Remembering the Revolution: Dissent, Culture, and Nationalism in the Irish Free State: Oxford Historical Monographs
Autor Frances Flanaganen Limba Engleză Hardback – 17 iun 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198739159
ISBN-10: 019873915X
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 148 x 225 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Oxford Historical Monographs
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 019873915X
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 148 x 225 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Oxford Historical Monographs
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
On a larger scale, in Remembering the Revolution: Dissent, Culture, and Nationalism in the Irish Free State, Frances Flanagan charts similar revisions through the fiction and non-fiction prose of four "nationalist intellectuals" ... close readings, informed by both political and literary history
[Iemembering the Revolution] is a thought provoking and original study based on rigorous interrogation of primary source material and a close analysis of a wide range of literary material. It makes a valuable contribution to the historiography.
Flanagan successfully articulates a hitherto obscure, critically self-examining, nationalist literature.
thought-provoking and impressively researched ... [a] timely reminder that the controversies surrounding the nature of that Irish insurrectionary wave were explored by the first post-revolutionary generation with a vigour that matches any modern polemic ... a thoughtful and scholarly contribution to an understanding of a generation that tried to change the world and had to live with the consequences of failure.
there is little doubt that Flanagan has produced a major work of modern Irish history. Remembering the Revolution illustrates the beauty of failure, showing how it contains within it the possibilities of change and insight.
Flanagan does an excellent job of describing her subjects' dilemmas. The book is elegantly and tightly written, and massively documented, with an excellent bibliography.
her lively writing and significant argument should gain her readers outside the academic world.
This book is a pioneering and forensic study which adds a great deal to our understanding of the Irish revolution and its ripples through Ireland after partition. In so doing, Flanagan does important work in contextualising debates over Irish culture and society in the 1920s within broader European trends, and as such, her work sits alongside Mo Moulton's recent Ireland and the Irish in Interwar England in resituating the Irish 1920s as a crucial part of a broader European malaise ... in delineating the lives of these men in the period after they had fallen into political irrelevance, Flanagan poses fundamental questions about how Irish historians have chosen narratives and chased stories; as such this book asks broader questions about the nature of historical practice which will be of relevance to all.
[Iemembering the Revolution] is a thought provoking and original study based on rigorous interrogation of primary source material and a close analysis of a wide range of literary material. It makes a valuable contribution to the historiography.
Flanagan successfully articulates a hitherto obscure, critically self-examining, nationalist literature.
thought-provoking and impressively researched ... [a] timely reminder that the controversies surrounding the nature of that Irish insurrectionary wave were explored by the first post-revolutionary generation with a vigour that matches any modern polemic ... a thoughtful and scholarly contribution to an understanding of a generation that tried to change the world and had to live with the consequences of failure.
there is little doubt that Flanagan has produced a major work of modern Irish history. Remembering the Revolution illustrates the beauty of failure, showing how it contains within it the possibilities of change and insight.
Flanagan does an excellent job of describing her subjects' dilemmas. The book is elegantly and tightly written, and massively documented, with an excellent bibliography.
her lively writing and significant argument should gain her readers outside the academic world.
This book is a pioneering and forensic study which adds a great deal to our understanding of the Irish revolution and its ripples through Ireland after partition. In so doing, Flanagan does important work in contextualising debates over Irish culture and society in the 1920s within broader European trends, and as such, her work sits alongside Mo Moulton's recent Ireland and the Irish in Interwar England in resituating the Irish 1920s as a crucial part of a broader European malaise ... in delineating the lives of these men in the period after they had fallen into political irrelevance, Flanagan poses fundamental questions about how Irish historians have chosen narratives and chased stories; as such this book asks broader questions about the nature of historical practice which will be of relevance to all.
Notă biografică
Frances Flanagan was born in Perth, Western Australia. She obtained bachelor degrees in Arts and Law from the University of Western Australia. After several years as a lawyer, she won a Commonwealth scholarship to read for a DPhil in history at the University of Oxford. She has been a senior scholar at Hertford College Oxford, a Marshall Fellow at the London Institute of Historical Research, and a lecturer and postdoctoral researcher at Birkbeck, University of London. She currently works at the University of Sydney, and lives in Sydney with her husband and two daughters.