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Nationalism in Irish History:

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Title: Nationalism in Irish History:


1
Nationalism in Irish History
  • History in Irish Nationalism

2
Exosocialization
  • Gellner and the economic and demographic changes
    that make culture primary
  • Gellner uses the term visible-what makes
    culture visible is the need to socialize
    subjects who are no longer living in intimate
    social units (villages and towns)
  • Nationalism and the city

3
  • A problem that we encounter often in this
    discipline is fairly obvious nationalism is both
    a historical phenomenon and a mechanism of
    mediation for other historical phenomenon
  • So, we can quite easily outline the history of
    modern Irish nationalism, and even discuss how
    certain figures treat nationalism, but

4
  • We also have to consider how a belief in the
    political rightness of the nation is itself
    modifying the way history gets told
  • For example much agrarian violence is seen by
    contemporary historians as nationalist or
    proto-nationalist, when it was neither it was
    strictly economical

5
  • Ribbonmen (early 1800s), Oakboys (mid 1800s),
    Whiteboys (1760s), peep o day boys (1780s)
  • Agrarian secret societies founded on the premise
    of protecting farmers from landlords
  • Not really interested in constitutional
    independence from England

6
The Act of Union, 1800
  • Piece of legislation that abolished the Irish
    Parliament and made Ireland a sister country of
    England
  • Irish landlords, growing increasingly worried
    about agrarian unrest, trade some of their rights
    and economic interests for enhanced security from
    an invincible defender England and the Crown

7
  • Document, which secures the primacy of the
    Protestant Church of Ireland and the political
    privilege of Unionists, is a direct response to
    two historical phenomena
  • 1) The French Revolution
  • 2) Insurgent Irish nationalism (especially
    Ribbonism)

8
  • As Oliver MacDonagh notes, as long as the Act was
    maintained it was more or less threatened by the
    forces which had provoked its inception (Union
    and Aftermath, 14).
  • The Act of Union and the forces that necessitate
    it are the starting points of modern Irish history

9
Constitutional Independence and the Nation
  • Young Ireland, Thomas Davis, and the urban
    strands of Irish nationalism
  • OConnell and the rural strands
  • Davitt, the Land War (1879-82), and the Three
    Fs
  • Fixed tenure
  • Fair rent
  • Free sale

10
Parnell
  • Irish Parliamentarian and landlord, Parnell,
    sought to have the Act of Union repealed
  • Was able to successfully join the two distinct,
    and even contradictory, impulses of Irish rural
    and urban nationalism
  • On the verge of this political success, Parnell
    was accused of committing adultery with Kitty
    OShea
  • Divorce was legal for Protestants in Ireland, but
    no nationalist leader would seriously contemplate
    marrying a divorced woman

11
  • By custom, then, OShea had split from her
    husband and had maintained a separate life
  • Lived with Parnell in London (but kept separate
    residences in Dublin)
  • They had three children together, and their
    marriage was well known

12
  • Still, this did not prevent the accusation of
    adultery from destroying his political career
  • The Catholic church was especially vicious with
    Parnell
  • Many Parnellites (like Joyce) responded by
    suggesting the Church focus on issues of
    spirituality rather than politics, but this did
    not help

13
Cultural Nationalism
  • The Fall of Parnell (note the biblical and epic
    overtones) left a void in Irish politics
  • This void was addressed by cultural figures
    rather than political ones for the next two
    decades
  • 1892- The Gaelic League
  • 1880s-90s Irish Education Act

14
JOYCE
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