Conscription, US Intervention and the Transformation of Ireland 1914-1918: Divergent Destinies
Autor Emmanuel Destenayen Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 oct 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350266599
ISBN-10: 1350266590
Pagini: 272
Ilustrații: 16 bw illus, 3 maps
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350266590
Pagini: 272
Ilustrații: 16 bw illus, 3 maps
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Situates the radicalisation of nationalist populations in Ireland in relation to fears of conscription
Notă biografică
Emmanuel Destenay is Associate Researcher at Sorbonne University, France.
Cuprins
List of illustrations Preface Acknowledgements Note on Translation Biography of France's Representatives Introduction Echoes of Sarajevo Conventional narratives Plea for a new historiography of the Irish Revolution Diplomatic sources and French narratives 1 Political Crisis, British Intentions and WartimeUncertainties (January 1913-March 1916) Home Rule and Ulster Unionism: the impossible settlement War breaks out: Asquith's strategy, recruitment, and the leapinto the unknown A distant war: propaganda and the war economy Laissez-fairepolicy and French concerns Conclusion 2 Was the Rebellion a Turning Point? (April 1916-October 1916) Allegiance and opportunities: US neutrality and thepreparation for an insurrection Rebellion, reactions and extrapolations? Aftermath and executions: the transformation of Ireland? Partition: ongoing deadlock and critical solutions Procrastination and the end of the old administrative regime Conclusion 3 All Changed, Changed Quietly (October 1916-March 1917) October 1916 and the threat of conscription Opposing conscription, supporting Redmond The decline in recruitment The North-Roscommon by-election: the twilight of Sinn Féin Conclusion 4 Resisting Conscription, Redefining Ireland(March 1917-October 1917) March 1917: the Home Rule controversy Re-organizingSinn Féin: towards the Árd Fheis The South Longford by-election:the men of Easter Weeksaved your sons from conscription Tightening the grip: the East-Clare election The Kilkenny by-electionÁrd Fheis: the Sinn Féin Convention in October 1917 The shifting position of the Roman Catholic clergy The growing number of Sinn Féin sympathizers Conclusion 5 The Wartime Internationalization of the Irish question(April 1917-March 1918) US intervention: a blow to the separatist movement? Colonel House and Ireland The April 1917 Irish Convention: a 'flat failure' or a'political camouflage'? British procrastination From fear of another black '47 to fear of conscription(January-March 1918) Unholy alliances, survival, and despair The goal of the Peace Conference takes hold Conclusion 6 Conscription, Betrayal and the Agony of the IrishParliamentary Party (April 1918) From the Ulster 'conscription cry' to the German offensive Heated debates and some revelations A stab in the back of the dead man: a second executionof dead heroes 'The miracle has been performed' Preparing the fight here and abroad An unpopular move among the British authorities in Ireland Conscription: a counter-Wilsonian move? Conclusion 7 Endgame (May 1918-December 1918) The German plot On the road to victory: summer 1918 December 1918: the triumph of the Internationalists Conclusion Epilogue How the Great War transformed Ireland Diverging destinies National minorities, post-warorder and disillusions Bibliography Index
Recenzii
More importantly, we will have to wait for a final verdict on Destenay's most ambitious claim: that despite the Easter Rising's status as a national foundation myth, it was the threat of conscription, not Easter Week 1916, that "decisively redirected the course of Irish history". Whatever the final results of the debate on that claim might be, this is a book that scholars of the critical period from 1914 to 1918 will find indispensable.
Emmanuel Destenay has rendered a singular service to Irish historiography by reminding us of the importance of the fear of conscription in Ireland during the last two years of the Great War ... This is a thoughtful and precisely argued work, based on an impressively wide range of sources, and it repays careful reading.
For a period that had already been well covered in the literature, credit is due to those scholars who have attempted to find new interpretations of events so well known. Among those scholars is Emmanuel Destenay, whose writings over the past several years have cast a revealing light on the significance of the First World War for Irish domestic politics during the revolutionary period . Those with an interest in better understanding the Irish revolution would be well served by reading what Emmanuel Destenay has written in this book.
Emmanuel Destenay's book undeniably questions the traditional historiography of the Irish revolution and the role of Easter Week 1916.
Emmanuel Destenay takes a fresh look at the rise of Sinn Fein ... A French historian, the author casts doubt on the argument that the Easter Rising of 1916 and Britain's lethal revenge against its leaders were the engine behind Sinn Fein's rise to electoral dominance two years later.
Emmanuel Destenay is one of the most innovative scholars currently working on 20th century Irish History. His first book, on Great War veterans during the Irish Revolution, was a skilful and important reinterpretation of events. This next book will further establish his reputation as an important historian in the field. It speaks to a wide range of issues across Irish, British and American history in a provocative yet thoughtful manner
Emmanuel Destenay revises our views of Irish responses to the impact of war in 1914 in important and helpful ways. He asks us to rethink debates which were reshaped more powerfully by hindsight than by opinion at the time. Perhaps only a Frenchman, distanced from the passions and divisions which the First World War can still arouse in Ireland, could have written this book
Emmanuel Destenay's book is an important addition to the historiography of the Irish revolution and represents a valuable and indispensable contribution for students and academics willing to explore this period of history.
Emmanuel Destenay has rendered a singular service to Irish historiography by reminding us of the importance of the fear of conscription in Ireland during the last two years of the Great War ... This is a thoughtful and precisely argued work, based on an impressively wide range of sources, and it repays careful reading.
For a period that had already been well covered in the literature, credit is due to those scholars who have attempted to find new interpretations of events so well known. Among those scholars is Emmanuel Destenay, whose writings over the past several years have cast a revealing light on the significance of the First World War for Irish domestic politics during the revolutionary period . Those with an interest in better understanding the Irish revolution would be well served by reading what Emmanuel Destenay has written in this book.
Emmanuel Destenay's book undeniably questions the traditional historiography of the Irish revolution and the role of Easter Week 1916.
Emmanuel Destenay takes a fresh look at the rise of Sinn Fein ... A French historian, the author casts doubt on the argument that the Easter Rising of 1916 and Britain's lethal revenge against its leaders were the engine behind Sinn Fein's rise to electoral dominance two years later.
Emmanuel Destenay is one of the most innovative scholars currently working on 20th century Irish History. His first book, on Great War veterans during the Irish Revolution, was a skilful and important reinterpretation of events. This next book will further establish his reputation as an important historian in the field. It speaks to a wide range of issues across Irish, British and American history in a provocative yet thoughtful manner
Emmanuel Destenay revises our views of Irish responses to the impact of war in 1914 in important and helpful ways. He asks us to rethink debates which were reshaped more powerfully by hindsight than by opinion at the time. Perhaps only a Frenchman, distanced from the passions and divisions which the First World War can still arouse in Ireland, could have written this book
Emmanuel Destenay's book is an important addition to the historiography of the Irish revolution and represents a valuable and indispensable contribution for students and academics willing to explore this period of history.