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  • av Hiram Morgan
    726,-

    Essays by historians on information, media and power from ancient times to the present day. They are all based on papers read at the Irish Conference of Historians meeting at Cork in 1999.

  • - The Social Architecture of a Modern Irish Village
    av Adrian Peace
    356 - 596,-

    An ethnography of an Irish community, considering the extent to which economic modernization has transformed the rural community. In doing so, it discusses whether the distinctive character of rural identity has been eroded by powerful and distant political and cultural forces.

  • - The Peppercanister Poems
    av Derval Tubridy
    390 - 666,-

    A guide to the increasingly allusive and complex Peppercanister poems. All the poems are discussed in chronological order and are accompanied by illustrations and reproductions of covers, which are fully explained in the text.

  • av Donal Moriarty
    350 - 546,-

    A study of the Irish modernist poet, Brian Coffey (1905-95), whose work has always been regarded as difficult. This text aims to explain how the poems release their meaning and guide the reader in understanding the poet's work.

  • - The Roman Catholic Church and Irish Politics, 1922-37
    av Patrick Murray
    430 - 776,-

    This volume presents a detailed account of the political outlook and activities of the Roman Catholic clergy, nationally and in the localities, during the 15 years after the Treaty. Topics include the involvement of bishops and priests in pro-Treaty and anti-Treaty politics.

  • - Women, Enlightenment and Nation
    av Cliona O Gallchoir
    370,-

  • - Football Hooliganism as a World Phenomenon
    av Eric Dunning
    390 - 720,-

    Why have problems of hooliganism from the outset become more regularly attached to soccer than to other global sports? This volume considers soccer hooliganism in 14 countries and shows that, despite its tendencies to be associated with British culture, it has long been a social problem worldwide.

  • av Norman White
    356 - 720,-

    Gerard Manley Hopkins spent five unhappy years in Ireland before his death in 1889, during which time he wrote perhaps the most interesting group of all his poems. Working outwards from Hopkins's most intimate creations, author Norman White examines the poet's complicated and troubled personality.

  • - Ireland, Russia and the Communist Internationals, 1919-43
    av Emmet O'Connor
    726,-

  • - Denis Devlin and Irish Poetic Modernism
    av Alexander Tyrell Davis
    370,-

    This is a study of one of the most important poets of the mid 20th-century. This book looks at Devlin's work within the aftermath of the Irish literary revival and Anglo-American and French modernism and then relates it to the work of Devlin's contemporaries and to modernism poets.

  • av Laurence M. Geary
    390 - 660,-

    This volume concerns the history of medicine and charity in Ireland, 1718-1851.

  • - Wallace Stevens Nature and Community
    av Justin Quinn
    420 - 786,-

    Wallace Stevens (1879-1955) has been acknowledged by writers as diverse as Harold Bloom, Adrienne Rich and R.S. Thomas as one of the central poets of the 20th century. Justin Quinn offers a fundamental reassessment of Stevens's work and the connections it makes between nature, community and art.

  • - Or Haunting the Free State
    av W.J. Mc Cormack
    366 - 720,-

    Roger Casement was tried for treason and executed for securing German rifles to help the 1916 Rising in Ireland. He has been a focus of controversy since the 1930s, largely due to his so-called Black diaries, allegedly forged by British intelligence in c.1916. This work examines his legacy.

  • - Writings from the Laureate for Irish Fiction
    av Anne Enright
    276,-

    In three urgent pieces of non-fiction Anne Enright explores speech and silence in the lives of Irish women.

  • - My American Journey
     
    710,-

    This collection of journal and diary entries, now published for the first time as a bilingual edition (Irish and English), is a compelling first-hand account of Douglas Hyde's successful seven-month fundraising odyssey through the United States in 1905-6.

  • av Leeann Lane
    326,-

    Dorothy Macardle is best known as the author of The Irish Republic (1937), and novels The Uninvited (1942) and The Unforeseen (1946). This biography places Macardle in the context of her republicanism after 1916 and later within the politics and religious ethos of the post-colonial state.

  • - The Country House and the State in Independent Ireland, 1922-73
    av Emer Crooke
    570,-

    In post-independence Ireland, the country house was not regarded as an integral part of the national heritage. Despite this, the relationship between the Irish state and the country house has not been examined in detail to date. White Elephants illustrates the complex nature of attitudes to the country house.

  • av Fergus O'Farrell
    260,-

    Using new archival material from the Bureau of Military History, Fergus O'Farrell documents Brugha's career as a revolutionary. This closely-researched work examines Brugha's complex attitudes to violence, illuminating how Brugha sought to marry force with politics in the pursuit of Irish independence.

  • av Aidan Moran
    176,-

    Managing Your Own Learning at University is a practical self-help guide for new and continuing students who are faced with taking responsibility for their own studies in college and university.

  • - Inside the Foreign Office 1964-7
    av Jane Toomey
    656,-

    Why, against a backdrop of the burgeoning 1960s, did the Labour Prime Minister, Harold Wilson, seek to replicate the path taken by his Conservative predecessor Harold Macmillan, and make an application to join the EEC? This book provides insights into the formulation, execution and fate of Britain's European policy during this period.

  • av Professor Bryan Fanning
    328,-

  • av Harry Clifton
    330,-

    In this volume, the distinguished Dublin poet Harry Clifton - who has lived and worked all over the globe - focuses on locating himself and other Irish poets in relation to the literary traditions of Britain, Europe and the United States. Clifton opens by recounting his time living in London in the late eighties and early nineties.

  • av Fearghal Mcgarry
    956,-

    The year 2016 marks the beginning of the centenary period of the Irish Free State's establishment. This beautifully produced limited edition series examines the fascinating time of change and evolution in the Ireland of 100 years ago. Each volume is a first-hand account of individuals or events during the 1913-23 revolutionary period.

  • - Human Obesity Explored
    av Mike Gibney
    300,-

    In Ever Seen a Fat Fox?: Human Obesity Explored Professor Mike Gibney traces the evolution of our modern diet and looks to science to offer solutions to the phenomenon of human obesity. He calls on governments to cease the single-issue ad-hoc approach and demands a massive governmental long-term investment in weight management.

  • av Paula Meehan
    300,-

    Imaginary Bonnets with Real Bees in Them is the third volume in The Poet's Chair series, publishing the public lectures of the Ireland Professors of Poetry. The Ireland Chair of Poetry was established in 1998 following the award of the Nobel Prize of Literature to Seamus Heaney and is supported by Queen's University Belfast.

  • av Norbert (Late of Universities of Leicester Elias
    712,-

    Beginning with the author's celebrated study of the changing standards of behaviour of the secular upper classes in Western Europe since the Middle Ages, this title demonstrates how psychological changes in habitus and emotion management were linked to wider transformations in power relations.

  • - Essays on Lore, Literature and Language / Aisti Ar Sheanchas, Ar Litriocht Agus Ar Theanga - Essays in Honour of Seamas O Cathain / Aisti in Onoir Do Sheamas O Cathain
     
    746,-

    Professor O Cathain is widely known for his contribution to Irish and international folkloristics and the many ways in which he has promoted Irish language and culture. In this festschrift, the articles cover a broad array of subjects, that are in themselves a reflection of Seamas O Cathain's wide-ranging interests.

  • av Eugene Doyle
    280,-

    Justin McCarthy (1830-1912) is the forgotten leader of the Irish Home Rule Movement. Overshadowed by Parnell before him and the 1916 leaders shortly after his death, McCarthy's considerable contribution to the national cause has been largely overlooked. This title presents his portrait.

  • av Alan Daly
    280,-

    Charles Stewart Parnell has proved a compelling figure in his own time and to ours. A Protestant landlord who possessed few of the gifts that inspire mass adoration, he was the unlikely object of popular veneration. This revision considers Parnell's career within the context of his times, Anglo-Irish affairs, and theoretical perspectives.

  • av James Fintan Lalor
    300,-

    James Fintan Lalor (1807-1849) was one of the most original thinkers of the Young Ireland movement, and one of the most frequently appropriated by later Irish activists. This edition offers a fresh transcription of Lalor's articles in their original newspaper form.

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