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This book analyses travel texts aimed at the emergent Irish middle
classes in the long nineteenth century. Unlike travel writing about
Ireland, Irish travel writing about foreign spaces has been
under-researched. Drawing on a wide range of neglected material and
focusing on selected European destinations, this study draws out
the distinctive features of an Irish corpus that often subverts
dominant trends in Anglo-Saxon travel writing. As it charts Irish
participation in a new 'mass' tourism, it shows how that
participation led to heated ideological debates in Victorian and
Edwardian Irish print culture. Those debates culminate in James
Joyce's 'The Dead', which is here re-read through new discursive
contextualizations. This book sheds new light on middle-class
culture in pre-independence Ireland, and on Ireland's relation to
Europe. The methodology used to define its Irish corpus also makes
innovative contributions to the study of travel writing.
This interdisciplinary collection investigates the forms that
authority assumed in nineteenth-century Ireland, the relations they
bore to international redefinitions of authority, and Irish
contributions to the reshaping of authority in the modern age. At a
time when age-old sources of social, political, spiritual and
cultural authority were eroded in the Western world, Ireland
witnessed both the restoration of older forms of authority and the
rise of figures who defined new models of authority in a democratic
age. Using new comparative perspectives as well as archival
resources in a wide range of fields, the essays gathered here show
how new authorities were embodied in emerging types of politicians,
clerics and professionals, and in material extensions of their
power in visual, oral and print cultures. These analyses often
eerily echo twenty-first-century debates about populism, suspicion
of scholarly and intellectual expertise, and the role of new
technologies and forms of association in contesting and recreating
authority. Several contributions highlight the role of emotion in
the way authority was deployed by figures ranging from Daniel
O'Connell to W.B. Yeats, foreshadowing the perceived rise of
emotional politics in our own age. This volume demonstrates that
many contested forms of authority that now look 'traditional'
emerged from nineteenth-century crises and developments, as did the
challenges that undermine authority. CONTRIBUTORS: Marguerite
Corporaal, Patrick Geoghegan, Patrick Maume, Michelle McCann,
Caroline M. McGee, James H. Murphy, Shane Nagle, Niamh NicGhabhann,
Richard Parfitt, Colleen M. Thomas, Tom Walker
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