A history of the media in Ireland

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

A history of the media in Ireland

Christopher Morash

Cambridge University Press, 2010

  • : hardback

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 231-235

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

From the first book printed in Ireland in the sixteenth century, to the globalised digital media culture of today, Christopher Morash traces the history of forms of communication in Ireland over the past four centuries: the vigorous newspaper and pamphlet culture of the eighteenth century, the spread of popular literacy in the nineteenth century, and the impact of the telegraph, telephone, phonograph, cinema and radio, which arrived in Ireland just as the Irish Free State came into being. Morash picks out specific events for detailed analysis, such as the first radio broadcast, during the 1916 Rising, or the Live Aid concert in 1985. This book breaks ground within Irish studies. Its accessible narrative explains how Ireland developed into the modern, globally interconnected, economy of today. This is an essential and hugely informative read for anyone interested in Irish cultural history.

Table of Contents

  • Chronology
  • 1. Stumpeworne letters: 1551-1660
  • Media event 1: bloudy newes from Ireland 23 October, 1641
  • 2. Public spirits: 1660-1800
  • Media event 2: postroads to liberty: January 22, 1793
  • 3. Acts of union: 1800-90
  • Media event 3: Parnellism and crime: April 18, 1887
  • 4. Casual miracles: 1890-1916
  • Media event 4: broadcasting the rising: April 24, 1916
  • 5. Listening in: 1921-60
  • Media event 5: helpless before the camera's eye: 5 October, 1968
  • 6. 1961-90: windows on the world
  • Media event 6: with satellite television you can go anywhere: 13 July, 1985
  • 7. Since 1990: digitised
  • Conclusion: imagining a mediated Ireland
  • Bibliographic essay
  • Index.

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