O'Rourke
  • Dublin slums in the 1930s, Frank Murphy
  • The Blueshirts and the 'economic war': a study of Ireland in the context of dependency theory, Andrew W. Orridge
  • Pariah dogs: deserters from the Irish defence forces who joined the British armed forces during 'the emergency', Liam Canny
  • Catholic action and the development of the Irish welfare state in the 1930s and 1940s, Adrian Kelly.
  • Part IV Northern Ireland, 1920-1968: 'Protestantism before Party!': the Ulster Protestant League in the 1930s, Graham Walker
  • Creating jobs, manufacturing unity: Ulster Unionism and mass unemployment, 1922-34, Christopher Norton
  • Lord Londonderry and education reform in 1920s Northern Ireland, Neil C. Fleming
  • Northern Ireland and British Fascism in the inter-war years, James Loughlin
  • Cultivating their own garden: broadcasting and culture in Northern ireland in the 1930s and 1940s, Gillian McIntosh
  • Belfast republicanism in the 30s: the oral evidence, Bill Rolston and Ronnie Munck.
  • Part V Ireland Since 1949: Ireland and the Marshall plan, Bernadette Whelan
  • Gender and voter appeal in Irish elections, 1948-1997, Michael O'Kelly
  • Changes in population and the extent of the built up area of the Dublin City region, 1936-1988, Arnold Horner.
  • Part VI Northern Ireland Since 1968: Acts of union: youth, sub-culture and ethnic identity amongst Protestants in Northern Ireland, Desmond Bell
  • Northern Irish nationalist political culture, Jennifer Todd
  • 'This is not a rebel song': the Irish conflict and popular music, Bill Rolston
  • From Sunningdale to the Good Friday Agreement: creating devolved government in Northern Ireland, Jonathan Tonge.
  • Part VII Women: Surveying politics of peace, gender, conflict, and identity in Northern Ireland: the case of the Derry Peace Women in 1972, Marie Hammond Callaghan
  • The hidden history of the PFIs: the repatriation of unmarried mothers and their children from England to Ireland in the 1950s and 1960s, Paul Michael Garrett
  • Women and the Irish Free State, 1922-1939: the interaction between economics and ideology, Mary E. Daly
  • Index.

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Details

  • NCID
    BA87572878
  • ISBN
    • 9780754627814
  • Country Code
    uk
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Aldershot
  • Pages/Volumes
    lxiv, 515 p.
  • Size
    26 cm
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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