Spirit of Revolution: Ireland from below, 1917-1923 by John Cunningham PhD, Terr

22 September 2024

Views: 33

Book Spirit of Revolution: Ireland from below, 1917-1923 PDF Download - John Cunningham PhD, Terry Dunne PhD

Download ebook ➡ http://ebooksharez.info/pl/book/709387/996

Spirit of Revolution: Ireland from below, 1917-1923
John Cunningham PhD, Terry Dunne PhD
Page: 288
Format: pdf, ePub, mobi, fb2
ISBN: 9781801511186
Publisher: Four Courts Press

Download or Read Online Spirit of Revolution: Ireland from below, 1917-1923 Free Book (PDF ePub Mobi) by John Cunningham PhD, Terry Dunne PhD
Spirit of Revolution: Ireland from below, 1917-1923 John Cunningham PhD, Terry Dunne PhD PDF, Spirit of Revolution: Ireland from below, 1917-1923 John Cunningham PhD, Terry Dunne PhD Epub, Spirit of Revolution: Ireland from below, 1917-1923 John Cunningham PhD, Terry Dunne PhD Read Online, Spirit of Revolution: Ireland from below, 1917-1923 John Cunningham PhD, Terry Dunne PhD Audiobook, Spirit of Revolution: Ireland from below, 1917-1923 John Cunningham PhD, Terry Dunne PhD VK, Spirit of Revolution: Ireland from below, 1917-1923 John Cunningham PhD, Terry Dunne PhD Kindle, Spirit of Revolution: Ireland from below, 1917-1923 John Cunningham PhD, Terry Dunne PhD Epub VK, Spirit of Revolution: Ireland from below, 1917-1923 John Cunningham PhD, Terry Dunne PhD Free Download

Overview
In the spring of 1919, UK Prime Minister David Lloyd George wrote: ‘The whole of Europe is filled with the spirit of revolution. There is a deep sense not only of discontent, but of anger and revolt, amongst the workmen against prewar conditions … In some countries, like Germany and Russia, the unrest takes the form of open rebellion; in others … it takes the shape of strikes and of a general disinclination to settle down to work.’ While comparative studies of revolution within the social sciences define revolution, in part, as necessarily involving mass participation, dominant narratives of the Irish revolution have left Lloyd George’s ‘spirit of revolution’ by the wayside. The political content of the revolution is assumed to exclusively be the demand for national independence, while a focus on high-politics and military elites obscures the ways in which tens of thousands of people participated in diverse forms of popular mobilization. This collection of regional and local case studies, by contrast, shows that a ‘spirit of revolution’ was widespread in Ireland in the period 1917– 23.

Share