‘Changed Utterly’? Transformation and continuity in late twentieth‐century Ireland
Identifieur interne : 000487 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 000486; suivant : 000488‘Changed Utterly’? Transformation and continuity in late twentieth‐century Ireland
Auteurs : R. F. Foster [Royaume-Uni]Source :
- Historical Research [ 0950-3471 ] ; 2007-08.
Descripteurs français
- Wicri :
- geographic : Irlande (pays).
English descriptors
- KwdEn :
- Arms trial, August, Bishop creighton, Catholic church, Catholic ireland, Celtic tiger, Charles james haughey, Charles townshend, Collective memory, Creighton, Creighton lecture, Cultural influence, Devotional revolution, Dublin, Economic miracle, Eoin mcnamee, Everlasting boom, Fianna, First world, Free state, Garret fitzgerald, Globalization, Haughey, Historical interpretation, Historical research, International recognition, Investigative journalism, Ireland, Irish, Irish america, Irish culture, Irish economy, Irish globalization, Irish historiography, Irish history, Irish liberation movement, Irish life, Irish literature, Irish people, Irish psyche, Irish republic, Irish review, Irish story, Irish times, John banville, Last generation, Late ireland, Liberation psychology, Lord acton, Lord randolph churchill, Many ways, Memory ireland, Modern ireland, Nineteenth century, Northern ireland, Other levels, Other things, Past generations, Political libido, Private life, Property developers, Recent analysis, Roddy doyle, Same time, Social partnership, Soft power, Strange death, Twentieth century, Wider world.
- Teeft :
- Arms trial, August, Bishop creighton, Catholic church, Catholic ireland, Celtic tiger, Charles james haughey, Charles townshend, Collective memory, Creighton, Creighton lecture, Cultural influence, Devotional revolution, Dublin, Economic miracle, Eoin mcnamee, Everlasting boom, Fianna, First world, Free state, Garret fitzgerald, Globalization, Haughey, Historical interpretation, Historical research, International recognition, Investigative journalism, Ireland, Irish, Irish america, Irish culture, Irish economy, Irish globalization, Irish historiography, Irish history, Irish liberation movement, Irish life, Irish literature, Irish people, Irish psyche, Irish republic, Irish review, Irish story, Irish times, John banville, Last generation, Late ireland, Liberation psychology, Lord acton, Lord randolph churchill, Many ways, Memory ireland, Modern ireland, Nineteenth century, Northern ireland, Other levels, Other things, Past generations, Political libido, Private life, Property developers, Recent analysis, Roddy doyle, Same time, Social partnership, Soft power, Strange death, Twentieth century, Wider world.
Abstract
From about 1970, Irish history moved into a fast‐forward phase culminating in an extraordinary economic boom for the Republic. This took place against the background of violence in Northern Ireland, up to the uneasy resolution of Good Friday 1998. It is now possible to try and analyse this era from a variety of sources, such as the reports of tribunals investigating corruption, contemporary memoirs, political records and investigative journalism. This article considers the forces and events behind dramatic and unforeseen change in politics, economics, cultural influence, religious profession and gender roles, and discusses how far the ‘key’ is to be found in American rather than European models and influence. Moreover, ‘liberalization’ in economic, religious, sexual and other spheres has been accompanied, on other levels, by a retreat into atavistic attitudes – particularly concerning the construction of Irish ‘identity’ and the packaging of Irish history. This masks a less‐noticed revolution in attitudes over the last thirty years of the twentieth century – the strengthening of partitionist attitudes in the Republic, and the copper‐fastening of the border between North and South.
Url:
DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-2281.2007.00411.x
Affiliations:
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Le document en format XML
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">From about 1970, Irish history moved into a fast‐forward phase culminating in an extraordinary economic boom for the Republic. This took place against the background of violence in Northern Ireland, up to the uneasy resolution of Good Friday 1998. It is now possible to try and analyse this era from a variety of sources, such as the reports of tribunals investigating corruption, contemporary memoirs, political records and investigative journalism. This article considers the forces and events behind dramatic and unforeseen change in politics, economics, cultural influence, religious profession and gender roles, and discusses how far the ‘key’ is to be found in American rather than European models and influence. Moreover, ‘liberalization’ in economic, religious, sexual and other spheres has been accompanied, on other levels, by a retreat into atavistic attitudes – particularly concerning the construction of Irish ‘identity’ and the packaging of Irish history. This masks a less‐noticed revolution in attitudes over the last thirty years of the twentieth century – the strengthening of partitionist attitudes in the Republic, and the copper‐fastening of the border between North and South.</div>
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