This research note examines how the terms ‘pagan’ and ‘paganism’ have variously been used in Irish national print media. It does this to investigate how Irish identity was constructed as the Republic of Ireland changed to a secularising society where the hegemony of the Roman Catholic Church substantially weakened. It finds that the trope of ‘pagan’ has been used to represent moral threats or political threats (such as the growth of Nazism or secularism) or acknowledge the influence of paganism (defined as ancient religious elements) on Irish culture. Research on Irish Pagans and related eco-spiritualities is a nascent field of study and this research note aims to contribute to its development. Limitations of the present study are...
This is a study of the so-called Irish Penitentials. The documents which compose this documental cor...
Questions of texts and ‘scripture’ sit uneasily with paganisms. Most pagans do not have ‘sacred scri...
The thesis compares the depictions of paganism found in the Middle Irish Togail Troí (‘The Destructi...
This research note examines how the terms ‘pagan’ and ‘paganism’ have variously been used in Irish ...
The degree to which pagan traditions influenced early medieval Irish literature has been the subject...
Some of the earliest references to ritual lamentation or keening in the early Irish sources are foun...
The first Irish language periodical, Bolg an tSolair, was published in Belfast in 1795 although jour...
This article investigates the conflicted cultural identity of those Irish-speaking antiquarians work...
A wealth of political writings survives from early Christian Ireland. While traditionally this mater...
Ireland’s long and contested status as an internal colony of Britain has been important in the histo...
This paper will examine the New Age Movement in Ireland in the context of theoretical debate...
This article explores some of the ways of remembering and honouring the ancestors in contemporary Pa...
Despite widespread acceptance of the impact of the Penal Laws on Irish society, authors have focused...
Neo-paganism is a vibrant, dynamic global movement, which has had a significant cultural impact. Neo...
Questions of texts and ‘scripture ’ sit uneasily with Paganisms. Most Pagans do not have ‘sacred scr...
This is a study of the so-called Irish Penitentials. The documents which compose this documental cor...
Questions of texts and ‘scripture’ sit uneasily with paganisms. Most pagans do not have ‘sacred scri...
The thesis compares the depictions of paganism found in the Middle Irish Togail Troí (‘The Destructi...
This research note examines how the terms ‘pagan’ and ‘paganism’ have variously been used in Irish ...
The degree to which pagan traditions influenced early medieval Irish literature has been the subject...
Some of the earliest references to ritual lamentation or keening in the early Irish sources are foun...
The first Irish language periodical, Bolg an tSolair, was published in Belfast in 1795 although jour...
This article investigates the conflicted cultural identity of those Irish-speaking antiquarians work...
A wealth of political writings survives from early Christian Ireland. While traditionally this mater...
Ireland’s long and contested status as an internal colony of Britain has been important in the histo...
This paper will examine the New Age Movement in Ireland in the context of theoretical debate...
This article explores some of the ways of remembering and honouring the ancestors in contemporary Pa...
Despite widespread acceptance of the impact of the Penal Laws on Irish society, authors have focused...
Neo-paganism is a vibrant, dynamic global movement, which has had a significant cultural impact. Neo...
Questions of texts and ‘scripture ’ sit uneasily with Paganisms. Most Pagans do not have ‘sacred scr...
This is a study of the so-called Irish Penitentials. The documents which compose this documental cor...
Questions of texts and ‘scripture’ sit uneasily with paganisms. Most pagans do not have ‘sacred scri...
The thesis compares the depictions of paganism found in the Middle Irish Togail Troí (‘The Destructi...