MTU Cork Library Catalogue

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The politics of illusion : republicanism and socialism in modern Ireland / Henry Patterson.

By: Patterson, Henry, 1947-.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: London : Hutchinson Radius, 1989Description: 248 p. ; 23 cm.ISBN: 0091742595 (hbk); 0091741394 (pbk).Subject(s): Republicanism -- Ireland -- History -- 20th century | Socialism -- Ireland -- History -- 20th century | Nationalism -- Ireland -- History -- 20th century | Ireland -- Politics and government -- 1922-DDC classification: 322.42
Contents:
Introduction -- The origins of social republicanism -- Republicanism in inter-war Ireland -- In De Valera's shadow -- A limited reassessment: the IRA after 1962 -- The officials: regression and development 1970-77 -- The provisionals and the rediscovery of social republicanism -- Conclusion.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
General Lending MTU Bishopstown Library Lending 322.42 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00042067
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

From agitation among the peasantry in the 1920s to efforts in the 1990s to add a political dimension to purist nationalism in the form of Sinn Fein's "peace process," Henry Patterson analyzes the various failed attempts to marry two fundamentally incompatible ideologies.Friend and foe have described the IRA as "socialists," "Marxists" and "fascists" or simply as militaristic and murderous thugs. In this highly praised work the author steers us through the complex, schismatic and inevitably secretive history of both the Provisional and Official IRA, Sinn Fein and the various organizations with which they have been associated. He teases out the meaning and significance of the twists and turns in republican policy, which at different periods have involved working with trade unions, collaboration with Nazi Germany, support for tenants fighting for better housing, hunger strikes, and, of course, both urban and rural guerrilla warfare.This fully revised and updated new edition takes the history of Irish republicanism beyond Sinn Fein's best ever performance in the 1997 elections in both the Republic of Ireland and the UK to the IRA's renewed ceasefire. Henry Patterson's conclusion is that "physical force" or militarist nationalism and the politics of the left make uneasy and, when the rhetoric is cleared away, self-deluding and illusory bed-fellows.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 221-248).

Introduction -- The origins of social republicanism -- Republicanism in inter-war Ireland -- In De Valera's shadow -- A limited reassessment: the IRA after 1962 -- The officials: regression and development 1970-77 -- The provisionals and the rediscovery of social republicanism -- Conclusion.

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