The ‘mere’ Irish and the colonisation of Ulster, 1570–1641

GERARD FARRELL Palgrave Macmillan €96 ISBN 9783319593623 Reviewed by James O’Neill James O’Neill is an independent heritage consultant based in Belfast. Perhaps it’s a coincidence, or maybe it’s the recent 400th anniversary of the start of the Ulster plantation, but there has been a recent influx of monographs and edited volumes examining that pivotal yet … Read more

The end of outrage: post-Famine adjustment in rural Ireland

BREANDÁN MAC SUIBHNE Oxford University Press £20 ISBN 9780198738619 Reviewed by Emily Mark-FitzGerald Emily Mark-FitzGerald is Associate Professor of Art History and Cultural Policy at University College Dublin. In Ways of seeing (1972), John Berger wrote of how ‘capitalism survives by forcing the majority, whom it exploits, to define their own interests as narrowly as … Read more

Lovers and strangers: an immigrant history of post-war Britain

CLAIRE WILLS Allen Lane €30 ISBN 9781846147166 Reviewed by Mary Kenny Mary Kenny’s most recent book is Am I a feminist? Are you? (New Island). Everyone is familiar with the legend that Irish migrants to Britain were greeted with landlords’ notices saying ‘No blacks, no Irish, no dogs’. I have never quite believed this particular … Read more

Michael Davitt, after the Land League 1882–1906

CARLA KING UCD Press €50 ISBN 9781906359928 Reviewed by Conor McNamara Published towards the end of the centenary year of the 1916 Rising, Carla King’s monumental biography of the later life of Michael Davitt concludes by noting the startling omission of serious analysis of Davitt’s political vision in the discourse of Irish revolutionaries during the … Read more