Description
The 19th era was a time of immense structural upheaval for Ireland, witnessing the Act of Union, the devastation of the Great Famine, and the rapid rise of revolutionary and constitutional nationalism. In Ideology and Ireland in the Nineteenth Century, distinguished cultural historians Tadhg Foley and Seán Ryder deliver a thorough, data-driven investigation into the underlying philosophical frameworks that drove these historical changes.
Foley and Ryder look deeply into contemporary political pamphlets, press essays, and state documents to evaluate the practical functional operations of competing ideologies, from British laissez-faire capitalism to radical agrarianism and Catholic identity building. The text systematically guides researchers through the complex intellectual landscapes that defined the era, revealing how ideas were manufactured and weaponized to either defend the imperial status quo or demand full independence. This authoritative volume stands as a mandatory reference cornerstone for advanced academic history tracks, political scientists, and university research libraries.
Critical research frameworks evaluated within this study:
-
Socio-Political Ideology Analytics: Breaks down the precise operations, media strategies, and language models used by unionist, nationalist, and agrarian movements.
-
Cultural Nationalism Mapping: Investigates how literature, antiquarian studies, and language revival efforts were integrated into high-stakes political campaigns.
-
Gold-Standard Scholarly Quality: Meticulously annotated with deep primary citations, extensive bibliography indices, and peer-reviewed historical cross-references.






Reviews
There are no reviews yet.