Paris – capital of Irish culture France, Ireland and the Republic, 1798–1916

Paris – capital of Irish culture

France, Ireland and the Republic, 1798–1916


Pierre Joannon & Kevin Whelan, editors

Hardback €45.00
Catalogue Price: €50.00
ISBN: 978-1-84682-651-1
Coming October 2017. 288pp; colour ills.

This collection explores the influence of France on the evolution of Irish political and cultural thought from the eighteenth century, showing how the convergence between the two countries fed into the cultural energies that underpinned the 1916 Rising. In the second half of the nineteenth century, Paris loomed large in the wider European imagination. Paris functioned as a political capital for fugitive Irish republicans from 1798 until 1916. This Parisian link was there from the Jacobites, through the United Irishmen to the Young Irelanders and the Fenians. Parisian links remained strong in the build-up to the 1916 Rising and the French exerted a strong intellectual influence on pre-1916 Irish political activists.

 

Contributors: Thomas Bartlett (U Aberdeen), Laurent Colantonio (U Quebec), Seamus Deane (U Notre Dame), Phyllis Gaffney (UCD), Pierre Joannon, Janick Julienne, Sylvie Kleinman, Anne Magny, Barry McCrea (U Notre Dame), Thomas O’Connor (MU), Justin Dolan Stover (Idaho State U), Pierre Ranger, Kevin Whelan (U Notre Dame).

Pierre Joannon is the author of many books on the relations between Ireland and France. Kevin Whelan is director of the University of Notre Dame Global Gateway in Dublin.