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1

Chandler, David. "New Zealand in Great Famine Era Irish politics: The strange case of A Narrative of the Sufferings of Maria Bennett." Journal of New Zealand & Pacific Studies 9, no. 2 (2021): 215–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/nzps_00068_1.

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A Narrative of the Sufferings of Maria Bennett, a crudely printed, eight-page pamphlet, was published in Dublin in spring 1846. It has been interpreted as an early fiction concerning New Zealand, or alternatively as a New Zealand ‘captivity narrative’, possibly based on the author’s own experiences. Against these readings, it is argued here that Maria Bennett, more concerned with Ireland than New Zealand, is a piece of pro-British propaganda hurried out in connection with the British Government’s ‘Protection of Life (Ireland) Bill’ ‐ generally referred to simply as the ‘Coercion Bill’ ‐ first
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Mary Kelly, Aidan Slingsby, Jason Dykes, and Jo Wood. "Mapping ‘sluggish’ migration: Irish internal migration 1851 – 1911." Irish Geography 54, no. 2 (2022): 89–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.55650/igj.2021.1461.

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Emigration is a major theme in Ireland’s demographic history and has, as a result, received significant attention in scholarship. By contrast, the less prominent story of internal migration has been much less researched. This has resulted in a neglect of the changing geographies of those who remained in Ireland. Here we use Origin-Destination (OD) and Destination-Origin (DO) maps to explore changing patterns of internal migration in Ireland from 1851 to 1911. In doing so, we show that up to 1851 internal migration primarily involved the movement of people to neighbouring counties, even in the
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3

Campbell Ross, Ian. "‘Damn these printers … By heaven, I'll cut Hoey's throat’: The History of Mr. Charles Fitzgerald and Miss Sarah Stapleton (1770), a Catholic Novel in Eighteenth-Century Ireland." Irish University Review 48, no. 2 (2018): 250–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/iur.2018.0353.

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The History of Mr Charles Fitzgerald and Miss Sarah Stapleton (Dublin, 1770) is a satirical marriage-plot novel, published by the Roman Catholic bookseller James Hoey Junior. The essay argues that the anonymous author was himself a Roman Catholic, whose work mischievously interrogates the place of English-language prose fiction in Ireland during the third-quarter of the eighteenth century. By so doing, the fiction illuminates the issue, so far neglected by Irish book historians, of how the growing middle-class Roman Catholic readership might have read the increasingly popular ‘new species of w
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Cronin, M., L. Domegan, L. Thornton, et al. "The epidemiology of infectious syphilis in the Republic of Ireland." Eurosurveillance 9, no. 12 (2004): 11–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.2807/esm.09.12.00495-en.

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In response to the increasing numbers of syphilis cases reported among men having sex with men (MSM) in Dublin, an Outbreak Control Team (OCT) was set up in late 2000. The outbreak peaked in 2001 and had largely ceased by late 2003. An enhanced syphilis surveillance system was introduced to capture data from January 2000. Between January 2000 and December 2003, 547 cases of infectious syphilis were notified in Ireland (415 were MSM). Four per cent of cases were diagnosed with HIV and 15.4% of cases were diagnosed with at least one other STI (excluding HIV) within the previous 3 months. The mea
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Lowe, W. J. "The constabulary agitation of 1882." Irish Historical Studies 31, no. 121 (1998): 37–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021121400013687.

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For two weeks in late July and early August 1882 newspapers in Ireland and London carried accounts of discontent among members of the Royal Irish Constabulary (R.I.C.), which policed the whole of Ireland except Dublin. The Irish land war of 1879–82 was ending, and the R.I.C. had burnished their reputation for stolid loyalty among British officialdom and the Irish public at large. Problems among Ireland’s police may have been disquieting, particularly at Dublin Castle and in landowner circles, but in the news accounts and other papers that survive there were few expressions of surprise that, at
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Thewissen, Catherine. "‘Unfailing Unity’: Jessie Louisa Moore Rickard, Great War Ireland and the Italian Risorgimento." Irish University Review 52, no. 2 (2022): 250–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/iur.2022.0566.

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This article offers a development of traditional approaches to Irish Great War literature which focus on issues of national identity towards a wider transnational field. It investigates two war narratives by Dublin-born Anglo-Irish writer Jessie Louisa Moore Rickard (1876–1963): her 1915 article for New Ireland ‘The Munsters at Rue du Bois’ and her 1918 home front novel The Fire of Green Boughs, both of which contain intertextual references to the Italian Risorgimento (1815–1871), or the unification of the Italian peninsula. By framing her works within the Italian context, Rickard establishes
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7

Takagami, Shin-ichi. "The Fenian rising in Dublin, March 1867." Irish Historical Studies 29, no. 115 (1995): 340–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s002112140001186x.

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The story of the Fenian rising in 1867 may be regarded as starting with the expulsion of James Stephens from the headship of one of the two factions of American Fenians in December 1866. Stephens tried to postpone a rising planned to take place before 1 January 1867. At that time there was vocal dissatisfaction within the rank and file at the lack of action. The Dublin organisation itself was divided on the question. According to the report of Superintendent Ryan of the Dublin Metropolitan Police in January 1867: The minor members of the conspiracy made open profession of doubts regarding the
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8

Glynn, Ronan W., Niamh Byrne, Siobhan O’Dea, et al. "Chemsex, risk behaviours and sexually transmitted infections among men who have sex with men in Dublin, Ireland." International Journal of Drug Policy 52 (February 2018): 9–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.drugpo.2017.10.008.

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9

Jackson, Alvin. "The failure of unionism in Dublin, 1900." Irish Historical Studies 26, no. 104 (1989): 377–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021121400010129.

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The election contests of 1900 in St Stephen’s Green and South County Dublin were covered in detail by newspapers throughout the British Isles and have been treated as a political watershed by more recent and scholarly commentators. This interest has had a partly personal and biographical inspiration since one of the unionist candidates for South Dublin was the agrarian reformer and junior minister, Horace Plunkett; but the significance, symbolic and actual, of these contests has been seen as extending beyond the participation of one prominent Edwardian Irishman. The defeat of two unionist M.P.
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10

Cunningham, Joanne. "A Qualitative Study of Gender-Based Pathways to Problem Drinking in Dublin, Ireland." Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine 29, no. 3 (2012): 163–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0790966700017195.

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AbstractObjective: High rates of alcohol-related harm have been reported in the European Union, including Ireland, for more than 20 years. This article's goal is to contextualise such rates by examining gender-based pathways to alcohol use disorders from the perspective of those self-identifying as in recovery using data collected midway through this 20-year trend.Methods: Sixteen informants (nine men and seven women) were interviewed between 1998 and 1999 in Dublin, Ireland. Using qualitative methods, informants were asked to reflect upon their experiences of problem drinking and recovery.Res
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Fitzpatrick, Orla. "Coupons, Clothing and Class: The Rationing of Dress in Ireland, 1942–1948." Costume 48, no. 2 (2014): 236–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/0590887614z.00000000052.

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This paper will explore how clothes rationing impacted upon the population of Ireland during the Second World War and how the restrictions were encountered by the general population. It allows for a reconsideration of the period with particular reference to notions of respectability and class, and how these were manifested in dress and fashion. It will also examine the concept of Dublin as a destination, both during and after the war, for the purchase of Irish manufactures and clothing types which remained scarce in Britain and on continental Europe. It will draw upon a diverse range of source
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Daly, Fionn P., Kate O’Donnell, Martin P. Davoren, et al. "Recreational and sexualised drug use among gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (gbMSM) in Ireland–Findings from the European MSM internet survey (EMIS) 2017." PLOS ONE 18, no. 7 (2023): e0288171. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0288171.

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Background Gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (gbMSM) report a higher prevalence of drug use in comparison to the general male population. However, in Ireland, there is a paucity of literature regarding the prevalence of drug use and its determinants among gbMSM. Aims/Objectives To quantify the prevalence of (i) recreational drug use (RDU) and (ii) sexualised drug use (SDU) among gbMSM in Ireland, and to identify the factors associated with these drug use practices. Methods The European MSM Internet Survey (EMIS) 2017 was an online, anonymous, internationally-promoted questionn
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Rafferty, Oliver P. "Cardinal Cullen, Early Fenianism, and the MacManus Funeral Affair." Recusant History 22, no. 4 (1995): 549–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0034193200002089.

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The political threat posed by the growth of Fenianism in Ireland in the late 1850s and early 1860s has generally been underplayed by much present-day historiography. Even contemporaries were not disposed to see American Fenianism as much of a danger to the constitutional stability of Ireland. The Dublin police authorities decided to recall sub-inspector Thomas Doyle from his surveillance work in America in July 1860. By that time Doyle had sent dozens of reports on Irish-American revolutionary activity. On the basis of his reports the authorities knew that John O'Mahony and Michael Dohney, bot
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Igoe, Derval, Mary Kelleher, Fionnuala Cooney, et al. "There has been a true rise inNeisseria gonorrhoeaebut not inChlamydia trachomatisin men who have sex with men in Dublin, Ireland." Sexually Transmitted Infections 90, no. 7 (2014): 523. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/sextrans-2014-051662.

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15

Considine, Craig. "Young Pakistani Men and Irish Identity: Religion, Race and Ethnicity in Post-Celtic Tiger Ireland." Sociology 52, no. 4 (2017): 655–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0038038516677221.

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This article contributes to the discussion on Irish identity by considering a set of empirical data from ethnographic research carried out in Pakistani communities in Dublin. The article considers views on ‘Irishness’ through the lens of young second-generation Pakistani Irish men. The data presented highlight how the Celtic Tiger experience reproduced cultural and ethnic narratives of Irish identity, but simultaneously initiated a new, more civic-oriented view of ‘Irishness’. Of particular concern in the minds of young Pakistani men include the secularisation of Irish society and the role tha
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16

Anbinder, Tyler, and Hope McCaffrey. "Which Irish men and women immigrated to the United States during the Great Famine migration of 1846–54?" Irish Historical Studies 39, no. 156 (2015): 620–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ihs.2015.22.

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AbstractDespite the extensive scholarly literature on both the Great Famine in Ireland and the Famine immigration to the United States, little is known about precisely which Irish men and women emigrated from Ireland in the Famine era. This article makes use of a new dataset comprised of 18,000 Famine-era emigrants (2 per cent of the total) who landed at the port of New York from 1846 to 1854 and whose ship manifests list their Irish county of origin. The data is used to estimate the number of emigrants from each county in Ireland who arrived in New York during the Famine era. Because three-qu
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17

Cronin, Michael G. "‘Ransack the histories’: Gay Men, Liberation and the Politics of Literary Style." Review of Irish Studies in Europe 5, no. 1 (2022): 73–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.32803/rise.v5i1.2971.

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It is now twenty years since the publication of Jamie O’Neill’s At Swim, Two Boys (2001). O’Neill’s novel was not the first Irish novel to depict same-sex passion, and not even the first Irish gay novel of the post-decriminalisation period. However, it did attain a wider and higher level of recognition among mainstream Irish, and international, readers. This may have been at least partly due to O’Neill’s decision to write a historical romance – a genre which still retains its enduring appeal for readers. By adapting this genre, O’Neill uses fiction to unearth, and imaginatively recreate, an ar
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18

Kelly, Bernard. "‘England owes something to these people’: the Anglo-Irish Unemployment Insurance agreement, 1946." Irish Historical Studies 38, no. 150 (2012): 269–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021121400001127.

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On 19 December 1946, the Irish President, Seán T. O'Kelly, signed the Unemployment Insurance Act into law. This innocuous-sounding piece of legislation has received very little attention from historians, but was of great importance to one section of post-war Irish society. Under its terms, Dublin and London entered into a special scheme whereby Irish men and women who had served with the British forces during the Second World War were allowed to claim British unemployment insurance payments, while still resident in the twenty-six counties of independent Ireland. Coming at a time of unemploymen
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Doorley, Ronan, Vikram Pakrashi, and Bidisha Ghosh. "Quantification of the Potential Health and Environmental Impacts of Active Travel in Dublin, Ireland." Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board 2531, no. 1 (2015): 129–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.3141/2531-15.

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Many European cities are becoming increasingly dependent on motorized transportation, with impacts ranging from traffic congestion and greenhouse gas emissions to sedentary lifestyles and an increased risk of noncommunicable diseases. The promotion of active modes of travel in urban environments has the potential to mitigate the external costs of motorized transportation and improve the physical and mental well-being of transport users. The present study considered a modal shift to active travel in commuter trips in Dublin, Ireland, and quantified the resultant benefits and detriments to indiv
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20

Shanley, Adam, Kate O’Donnell, Peter Weatherburn, John Gilmore, and T. Charles Witzel. "Understanding sexual health service access for gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men in Ireland during the COVID-19 crisis: Findings from the EMERGE survey." PLOS ONE 19, no. 7 (2024): e0306280. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0306280.

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Background In the Republic of Ireland, the COVID-19 crisis led to sexual health service closures while clinical staff were redeployed to the pandemic response. Gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (gbMSM) face pre-existing sexual health inequalities which may have been exacerbated. The aim of this study is to understand sexual health service accessibility for gbMSM in Ireland during the COVID-19 crisis. Methods EMERGE recruited 980 gbMSM in Ireland (June-July 2021) to an anonymous online survey investigating well-being and service access through geo-location sexual networking apps
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EL-Shazli, Salwa. "Mother Ireland, Blood-Mother, and the Lost Young Men In Selections of Modern Irish Fiction." مجلة وادی النیل للدراسات والبحوث الإنسانیة والاجتماعیة والتربویه 29, no. 1 (2021): 41–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.21608/jwadi.2021.146826.

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22

Kilgallon, Hayley. "From Novelty Act to National Association: The Emergence of Ladies’ Gaelic Football in the 1970s." Studies in Arts and Humanities 7, no. 1 (2021): 113–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.18193/sah.v7i1.204.

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In 1967 a county Cork farmer wrote to the Sunday Independent (Dublin) to express his hope that the Gaelic Athletic Association (G.A.A.) would ban women from attending the upcoming All-Ireland finals. The G.A.A is a male-only organisation, he argued, and the presence of women at Croke Park would take up ‘valuable space’. His letter generated many outraged responses from both men and women, all arguing against his opinion and illustrating that women played a vital role within the sporting community—whether as supporters, sandwich-makers or jersey-washers. The responses highlighted how people in
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Destenay, Emmanuel. "The impact of political unrest in Ireland on Irish soldiers in the British army, 1914–18: a re-evaluation." Irish Historical Studies 42, no. 161 (2018): 50–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ihs.2018.2.

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AbstractIn order better to understand the impact of political unrest in Ireland on Irish troops fighting in the First World War, it is necessary to acknowledge that the role of the 1916 Rising has been significantly overestimated, while the influence of the 1914 home rule crisis and the repercussions of the anti-conscription movement have been underestimated. The 1914 home rule crisis significantly impacted on the Germans’ view of the Irish and conditioned the treatment of Irish P.O.W.s from December 1914 onwards. In addition, the post-1916 Rising executions and the conscription crisis had a s
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Davidson, Michael W. "Pioneers in Optics: William Rowan Hamilton and John Kerr." Microscopy Today 20, no. 4 (2012): 50–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1551929512000405.

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Considered a child prodigy, William Rowan Hamilton could read Hebrew, Latin, and Greek at the tender age of five and had undertaken the study of at least six other languages before his twelfth birthday. The native of Dublin, Ireland, lived with and was educated by an uncle who was an Anglican priest, because his father's legal career required him to spend much of his time in England. In his youth, Hamilton was introduced to Zerah Colburn, an American mathematical prodigy who exhibited his amazing calculating dexterity for entertainment. Competitive bouts of computations between the young men a
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DOLAN, ANNE. "KILLING AND BLOODY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1920." Historical Journal 49, no. 3 (2006): 789–810. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x06005516.

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21 November 1920 began with the killing of fourteen men in their flats, boarding houses, and hotel rooms in Dublin. The Irish Republican Army (IRA) alleged that they were British spies. That afternoon British forces retaliated by firing on a crowd of supporters at a Gaelic football match in Croke Park, killing twelve and injuring sixty. The day quickly became known as Bloody Sunday. Much has been made of the afternoon's events. The shootings in Croke Park have acquired legendary status. Concern with the morning's killing has been largely limited to whether or not the dead men were the spies th
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Maguire, Martin. "The organisation and activism of Dublin’s Protestant working class, 1883–1935." Irish Historical Studies 29, no. 113 (1994): 65–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021121400018770.

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Protestant working-class loyalists have been found not only in Belfast, behind the painted kerbs and muralled gables of the Shankill Road and Ballysillan. Recent research has found working-class loyalism in the Ulster hinterland of mid-Armagh. However, most of what has been written on southern Protestantism, beyond Belfast and Ulster, has been on the gentry class. Yet Dublin was once the centre of organised Protestant opinion in Ireland and had, in the early nineteenth century, an assertive and exuberantly sectarian Protestant working class. This paper is based on a study of the Protestant wor
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Harris, Susan Cannon. "Clearing the Stage: Gender, Class, and the Freedom of the Scenes in Eighteenth-Century Dublin." PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 119, no. 5 (2004): 1264–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1632/s0030812900101737.

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This essay investigates the conditions and consequences of Thomas Sheridan's attempt to bar spectators from behind the scenes at the Theatre-Royal in Dublin's Smock Alley. Sheridan succeeded in revoking the “freedom of the scenes”—a privilege by which aristocratic men were allowed to roam the green room, dressing rooms, and stage during the performance—because Dublin was the cultural and political center of a colonial society whose members were struggling for control over the spaces outside the theater. The reform provoked a conflict known as the Kelly riots, which began with a spectator's att
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Lefkowich, Maya, Noel Richardson, and Steve Robertson. "“If We Want to Get Men in, Then We Need to Ask Men What They Want”: Pathways to Effective Health Programing for Men." American Journal of Men's Health 11, no. 5 (2015): 1512–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1557988315617825.

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In Ireland, men’s health is becoming a priority. In line with global trends, indicators of poor mental health (including rates of depression and suicide) are increasing alongside rates of unemployment and social isolation. Despite the growing awareness of men’s health as a national priority, and development of the first National Men’s Health Policy in the world, there is still a concern about men’s nonengagement with health services. Health and community services often struggle to appropriately accommodate men, and men commonly avoid health spaces. A growing body of literature suggests that a
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Kabkova, Olha. "W. TREVOR’S APPLICATION OF J. JOYCE’S INSPIRATION." Слово і Час, no. 3 (May 26, 2021): 37–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.33608/0236-1477.2021.03.37-47.

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While finding out the relation of W. Trevor’s writing to Joyce, we are to take into account the fact, fixed by the German writer H. Bell in his “Irish diary”: Joyce is one of the ordinary surnames in Ireland. Yet the aim of the article was to search for the influence of the literary technique of J. Joyce — one of the well-known modernists — on W. Trevor’s creative works. On the one hand, W. Trevor himself in the interviews insisted that “Dubliners” and “A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man” were valuable for him within the whole life; on the other hand, the known and famous writers and crit
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Lanters, José. "Women and Marriage: Hazel Ellis' Gate Theatre Plays of the 1930s in Context." Review of Irish Studies in Europe 5, no. 2 (2022): 2–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.32803/rise.v5i2.3070.

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This essay considers two unpublished plays written by Hazel Ellis in the 1930s and produced by the Gate Theatre, Dublin, where Ellis had started out as an actor. While the two plays appear to have little in common, the substance of each echoes the public debate in Ireland at the time regarding marriage, divorce, and women in the workplace. These were the years leading up to the adoption of the 1937 Constitution, which sanctified the nuclear family and the central role of the wife and mother within it as the moral cornerstone of society. In both plays the female characters struggle to make mean
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Allen, Rory. "The Legacy of The Northern Irish Conflict, Weak Men and Silenced Women in the Novels of Jan Carson." Review of Irish Studies in Europe 7, no. 2 (2025): 20–36. https://doi.org/10.32803/rise.v7i2.3316.

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This article focuses on the Belfast-based novelist and short-story writer Jan Carson. Raised in a rural, strictly evangelical Presbyterian household, Carson and her work offer rare insights into a community that is seldom given academic attention. The article will examine how her two most recent novels, The Fire Starters (2019) and The Raptures (2022), speak to themes regarding the legacy of violence and gender roles in Northern Ireland. Supplemented by Carson’s own oral testimonies, passages from her work, and her wider comments in the media, this article explores how Carson’s work reflects h
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Paul, Gillian, Susan M. Smith, and Jean Long. "Experience of intimate partner violence among women and men attending general practices in Dublin, Ireland: A cross-sectional survey." European Journal of General Practice 12, no. 2 (2006): 66–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13814780600757344.

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GARNHAM, NEAL. "LOCAL ELITE CREATION IN EARLY HANOVERIAN IRELAND: THE CASE OF THE COUNTY GRAND JURY." Historical Journal 42, no. 3 (1999): 623–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x9900847x.

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The years immediately after the Glorious Revolution saw the Irish parliament establish itself as an active legislative body. Local government in the country then received something of a fillip, both through legislative action in Dublin, and by reason of the extended period of social and political stability that followed the end of Queen Anne's reign. This essay seeks to outline the responsibilities and functions of the grand jury in Ireland, and thus to establish its position as perhaps the most important component in the governance of provincial Ireland. Further to this it attempts to analyse
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Rangarajan, Padma. "“With a Knife at One’s Throat”." Nineteenth-Century Literature 75, no. 3 (2020): 294–317. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/ncl.2020.75.3.294.

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Padma Rangarajan, “‘With a Knife at One’s Throat’: Irish Terrorism in The O’Briens and the O’Flahertys” (pp. 294–317) Sydney Owenson, Lady Morgan’s The O’Briens and the O’Flahertys (1827) is a silver-fork novel edged in steel: a portrait of aristocratic 1790s Dublin society that doubles as anti-imperialist jeremiad. It is also one of the earliest pieces of fiction to explicitly identify terrorism as an inevitable consequence of colonial conquest. In this essay, I demonstrate how Morgan’s novel upends the standard definition of terrorism as a singular historical rift and rewrites it as a condit
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Rangarajan, Padma. "“With a Knife at One’s Throat”." Nineteenth-Century Literature 75, no. 3 (2020): 294–317. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/ncl.2020.75.3.294.

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Padma Rangarajan, “‘With a Knife at One’s Throat’: Irish Terrorism in The O’Briens and the O’Flahertys” (pp. 294–317) Sydney Owenson, Lady Morgan’s The O’Briens and the O’Flahertys (1827) is a silver-fork novel edged in steel: a portrait of aristocratic 1790s Dublin society that doubles as anti-imperialist jeremiad. It is also one of the earliest pieces of fiction to explicitly identify terrorism as an inevitable consequence of colonial conquest. In this essay, I demonstrate how Morgan’s novel upends the standard definition of terrorism as a singular historical rift and rewrites it as a condit
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Bolton, J. L. "Irish migration to England in the late middle ages: the evidence of 1394 and 1440." Irish Historical Studies 32, no. 125 (2000): 1–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021121400014620.

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In 1440, for the first and only time in the late middle ages, the Irish in England were treated as aliens for taxation purposes. At the Reading session of the parliament of 1439–40 the Commons had granted an alien subsidy. It was a poll tax, to be paid at the rate of 16d. per head by householders and at 6d. per head by non-householders, by all those either not born in England or Wales or who did not have letters of denization, that is, naturalisation. Men of religious obedience and children under the age of twelve were also exempted, as were alien women married to English or Welsh men. The gra
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Malcolm, Elizabeth. "‘The reign of terror in Carlow’: the politics of policing Ireland in the late 1830s." Irish Historical Studies 32, no. 125 (2000): 59–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021121400014656.

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On 7 August 1837, the first day of voting in an election for two county seats, there was an altercation on the steps of the courthouse in Carlow town. This was not a typical Irish election riot, however, although large numbers of excited supporters of the rival candidates were milling around in the streets adjacent to the building. The altercation, which involved shouted abuse and a physical struggle, took place between two men only: one was the town’s sub-inspector of constabulary, and the other was its resident magistrate (R.M.) — in other words, Carlow’s two principal government-appointed u
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Nolan, Frances. "‘The Cat’s Paw’: Helen Arthur, the act of resumption andThe Popish pretenders to the forfeited estates in Ireland, 1700–03." Irish Historical Studies 42, no. 162 (2018): 225–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ihs.2018.31.

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AbstractThis article examines the case of Helen Arthur, a Catholic and Jacobite Irish woman who travelled with her children to France following William III’s victory over James II in the War of the Two Kings (1689–91). It considers Helen’s circumstances and her representation inThe Popish pretenders to the forfeited estates in Ireland, a pamphlet published in London in 1702 as a criticism of the act of resumption. The act, introduced by the English parliament in 1700, voided the majority of William III’s grants to favourites and supporters. Its provisions offered many dispossessed, including t
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Price, Graham. "Quite an Other Thing: Recent Texts in ‘Irish Queer Studies’Books Reviewed: Caroline Magennis and Raymond Mullen (eds). Irish Masculinities: Reflections on Literature and Culture. Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2011. x+194 pages. £50.00 GBP.Aintzane Legaretta Mentxaka, Kate O'Brien and the Fiction of Identity: Sex, Art and Politics in Mary Lavelle and Other Writings. North Carolina and London: McFarland and Company Inc, 2011. 290 pages. $45.00 USD.Fintan Walsh (ed), Queer Notions: New Plays and Performances from Ireland. Cork: Cork UP, 2010. 276 pages. $55.00 USD.Éibhear Walshe, Oscar's Shadow: Wilde, Homosexuality and Modern Ireland. Cork: Cork University Press, 2011. xi+149 pages. €39.00 EUR." Irish University Review 43, no. 1 (2013): 222–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/iur.2013.0065.

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This essay shall examine the relationship that exists between Irish studies and queer theory via a consideration of three recently published works, both academic and literary. The texts that shall be reviewed are: Eibhear Walshe's Oscar's Shadow: Wilde, Homosexuality and Modern Ireland, Aintzane Legarreta Mentxaka's Kate O'Brien and the Fiction of Identity: Sex, Art and Politics in Mary Lavelle and Other Writings, and the new collection of plays, edited by Fintan Walshe, entitled Queer Notions. The association between Irishness and otherness (a connection explicitly stated by Oscar Wilde) mean
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MILLER, BONNY H. "Augusta Browne: From Musical Prodigy to Musical Pilgrim in Nineteenth-Century America." Journal of the Society for American Music 8, no. 2 (2014): 189–218. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1752196314000078.

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AbstractAugusta Browne Garrett composed at least two hundred piano pieces, songs, duets, hymns, and sacred settings between her birth in Dublin, Ireland, around 1820, and her death in Washington, D.C., in 1882. Judith Tick celebrated Browne as the “most prolific woman composer in America before 1870” in her landmark study American Women Composers before 1870. Browne, however, cast an enduring shadow as an author as well, publishing two books, a dozen poems, several Protestant morality tracts, and more than sixty music essays, nonfiction pieces, and short stories. By means of her prose publicat
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Gutiérrez-Vilahú, Lourdes, Núria Massó-Ortigosa, Ferran Rey-Abella, Lluís Costa-Tutusaus, and Myriam Guerra-Balic. "Reliability and Validity of the Footprint Assessment Method Using Photoshop CS5 Software in Young People with Down Syndrome." Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association 106, no. 3 (2016): 207–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.7547/15-012.

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Background: People with Down syndrome present skeletal abnormalities in their feet that can be analyzed by commonly used gold standard indices (the Hernández-Corvo index, the Chippaux-Smirak index, the Staheli arch index, and the Clarke angle) based on footprint measurements. The use of Photoshop CS5 software (Adobe Systems Software Ireland Ltd, Dublin, Ireland) to measure footprints has been validated in the general population. The present study aimed to assess the reliability and validity of this footprint assessment technique in the population with Down syndrome. Methods: Using optical podo
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O’Connor, Pat, and Eileen Drew. "The Tenure Track Model: Its Acceptance and Perceived Gendered Character." Trends in Higher Education 2, no. 1 (2023): 62–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/higheredu2010005.

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This article is concerned with the tenure track (TT) model, which has become increasingly used to extend the period of early career academics’ probation from one to five years across the EU. This article focuses on the TT in Trinity College Dublin (TCD), the oldest and most prestigious university in Ireland, one where gender equality has been embedded more consistently and where the pace of change has been faster than in other Irish universities. Drawing on interviews with thirteen men and women in three faculties, all but one of whom had successfully achieved tenure, this article explores the
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Jarząb-Napierała, Joanna. "“No Country for Old Men”? The Question of George Moore’s Place in the Early Twentieth-Century Literature of Ireland." Text Matters, no. 8 (October 24, 2018): 25–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/texmat-2018-0002.

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The paper scrutinizes the literary output of George Moore with reference to the expectations of the new generation of Irish writers emerging at the beginning of the twentieth century. Although George Moore is considered to belong to the Anglo-Irish ascendancy writers, he began his writing career from dissociating himself from the literary achievements of his own social class. His infatuation with the ideals of the Gaelic League not only brought him back to Dublin, but also encouraged him to write short stories analogous to famous Ivan Turgenev’s The Sportsman’s Sketches. The idea of using a Ru
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Mulligan, Vanessa, Yvonne Lynagh, Susan Clarke, Magnus Unemo, and Brendan Crowley. "Prevalence, Macrolide Resistance, and Fluoroquinolone Resistance in Mycoplasma genitalium in Men Who Have Sex With Men Attending an Sexually Transmitted Disease Clinic in Dublin, Ireland in 2017–2018." Sexually Transmitted Diseases 46, no. 4 (2019): e35-e37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/olq.0000000000000940.

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Finn, Stephen P., Eamon Leen, Liam English, and D. Sean O'Briain. "Autopsy Findings in an Outbreak of Severe Systemic Illness in Heroin Users Following Injection Site Inflammation: An Effect of Clostridium novyi Exotoxin?" Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine 127, no. 11 (2003): 1465–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.5858/2003-127-1465-afiaoo.

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Abstract Context.—An epidemic of unexplained illness among injecting drug users characterized by injection site inflammation and severe systemic toxicity occurred in Ireland and the United Kingdom from April to August 2000. One hundred eight persons became ill, and 43 persons died. In Dublin, 8 of 22 patients died. Six of the 8 fatal cases were epidemiologically linked to a source of heroin. Most had experienced local injection site lesions for 7 to 14 days before developing a rapidly fatal systemic illness characterized by hypotension, thirst, pulmonary edema, pericardial and pleural effusion
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Corish, Clare A., and Nicholas P. Kennedy. "Anthropometric measurements from a cross-sectional survey of Irish free-living elderly subjects with smoothed centile curves." British Journal of Nutrition 89, no. 1 (2003): 137–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1079/bjn2002748.

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Anthropometric screening has been recommended for the detection of undernutrition as it is simple, inexpensive and non-invasive. However, a recent study estimating the prevalence of undernutrition on admission to hospital in Dublin, Republic of Ireland, highlighted that the anthropometric reference data currently available in the UK and Republic of Ireland are inadequate to accurately determine nutritional status. In order to provide current anthropometric data, we carried out a cross-sectional study of 874 free-living, apparently healthy Irish-born elderly individuals aged over 65 years. Heig
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BIAGINI, EUGENIO F. "A LONG WAY TO TIPPERARY: THE IRISH IN THE FIRST WORLD WAR." Historical Journal 61, no. 2 (2017): 525–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x17000218.

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‘The Irish are out in force’: it was a rainy summer day on the fields of the Somme, and they were very young, in their early teens, in fact. However, this was not 1916, but 2016, when the centenary of one of the bloodiest battles in history attracted an international crowd, including large contingents of school children from the Republic. In contrast to the 50th anniversary, which, in 1966, had been a ‘Unionist’ commemoration – claimed by the Northern Irish loyalists as their own, while the survivors of the Southern veterans kept their heads down and suppressed this part of their past – in 201
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ORiordan, Maeve. "‘We … galloped hard and straight over some big stone gaps’: Freedom of the Hunt for Elite Women in Ireland, 1860-1914." Studies in Arts and Humanities 7, no. 1 (2021): 18–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.18193/sah.v7i1.200.

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Hunting was an elite social pastime accessible to both men and women, of the correct social class, throughout the period 1860-1914. Female involvement in this sport preceded their widespread involvement in other sports and pastimes such as tennis and cycling. This article explores the contradictions inherent in women’s involvement in this masculine sport. The sport demanded that participants display contemporary masculine characteristics of bravery, strength, and independence, and yet it was open to both married and unmarried women of the gentry and ascendancy class in Ireland. The sport was a
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Timonen, Virpi, and Luciana Lolich. "Dependency as Status: Older Adults’ Presentations of Self as Recipients of Care." SAGE Open 10, no. 4 (2020): 215824402096359. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2158244020963590.

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We draw on Bourdieu’s and Goffman’s theories to elaborate the novel idea of dependency as status in old age, a concept that emerged from our Grounded Theory study conducted with 46 older adults (26 women and 20 men) living in and around Dublin, Ireland. The research participants’ portrayals of (in)dependence and assistance reflected their access to and use of social and symbolic (age) capital. Older adults derived social capital from supportive family relations or trusting relationships with formal care providers, and deployed such capital to signal their status as “cared for” individuals. Age
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McAteer, Michael. "Post-revisionism: Conflict (Ir)resolution and the Limits of Ambivalence in Kevin McCarthy’s Peeler." Text Matters, no. 8 (October 24, 2018): 9–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/texmat-2018-0001.

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This essay considers a historical novel of recent times in revisionist terms, Kevin McCarthy’s debut novel of 2010, Peeler. In doing so, I also address the limitations that the novel exposes within Irish revisionism. I propose that McCarthy’s novel should be regarded more properly as a post-revisionist work of literature. A piece of detective fiction that is set during the Irish War of Independence from 1919 to 1921, Peeler challenges the romantic nationalist understanding of the War as one of heroic struggle by focusing its attention on a Catholic member of the Royal Irish Constabulary. In co
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