This article explores the juxtaposition of the 1853 Irish Industrial Exhibition in Dublin and the dramatic rise of department stores in the city during the same decade. It analyses the aims, structure and reception of the 1853 Exhibition within the context of the Irish industrial movement, the economic modernity of the post-Famine era and the dramatic changes to consumer culture which were occurring during the 1850s. The article takes as its focus the hitherto neglected ‘monster house’ controversy – conducted in pamphlets and public lectures – regarding the growth of Dublin's department stores. Coinciding with the 1853 Exhibition, the controversy rehearsed many of the same concerns regarding economic and social structures in Irish urban soc...
Institutional cinema did not arrive fully formed to the city of Cork, Ireland, but was constituted t...
On 1 September 1831 the Zoological Gardens in Dublin’s Phoenix Park opened to the public and those ...
The paper explores the activities of the Dublin Society as a form of public reason. Founded in 1731 ...
This article explores the juxtaposition of the 1853 Irish Industrial Exhibition in Dublin and the dr...
During the 1890s, a series of large-scale, spectacular charity bazaars was held in Dublin. All of t...
Exhibiting Irishness traces multiple constructions of Irish identity in national and international d...
British exhibitions of the nineteenth and early twentieth century were spaces that, through the disp...
This paper is concerned with Dublin Merchants and the Repeal movement. The Repeal movement, which de...
The article investigates how three exhibitions represent the Irish participation in the Great War, c...
Roberta Gefter Wondrich Exhibitionary Forms in Ireland: James Joyce\u2019s Exhibits of Irish Moderni...
This book chapter examines exhibits sent for display within the Crystal Palace from Belfast and Dubl...
Existing scholarship on representations of Ireland in the British press has overlooked a subset of n...
These Graves and Ruinous Houses\u27: The Role of Domestic Items and Spaces in Revolutionary Ireland ...
Cities develop around industry, markets and transport links. Dublin in the nineteenth century was si...
This article examines how a transnational vision of Ireland was created in the United States by two ...
Institutional cinema did not arrive fully formed to the city of Cork, Ireland, but was constituted t...
On 1 September 1831 the Zoological Gardens in Dublin’s Phoenix Park opened to the public and those ...
The paper explores the activities of the Dublin Society as a form of public reason. Founded in 1731 ...
This article explores the juxtaposition of the 1853 Irish Industrial Exhibition in Dublin and the dr...
During the 1890s, a series of large-scale, spectacular charity bazaars was held in Dublin. All of t...
Exhibiting Irishness traces multiple constructions of Irish identity in national and international d...
British exhibitions of the nineteenth and early twentieth century were spaces that, through the disp...
This paper is concerned with Dublin Merchants and the Repeal movement. The Repeal movement, which de...
The article investigates how three exhibitions represent the Irish participation in the Great War, c...
Roberta Gefter Wondrich Exhibitionary Forms in Ireland: James Joyce\u2019s Exhibits of Irish Moderni...
This book chapter examines exhibits sent for display within the Crystal Palace from Belfast and Dubl...
Existing scholarship on representations of Ireland in the British press has overlooked a subset of n...
These Graves and Ruinous Houses\u27: The Role of Domestic Items and Spaces in Revolutionary Ireland ...
Cities develop around industry, markets and transport links. Dublin in the nineteenth century was si...
This article examines how a transnational vision of Ireland was created in the United States by two ...
Institutional cinema did not arrive fully formed to the city of Cork, Ireland, but was constituted t...
On 1 September 1831 the Zoological Gardens in Dublin’s Phoenix Park opened to the public and those ...
The paper explores the activities of the Dublin Society as a form of public reason. Founded in 1731 ...