Fr. 27.50

Short History of Irish Independence

English · Paperback / Softback

Will be released 30.10.2016

Description

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The history of modern Ireland has been one of both struggle and hope. The struggle, first to establish a nation independent of Britain and then to define what it represents, is one that continues to animate politics and society at home as well as abroad among the Irish Diaspora (especially in the USA). Though it is a struggle that still bears the traces of sectarianism, this is leavened by the ongoing hopes - both north and south of the border - of a lasting settlement in Ulster. Charting those large, iconic moments of the Irish narrative, award-winning historian J J Lee sets such momentous events as the founding of the Fenians (1858), C S Parnell's campaign for Home Rule (from 1877), the Easter Rising (1916), occupation of the Dublin Custom House (1921), the death of Michael Collins (1922) and the rise of Éamon de Valera against the surging tides of stronger currents: whether the Great Famine, the War of Independence or the bitter Civil War between pro- and anti-treaty factions of the IRA.

About the author










J J Lee is Glucksman Professor of Irish Studies at New York University. His previous books are The Modernisation of Irish Society, 1848-1918; Making the Irish American: History and Heritage of the Irish in the United States (edited with Marion R Casey); and Ireland 1912- 1985: Politics and Society, winner of the Irish Times-Aer Lingus Irish Literature Prize, the Irish Life-Sunday Independent Arts Award and the James S Donnelly Sr Prize of the American Conference of Irish Studies.

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