This article offers a critical analysis of the representation of early modern popular violence provided by the 1641 depositions. Exploring the problems of how reported ‘speech’ was produced and recorded in the 1641 depositions, the article challenges the tendency within the depositions to represent violence as a spontaneous and immediate act, explicable by a racialised reading of Irish ‘barbarity’ and Catholic treachery. Exploiting a large cache of depositions and examinations in the relatively resource-rich urban context of Galway, it offers a micro-historical narrative of two brutal episodes of popular violence there in 1642 to reveal the complex histories and politics that might lie behind acts of violence in the Irish rising. Examining ...
This paper aims to examine the coverage of the 1916 Easter Rising and the impact of that coverage on...
In its investigation of social and political violence during the Irish Civil War, this thesis tackle...
Winner of the Donald Murphy Prize given by the American Conference for Irish Studies Sectarian viole...
This article contributes to a body of work exploring the possibilities of a popular politics in Irel...
The Irish Rebellion of 1641 is particularly vital to understanding the political, religious, and soc...
Violence was a central feature of Anglo-Irish relations in the latter half of the sixteenth century....
Between 1641 and 1652, Ireland was ravaged by war and monarchy was replaced by the Cromwellian Commo...
This study challenges current historical assumptions about the nature, scope, and timeframe of the 1...
In 1579 the English writer Thomas Churchyard explained to his readers the military strategy that Sir...
The fall of the Kildare Geraldines in 1534 has traditionally been seen as the hinge of late medieval...
This doctoral thesis examines the words and speeches recorded in the 1641 depositions. The 1641 depo...
This essay focuses on the changes in English rhetoric concerning Irish Catholicism from 1578-1610. A...
This study examines the reasons why the O’Donnell lords of Tír Conaill were never fully reconciled t...
There are few periods in the history of any nation as tumultuous as the late-sixteenth and early-sev...
Building upon some classical debates in historical materialism, this essay proceeds to a critical ap...
This paper aims to examine the coverage of the 1916 Easter Rising and the impact of that coverage on...
In its investigation of social and political violence during the Irish Civil War, this thesis tackle...
Winner of the Donald Murphy Prize given by the American Conference for Irish Studies Sectarian viole...
This article contributes to a body of work exploring the possibilities of a popular politics in Irel...
The Irish Rebellion of 1641 is particularly vital to understanding the political, religious, and soc...
Violence was a central feature of Anglo-Irish relations in the latter half of the sixteenth century....
Between 1641 and 1652, Ireland was ravaged by war and monarchy was replaced by the Cromwellian Commo...
This study challenges current historical assumptions about the nature, scope, and timeframe of the 1...
In 1579 the English writer Thomas Churchyard explained to his readers the military strategy that Sir...
The fall of the Kildare Geraldines in 1534 has traditionally been seen as the hinge of late medieval...
This doctoral thesis examines the words and speeches recorded in the 1641 depositions. The 1641 depo...
This essay focuses on the changes in English rhetoric concerning Irish Catholicism from 1578-1610. A...
This study examines the reasons why the O’Donnell lords of Tír Conaill were never fully reconciled t...
There are few periods in the history of any nation as tumultuous as the late-sixteenth and early-sev...
Building upon some classical debates in historical materialism, this essay proceeds to a critical ap...
This paper aims to examine the coverage of the 1916 Easter Rising and the impact of that coverage on...
In its investigation of social and political violence during the Irish Civil War, this thesis tackle...
Winner of the Donald Murphy Prize given by the American Conference for Irish Studies Sectarian viole...