A nation and not a rabble : the Irish revolution, 1913-1923 /
Renowned Irish historian Diarmaid Ferriter presents a new look at the Irish revolutionary period from 1913-1923, drawing from newly available historical sources as well as the testimonies of the people who lived and fought through this extraordinary period. Packed with violence, political drama and...
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| Format: | Book |
| Language: | English |
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New York :
Overlook Press,
2015.
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Table of Contents:
- Part I. In search of the rabble
- Opening the witness accounts
- Who owned the revolution?
- The history wars
- The fighting stories
- Closing young minds?
- Keepers of the revolutionary flame
- Broadening the interpretations and the sources
- New scepticisms, new revisions and the shadow of the Troubles
- Labour, gender and the social perspective
- The politics of peace and the twenty-first century perspective
- Part II. Revolutionary Ireland, 1913-23
- An evolving nationalism
- Ulster prepared with one voice? : 1910-14
- Labour, nationalism and war : 1913-16
- 1916 : an idea "essentially spiritual"?
- The perfect patriots
- 1917-18 : bonfires and ballots
- War of Independence (1): 1919-20 : catching the waves
- The chivalrous soldier and the cruel killer
- Governing, social realities and justice
- Land for the people?
- War of Independence (2): 1921-2 : the juggernaut of politics
- Truce and treaty
- The drift to civil war
- Civil war
- Stone hearts
- Ulster's wounded self-love
- The tyranny of the "special"
- Part III. Legacy and commemoration
- "In danger of finding myself with nothing at all"
- "For the life of my heroic son"
- Homes fit for heroes?
- Scrambling for the bones of the patriot dead
- "He knew as much about commanding as my dog"
- Commemoration during the troubles and the peace process
- Remembering the First World War and welcoming the Queen
- Invoking revolutionary ghosts as the Celtic tiger dies and Fianna Fáil collapses
- New commemorative priorities, sacred cows and the status of history 397.