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Ireland, slavery and the Caribbean is a complex and ground-breaking
collection of essays. Grounded in history, it integrates
perspectives from art historians, architectural and landscape
historians, and literary scholars to produce a genuinely
interdisciplinary collection that spans from 1620-1830: the high
point of European colonialism. By exploring imperial, national and
familial relationships from their building blocks of plantation,
migration, property and trade, it finds new ways to re-create and
question how slavery made the Atlantic world. -- .
For as far back as school registers can take us, the most
prestigious education available to any Irish child was to be found
outside Ireland. Catholics of Consequence traces, for the first
time, the transnational education, careers, and lives of more than
two thousand Irish boys and girls who attended Catholic schools in
England, France, Belgium, and elsewhere in the second half of the
nineteenth century. There was a long tradition of Irish Anglicans,
Protestants, and Catholics sending their children abroad for the
majority of their formative years. However, as the cultural
nationalism of the Irish revival took root at the end of the
nineteenth century, Irish Catholics who sent their children to
school in Britain were accused of a pro-Britishness that
crystallized into still recognisable terms of insult such as West
Briton, Castle Catholic, Squireen, and Seoinin. This concept has an
enduring resonance in Ireland, but very few publications have ever
interrogated it. Catholics of Consequence endeavours to analyse the
education and subsequent lives of the Irish children that received
this type of transnational education. It also tells the story of
elite education in Ireland, where schools such as Clongowes Wood
College and Castleknock College were rooted in the continental
Catholic tradition, but also looked to public schools in England as
exemplars. Taken together the book tells the story of an Irish
Catholic elite at once integrated and segregated within what was
then the most powerful state in the world.
For as far back as school registers can take us, the most
prestigious education available to any Irish child was to be found
outside Ireland. Catholics of Consequence traces, for the first
time, the transnational education, careers, and lives of more than
two thousand Irish boys and girls who attended Catholic schools in
England, France, Belgium, and elsewhere in the second half of the
nineteenth century. There was a long tradition of Irish Anglicans
and Catholics sending their children abroad for the majority of
their formative years. However, as the cultural nationalism of the
Irish revival at the end of the nineteenth century took root, Irish
Catholics who sent their children to school in Britain were accused
of a pro-Britishness that crystallized into still recognisable
terms of insult such as West Briton, Castle Catholic, Squireen, and
Seoinin. This concept has an enduring resonance in Ireland, but
very few publications have ever interrogated it. Catholics of
Consequence marks the first ever attempt to analyse the education
and subsequent lives of the Irish children that received this type
of transnational education. It also tells the story of elite
education in Ireland, where schools such as Clongowes Wood and
Castleknock College were rooted in the continental Catholic
tradition, but also looked to public schools in England as
exemplars. Taken together it tells the story of an Irish Catholic
elite at once integrated and segregated within what was then the
most powerful state in the world.
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