Exhibiting Irishness traces multiple constructions of Irish identity in national and international displays between the 1850s and 1960s as Ireland moved from a colonial to an independent, globally-connected state. As a cultural history of Irish identity, the book considers exhibitions as a formative platform for imagining a host of Irish pasts, presents and futures. Fair organisers responded to the contexts of famine and poverty, migration and diasporic settlement, independence movements and partition, as well as post-colonial nation building. In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, exhibitions captured the imagination of organisers and visitors. The global displays were heralded as a unique, profitable, and unsurpassed forum for celebra...
This thesis examines how the Irish Free State harnessed visual art for its political purposes in the...
The Irish Celebrating is a collection of essays which focuses on the complex dynamics of celebrating...
John Patrick MontanoThe end of the nineteenth century witnessed a revival of language, history, lite...
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 book chapter examines exhibits sent for display within the Crystal Palace from Belfast and Dubl...
Roberta Gefter Wondrich Exhibitionary Forms in Ireland: James Joyce\u2019s Exhibits of Irish Moderni...
This thesis shows how the synthesis between model Irish villages and picture postcards led to a reco...
“It’s the Ireland of This Land”[1] The History, Memory, and Marketing of an American Irish Sense of ...
peer-reviewedThis thesis shows how the synthesis between model Irish villages and picture postcards ...
This article examines how a transnational vision of Ireland was created in the United States by two ...
1967 in Dublin, Ireland, an exhibition opened its doors to a suspecting public. Rose '67 was a work...
The 1897 Irish Fair in New York City is significant for its map exhibit of a topographical map of Ir...
This research project presents a methodological and theoretical framework for conducting research on...
This thesis examines the representation of Ireland in images and texts produced in Britain and Fran...
This thesis examines how the Irish Free State harnessed visual art for its political purposes in the...
The Irish Celebrating is a collection of essays which focuses on the complex dynamics of celebrating...
John Patrick MontanoThe end of the nineteenth century witnessed a revival of language, history, lite...
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 book chapter examines exhibits sent for display within the Crystal Palace from Belfast and Dubl...
Roberta Gefter Wondrich Exhibitionary Forms in Ireland: James Joyce\u2019s Exhibits of Irish Moderni...
This thesis shows how the synthesis between model Irish villages and picture postcards led to a reco...
“It’s the Ireland of This Land”[1] The History, Memory, and Marketing of an American Irish Sense of ...
peer-reviewedThis thesis shows how the synthesis between model Irish villages and picture postcards ...
This article examines how a transnational vision of Ireland was created in the United States by two ...
1967 in Dublin, Ireland, an exhibition opened its doors to a suspecting public. Rose '67 was a work...
The 1897 Irish Fair in New York City is significant for its map exhibit of a topographical map of Ir...
This research project presents a methodological and theoretical framework for conducting research on...
This thesis examines the representation of Ireland in images and texts produced in Britain and Fran...
This thesis examines how the Irish Free State harnessed visual art for its political purposes in the...
The Irish Celebrating is a collection of essays which focuses on the complex dynamics of celebrating...
John Patrick MontanoThe end of the nineteenth century witnessed a revival of language, history, lite...