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'…and then the music was so loud, so beautiful that I couldn’t
think of anything else. I was completely lost to the music,
enveloped by melody which was part of Pan.' In 1894, Arthur
Machen’s landmark novella The Great God Pan was published,
sparking the sinister resurgence of the pagan goat god. Writers of
the late-nineteenth to mid-twentieth centuries, such as Oscar
Wilde, E. M. Forster and Margery Lawrence, took the god’s
rebellious influence as inspiration to spin beguiling tales of
social norms turned upside down and ancient ecological forces
compelling their protagonists to ecstatic heights or bizarre dooms.
Assembling ten tales and six poems – along with Machen’s
novella – from the boom years of Pan-centric literature, this new
collection revels in themes of queer awakening, transgression
against societal bonds and the bewitching power of the wild as it
explores a rapturous and culturally significant chapter in the
history of weird fiction.
'All about us on the stairs was some of the most exquisite statuary
I have ever seen... save for a few pieces carved in the form of
some hideous beast, the like of which I have never seen on
earth...' The sunken continent of Atlantis has dwelt in the
collective imagination of writers and artists for centuries; a
bejewelled paradox bubbling with themes of irrecoverable loss and
quixotic faith in its rediscovery. This new anthology collects
stories from the vast, yet seldom recognised, vault of Atlantean
fiction from the Golden Age of Weird Tales magazine, presented in
four core sections, perfect for diving into: - Atlantis
Rediscovered – in which the ruins of ancient Atlantis are found
again. - Atlantis Revisited – tales of Deep Time, in which the
descendants of Atlanteans re-live the experiences of ancestors. -
Atlantis Resurrected – in which Atlantis never sunk at all but
remains at large in the world. - Atlantis Reimagined – in which
the continent is fertile ground for experiments in Weird Fantasy
and beyond.
John Redmond's constitutional, parliamentary, Irish Party went from
dominating Irish politics to oblivion in just four years from
1914-1918. The goal of limited Home Rule, peacefully achieved,
appeared to die with it.
Given the speed of the party's collapse, its death has been seen
as inevitable. Though such views have been challenged, there has
been no detailed study of the Irish Party in the last years of
union with Britain, before the world war and the Easter Rising
transformed Irish politics.
Through a study of five counties in provincial Ireland - Leitrim,
Longford, Roscommon, Sligo, and Westmeath - that history has now
been written. Far from being 'rotten', the Irish Party was
representative of nationalist opinion and still capable of
self-renewal and change. However, the Irish nationalism at this
time was also suffused with a fierce anglophobia and sense of
grievance, defined by its enemies, which rapidly came to the fore,
first in the Home Rule crisis and then in the war. Redmond's
project, the peaceful attainment of Home Rule, simply could not be
realised.
During the First World War approximately 210,000 Irish men and a
much smaller, but significant, number of Irish women served in the
British armed forces. All were volunteers and a very high
proportion were from Catholic and Nationalist communities. This
book is the first comprehensive analysis of Irish recruitment
between 1914 and 1918 for the island of Ireland as a whole. It
makes extensive use of previously neglected internal British army
recruiting returns held at The National Archives, Kew, along with
other valuable archival and newspaper sources. There has been a
tendency to discount the importance of political factors in Irish
recruitment, but this book demonstrates that recruitment campaigns
organised under the auspices of the Irish National Volunteers and
Ulster Volunteer Force were the earliest and some of the most
effective campaigns run throughout the war. The British government
conspicuously failed to create an effective recruiting organisation
or to mobilise civic society in Ireland. While the military
mobilisation which occurred between 1914 and 1918 was the largest
in Irish history, British officials persistently characterised it
as inadequate, threatening to introduce conscription in 1918. This
book also reflects on the disparity of sacrifice between North-East
Ulster and the rest of Ireland, urban and rural Ireland, and
Ireland and Great Britain.
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Paperback
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R205
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Discovery Miles 1 680
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