The Counter-Culture of Conscience (Paperback)
Sean Patrick Pearse
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Add to basketSold by Grand Eagle Retail, Bensenville, IL, U.S.A.
AbeBooks Seller since October 12, 2005
Condition: New
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketPaperback. The Counter-Culture of Conscience: Protestant Nationalism and the Irish RepublicFor three centuries, a remarkable and often overlooked tradition ran through the heart of Irish political life, the tradition of the Protestant who chose Ireland over community, principle over privilege, and the common good over confessional loyalty. From William Molyneux's foundational legal argument for Irish sovereignty in 1698 to the civil rights marchers of 1960s Belfast, men and women of Protestant background consistently argued, at great personal cost, for an inclusive, non-sectarian Irish republic in which Catholic and Protestant would stand as equal citizens.This book traces that tradition in full, from the constitutional patriotism of Swift and Grattan through the revolutionary republicanism of Wolfe Tone and Lord Edward FitzGerald, through the cultural nationalism of Thomas Davis and Douglas Hyde, through the parliamentary genius of Parnell and the anti-imperial courage of Casement, to the Senate battles of the Free State era and the long, difficult survival of the ideal through partition and the Troubles. It asks why the United Irish vision of a republic built on the common name of Irishmen was never fully realised, what structural forces prevented it, and what the courage and failure of those who pursued it across three centuries can teach us about the unfinished business of Irish political life today. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
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The Counter-Culture of Conscience: Protestant Nationalism and the Irish Republic
For three centuries, a remarkable and often overlooked tradition ran through the heart of Irish political life, the tradition of the Protestant who chose Ireland over community, principle over privilege, and the common good over confessional loyalty. From William Molyneux's foundational legal argument for Irish sovereignty in 1698 to the civil rights marchers of 1960s Belfast, men and women of Protestant background consistently argued, at great personal cost, for an inclusive, non-sectarian Irish republic in which Catholic and Protestant would stand as equal citizens.
This book traces that tradition in full, from the constitutional patriotism of Swift and Grattan through the revolutionary republicanism of Wolfe Tone and Lord Edward FitzGerald, through the cultural nationalism of Thomas Davis and Douglas Hyde, through the parliamentary genius of Parnell and the anti-imperial courage of Casement, to the Senate battles of the Free State era and the long, difficult survival of the ideal through partition and the Troubles. It asks why the United Irish vision of a republic built on the common name of Irishmen was never fully realised, what structural forces prevented it, and what the courage and failure of those who pursued it across three centuries can teach us about the unfinished business of Irish political life today.
Sean Patrick Pearse is an Irish historian and writer specialising in the political and cultural history of Ireland, Britain, and the Protestant nationalist tradition. Drawing on a deep engagement with primary sources, archival material, and the best of contemporary Irish historiography, Pearse writes narrative history that combines scholarly rigour with accessible, literary prose. His work explores the long and often contradictory relationship between religious identity, political loyalty, and the aspiration to national self-determination on the island of Ireland, from the constitutional debates of the eighteenth century through to the complexities of the post-partition era and the peace process. Pearse is particularly interested in the figures who crossed communal boundaries - the Protestants who chose republican nationalism, the socialists who attempted cross-confessional solidarity, and the cultural revivalists who tried to write all of Ireland's traditions into a single national story. His books aim to recover forgotten or marginalised voices within the Irish historical tradition and to ask what their courage and their failures can teach us about the unfinished business of Irish political life. He writes for readers who want history that is intellectually serious, humanly engaged, and willing to ask uncomfortable questions.
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