Patrick Mannion (Editor) Patrick Mannion is Research Fellow in Irish History at the University of Edinburgh, where he works on the AHRC-funded project A Global History of Irish Revolution, 1916-23. He is the author of the prize-winning book A Land of Dreams: Ethnicity, Nationalism, and the Irish in Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, and Maine, 1880-1923. Fearghal McGarry (Editor) Fearghal McGarry is Professor of Irish History at Queen's University Belfast. He has authored and edited many books, including The Rising-Ireland: Easter 1916, Eoin O'Duffy: A Self-Made Hero, and Remembering 1916. The Easter Rising, the Somme and the Politics of Memory in Ireland.
Description
"Featuring impressive new scholarship on the global dimensions of the Irish Revolution, Mannion and McGarry provide much needed coherence to this emergent but still diffuse and underdeveloped aspect of the historiography, resulting in a cutting-edge reader on a critical theme that currently lacks a single dedicated volume. Most impressively, The Irish Revolution features many neglected or virtually unknown international influences and comparative case studies, including Algerian, Egyptian, Korean, Panamanian, and African-American contexts, making it a novel contribution to our understanding of the international dimensions of anti-colonial (and colonial) discourses, networks, and responses to Irish events." -- Gavin Foster, author of The Irish Civil War and Society: Politics, Class and Conflict "A truly groundbreaking volume whose international contributions force a great reimagining of the Irish Revolution. A must-read for anyone interested in Irish history." -- Timothy McMahon, Marquette University "A brilliant collection of essays, written by some of the leading authorities on the subject. The book takes us from Dublin to Delhi, from Algeria to Australia, and many other places in-between, and greatly enriches our understanding of the global repercussions and entanglements of what happened in Ireland between 1916 and 1922. Essential reading for anyone who is interested in the global interconnectedness of revolutionary struggle during this period." -- Robert Gerwarth, Professor of Modern History at University College Dublin "The Irish Revolution: A Global History, an invaluable synthesis of a new, more globally minded scholarship on the Irish Revolution, is essential reading for anyone interested in twentieth-century Ireland. By placing Irish events in such rich dialogue with anti-colonial and imperial contexts, the authors cast new light on familiar incidents and individuals while raising new figures from the shadows. The result is a revitalized sense of the global significance of the Irish revolutionary decade, events that continue to reverberate long after the Wilsonian moment." * New Hibernia Review *