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  • 1
    UID:
    almahu_9949758806902882
    Format: 1 online resource (480 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781350333307
    Series Statement: Bloomsbury Studies in Classical Reception
    Content: 〈b〉Through an extensive series of extracts and accompanying interpretative and contextual essays, this volume 〈/b〉〈b〉showcases the expertise in classical learning that flourished in medieval Gaelic Ireland.〈/b〉 Providing translations of all excerpts, it situates better known 'antiquity sagas' in the Middle Irish language, such as 〈i〉Togail Troí 〈/i〉(〈i〉The Siege of Troy〈/i〉, based on Dares Phrygius), 〈i〉Imtheachta Aeniasa〈/i〉 (〈i〉The Wanderings of Aeneas〈/i〉, based on Virgil's 〈i〉Aeneid〈/i〉), 〈i〉In Cath Catharda 〈/i〉(〈i〉The Civil War〈/i〉, based on Lucan) and 〈i〉Togail na Tebe 〈/i〉(〈i〉The Siege of Thebes〈/i〉, based on Statius), within the broader constellation of medieval Irish literature that references and engages with classical antiquity. Included are synchronistic poetry and world chronologies; lesser-known Irish poetry and prose recounting episodes from Graeco-Roman mythography and featuring, for instance, Jason and the Argonauts, Ulysses and Penelope, Agamemnon and Clytemnestra, Daedalus and the Minotaur; linguistic and metaphysical tracts; place-name lore; and medieval historiographies of Alexander the Great, Hercules, and warriors of Irish legend recast as classical heroes. Creating access to this body of texts and revealing the marked influences of classical concepts on the imaginative resources of medieval Ireland fills a conspicuous lacuna in our knowledge of classical reception in European literatures. The ebook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on www.bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by the European Research Council, grant no. 818366.
    Note: List of Illustrations List of Contributors Acknowledgements A Guide to Editorial Practices for Middle Irish Texts, 〈i〉Michael Clarke (University of Galway, Ireland)〈/i〉 〈b〉 I. INTRODUCTION〈/b〉 1. The Culture of the Book and Classical Learning in the Gaelic Middle Ages, 〈i〉Máire Ní Mhaonaigh (University of Cambridge, UK) and Michael Clarke (University of Galway, Ireland)〈/i〉 2. The Irish Antiquity Sagas in Context, 〈i〉Ralph O'Connor (University of Aberdeen, UK)〈/i〉 〈b〉II. CHRONOLOGY AND CORRELATION〈/b〉 3. The First Fragment of the 〈i〉Annals of Tigernach, 〈/i〉〈i〉Patrick Wadden (Belmont Abbey College, USA)〈/i〉 4. Gilla Cóemáin's 〈i〉Annálad anall uile 〈/i〉'All the annals heretofore...', 〈i〉Peadar Mac Gabhann (Ulster University, UK)〈/i〉 5. Flann Mainistrech's 〈i〉Flaithius Rómán ríge glonn 〈/i〉'The sovereignty of the Romans was a kingship of feats of prowess', 〈i〉Peadar Mac Gabhann (Ulster University, UK)〈/i〉 〈b〉III. THE TROJAN WAR〈/b〉 6. 〈i〉Luid Iasón ina luing lóir〈/i〉 'Jason went in his ample ship', 〈i〉Michael Clarke (University of Galway, Ireland)〈/i〉 7. 〈i〉Togail Troí〈/i〉 'The Siege of Troy', Recension 1, 〈i〉Brent Miles (University of Toronto, Canada)〈/i〉 8. 〈i〉Togail Troí〈/i〉 'The Siege of Troy', Recension 2 from the Book of Leinster, 〈i〉Michael Clarke (University of Galway, Ireland)〈/i〉 9. 〈i〉Togail Troí〈/i〉 'The Siege of Troy', Recension 3, 〈i〉Michael Clarke (University of Galway, Ireland)〈/i〉 10. 〈i〉Don Tres Troí 〈/i〉'On the Third Troy', 〈i〉Brent Miles (University of Toronto, Canada)〈/i〉 〈b〉IV. ADAPTATION OF LATIN EPIC〈/b〉 11. 〈i〉Togail na Tebe〈/i〉 'The Siege of Thebes', 〈i〉Mariamne Briggs (Independent Scholar, UK)〈/i〉 12. 〈i〉Riss in Mundtuirc 〈/i〉'The Tale of the Necklace', 〈i〉Brent Miles (University of Toronto, Canada)〈/i〉 13. 〈i〉Imtheachta Aeniasa 〈/i〉'The Wanderings of Aeneas', 〈i〉Erich Poppe (University of Marburg, Germany)〈/i〉 14. 〈i〉In Cath Catharda 〈/i〉'The Civil War': The Prologue, 〈i〉Brigid Ehrmantraut (University of Cambridge, UK)〈/i〉 15. 〈i〉In Cath Catharda 〈/i〉'The Civil War': Literary Techniques, 〈i〉Maio Nagashima (University of Cambridge, UK)〈/i〉 16. 〈i〉In Cath Catharda 〈/i〉'The Civil War': The Influence of Scholia, 〈i〉Cillian O'Hogan (University of Toronto, Canada)〈/i〉 〈b〉V. MYTHOGRAPHY AND PSEUDOHISTORY〈/b〉 17. 'How Samson Slew the Gesteda', 〈i〉Brigid Ehrmantraut (University of Cambridge, UK)〈/i〉 18. 〈i〉Merugud Uilixis meic Leirtis 〈/i〉'The Wandering of Ulysses son of Laertes', 〈i〉Barbara Hillers (Indiana University, USA)〈/i〉 19. 〈i〉Fingal Chlainne Tanntail 〈/i〉'The Kin-Slaying of the Family of Tantalus', 〈i〉Robert Crampton (Independent Scholar, UK)〈/i〉 20. 〈i〉Sgél in Mínaduir 〈/i〉'The Story of the Minotaur', 〈i〉Barbara Hillers (Indiana University, USA)〈/i〉 21. 〈i〉Scéla Alaxandair 〈/i〉'The Saga of Alexander', 〈i〉Cameron Wachowich (University of Toronto, Canada)〈/i〉 22. 〈i〉Stair Ercuil ocus a Bás〈/i〉 'The History of Hercules and his Death', 〈i〉Gregory R. Darwin (Uppsala University, Sweden)〈/i〉 〈b〉VI. WORLD KNOWLEDGE AND INDIGENOUS TRADITION〈/b〉 23. 〈i〉Auraicept na nÉces〈/i〉 'The Scholars' Primer', 〈i〉Nicolai Egjar Engesland (University of Oslo, Norway)〈/i〉 24. 〈i〉Clann Ollaman uaisle Emna 〈/i〉'The nobles of Emain Macha are Ollam's descendants', 〈i〉Michael Clarke (University of Galway, Ireland)〈/i〉 25. 〈i〉Cogadh Gáedhel re Gallaibh 〈/i〉'The War of the Irish against the Foreigners', 〈i〉Máire Ní Mhaonaigh (University of Cambridge, UK)〈/i〉 26. 〈i〉Lebor Gabála Érenn 〈/i〉'The Book of Invasions of Ireland', 〈i〉John Carey (University College Cork, Ireland)〈/i〉 27. 〈i〉Dindshenchas Érend 〈/i〉'Knowledge of Ireland's Notable Places': The River Boyne, 〈i〉Máire Ní Mhaonaigh (University of Cambridge, UK)〈/i〉 28. 〈i〉Dindshenchas Érend 〈/i〉'Knowledge of Ireland's Notable Places': The Origins of Tara, 〈i〉Marie-Luise Theuerkauf (University of Cambridge, UK)〈/i〉 29. 〈i〉Suidiugud Tellaig Temra 〈/i〉'The Establishment of Tara's Dominion', 〈i〉Daniel Watson (Dublin Institute of Advanced Studies)〈/i〉 30. 〈i〉Scéla na Esérgi〈/i〉 'Treatise on the Resurrection', 〈i〉Elizabeth Boyle (National University of Ireland Maynooth, Ireland)〈/i〉 〈b〉VII. EPILOGUE〈/b〉 31. Classical Reception and Medieval Irish Texts, 〈i〉Isabelle Torrance (Aarhus University, Denmark)〈/i〉 32. Table of the Principal Manuscript Sources Used, 〈i〉Michael Clarke (University of Galway, Ireland)〈/i〉 〈i〉 〈/i〉Notes Bibliography Index 〈u〉 〈/u〉
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781350333277
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Bern : Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
    UID:
    almahu_9948664286702882
    Format: 1 online resource (248 p.)
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9783035300734
    Series Statement: Reimagining Ireland 12
    Content: The essays in this collection all revolve around the notion of change in Ireland, whether by revolution or by evolution. Developments in the shared histories of Ireland and Great Britain are an important theme throughout the book. The volume begins by examining two remarkable Irishmen on the make in Georgian London: the boxing historian Pierce Egan and the extraordinary Charles Macklin, eighteenth-century actor, playwright and manslaughterer. The focus then moves to aspects of Hibernian influence and the presence of the Irish Diaspora in Great Britain from the medieval period up to the late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century celebrations of St Patrick’s Day in Manchester. The book also considers the very different attitudes to the British Empire evident in the career of the 1916 rebel Sir Roger Casement and the Victorian philologist and colonial servant Whitley Stokes. Further essays look at writings by Scottish Marxists on the state of Ireland in the 1920s and the pronouncements on the Troubles by John Lennon and Paul McCartney. The book also examines change in the culture of the island of Ireland, from the development of the Irish historical novel in the nineteenth century, to ecology in contemporary Irish women’s poetry, to the present state of the Roman Catholic Church in Ireland. Contemporary Irish authors examined include Roddy Doyle, Joseph O’Connor and Martin McDonagh.
    Note: Contents: Michael O’Neill: Foreword – Alison O’Malley-Younger/John Strachan: Introduction – John Strachan: Pierce Egan, West Briton – Alison O’Malley-Younger: ‘Oh Horrible! An Irish Man’: Macklin, Friel and the Politics of Mimicry – Paul Younger: Bryneich - Rìoghachd Ghàidhealach: The Gaelic Foundations of the Golden Age of Northumbria – Mervyn Busteed: ‘Plentiful Libations of Whisky, Perfervid Irish Oratory and Some Religious Sentiment’: Celebrating St Patrick’s Day in Manchester, 1825-1922 – Elizabeth Boyle: Whitley Stokes’s Immram: Evolution, Ireland and Empire – Willy Maley: ‘Their Song Is Over’ (and Other Familiar Refrains): Irish Revolutions, Gyrations and Ululations from Lenin to Lennon – Patrick Maume: Respectability against Ascendancy: The Banim Brothers and the Invention of the Irish Catholic Middle-Class Novel in the Age of O’Connell – Catherine Rees: Theatrical Representations of Easter 1916 and Sir Roger Casement: Flags, Walls and Cats – Sylvie Mikowski: Reimagining the Irish Historical Novel in Roddy Doyle’s A Star Called Henry and Joseph O’Connor’s Star of the Sea – Lucy Collins: Clearing the Air: Irish Women Poets and Environmental Change – Eamon Maher: Contemporary Irish Catholicism: Revolution or Evolution?
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783039118816
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge :Cambridge University Press,
    UID:
    almahu_9947414170202882
    Format: 1 online resource (x, 244 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    ISBN: 9780511522758 (ebook)
    Series Statement: Cambridge studies in the history and theory of politics
    Content: This study examines the Law Reports of Sir John Davies and litigation pleaded before the central Irish courts during the period in which Davies served in Ireland as solicitor-general (1603–6) and attorney-general (1606–19). The author's main concern is to explicate the legal and jurisprudential issues involved and to draw out their deeper political implications. He argues that, in the absence of a malleable parliament, judge-made law became the instrument by which the Jacobean regime consolidated the Tudor conquest. The book also touches on the influence of the implementation of the law on the Irish coinage, Gaelic tenurial customs and religious conformity. More controversial themes include the origins of precedent in the Anglo-American legal tradition, the use of continental civil law in common law litigation and the relationship of early modern Ireland to the development of an imperial jurisprudence.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015).
    Additional Edition: Print version: ISBN 9780521253284
    Language: English
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  • 4
    UID:
    almahu_9947413562602882
    Format: 1 online resource (xiv, 209 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    ISBN: 9781846158544 (ebook)
    Content: Of all the Celtic countries, Scotland has lacked the kind of scholarly attention that has been lavished fruitfully on Wales, Ireland, Cornwall and Brittany. And yet of all of them, Scotland offers the widest range of interfaces with broader work on the cult of saints. The papers presented here cover this territory very effectively.... [the book] brings together excellent studies that successfully explore the wide ramifications of the topic. Anyone with an interest in saints' cults will want this book. DAUVIT BROUN, Professor of Scottish History, University of Glasgow. This volume examines the phenomena of the cult of saints and Marian devotion as they were manifested in Scotland, ranging from the early medieval period to the sixteenth century. It combines general surveys of the development of the study of saints in the early and later middle ages with more focused articles on particular subjects, including St Waltheof of Melrose, the obscure early medieval origins of the cult of St Munnu, the short-lived martyr cult of David, duke of Rothsay, and the Scottish saints included in the greatest liturgical compendium produced in late medieval Scotland, the Aberdeen breviary. The way in which Marian devotion permeated late medieval Scottish society is discussed in terms of the church dedications of the twelfth and thirteenth-century aristocracy, the ecclesiastical landscape of Perth, the depiction of Mary in Gaelic poetry, and the pervasive influence of the familial bond between holy mother and son in representations of the Scottish royal family. Dr Steve Boardman is Reader in History, University of Edinburgh; Eila Williamson gained her PhD from the University of Glasgow. Contributors: Helen Birkett, Steve Boardman, Rachel Butter, Thomas Owen Clancy, David Ditchburn, Audrey-Beth Fitch, Mark A. Hall, Matthew H. Hammond, Sim Innes, Alan Macquarrie
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 02 Oct 2015). , The Big Man, the Footsteps, and the Fissile Saint: paradigms and problems in studies of insular saints' cults / Thomas Owen Cluny -- St. Munnu in Ireland and Scotland: an exploration of his cult / Rachel Butter -- The struggle for sanctity: St Waltheof of Melrose, Cisterican in-house cults and canonisation procedure at the turn of the thirteenth century / Helen Birkett -- Royal and aristocratic attitudes to saints in twelfth- and thirteenth-century Scotland / Matthew H. Hammond -- A saintly sinner? The 'martyrdom' of David, duke of Rothesay / Steve Boardman -- Wo/men only? Marian devotion in medieval Perth / Mark A. Hall -- Is eagal liom lá na hagra: Devotion to the Virgin in the later medieval Gàidhealtachd / Sim R. Innes -- Scottish saints' legends in the Aberdeen Breviary / Alan Macquarrie -- Mothers and their sons: Mary and Jesus in Scotland, 1450-1560 / Audrey-Beth Fitch -- The 'McRoberts Thesis' and patterns of sanctity in late medieval Scotland / David Ditchburn.
    Additional Edition: Print version: ISBN 9781843835622
    Language: English
    Subjects: Theology
    RVK:
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Woodbridge, Suffolk ; Rochester, NY :The Boydell Press,
    UID:
    almahu_9949865674702882
    Format: 1 online resource (xi, 188 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    ISBN: 9781805431695 (ebook)
    Series Statement: Irish historical monographs series ; [XXVII]
    Content: A reassessment of the rivalry between the two great Anglo-Norman magnate families in late medieval and early modern Ireland, putting forward a new interpretation of events. The Fitzgerald Earls of Kildare and the Butler Earls of Ormond were the foremost old colonial magnates in the late medieval Lordship of Ireland. Rivals for power and influence throughout the island but in particular for the post of chief governor, the principal representative of the English crown in Ireland, their struggle for mastery expressed itself in multiple ways ranging from competition for cultural hegemony to outright military confrontation. This book, based on extensive original research including hitherto unexplored evidence from literary sources and material culture, serves to counterbalance the anti-Kildare impression given by official documents such as the State Papers, which stressed that the objective of a military conquest of Gaelic Ireland was paramount. Instead, the book argues that the Kildare-Ormond rivalry was a more subtle and sophisticated conflict between two different concepts of what Ireland should be, the frequently dominant Fitzgeralds promoting the idea of Ireland as an integrated polity with the recognition and co-option of leading figures in Gaelic Ireland, the opposing Butlers embodying the traditional Cambro-Norman ideas of conquest. However, it is further argued that these opposing positions were not fundamental but conditional, dependent upon which great house held the chief governorship. The book elaborates on these alternating concepts of Ireland, showing how the political war between the two magnate families, and the accompanying culture war, played out over time.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 10 May 2024). , White Earl to the great Earl, 1442-96 -- Late Yorkist, early Tudor 'Butler Expugnatio' -- Kildare renaissance, 1496-1522 -- Salus populi, Geraldine 'decay', c. 1512-19 -- Geraldine 'decay', 1522-34 -- Aristocratic entente, Kildare c. 1524-34 -- Rebellion, state paper ark age, 1534-40.
    Additional Edition: Print version: ISBN 9781837650521
    Language: English
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  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Santa Barbara, Calif. :ABC-CLIO,
    UID:
    edocfu_9960962647902883
    Format: 1 online resource (2 volumes in 1 (lxi, 898 pages)) : , illustrations, maps.
    ISBN: 979-82-16-05865-6 , 1-283-54917-4 , 9786613861627 , 1-59884-965-4
    Series Statement: Gale eBooks
    Content: This succinct, accessible two-volume set covers all aspects of Celtic historical life, from prehistory to the present day.
    Note: Two volumes combined as one. , Cover; Title; Copyright; Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; Celtic Chronology; VOLUME 1; Aberffraw; Aberystwyth; Act of Union, Ireland (1800); Acte d'Union, Brittany (1532); Acts of Union, Wales (1536-43); Aedán mac Gabráin; agriculture, Gaul; agriculture, Ireland; agriculture, Isle of Man; agriculture, Scotland; agriculture, Wales; Aided Énfir Aífe and Oidheadh Chonnlaoich mheic Con Culainn; aisling; Aithbhreac nighean Coirceadail; Alan Varveg; Alba (Scotland); Alba, name, derivation, and usage; Alban, St. (Albanus Verolamiensis); Albion, Albiones; Amairgen mac Míled , Ambrosius Aurelianus (Emrys Wledig)Anaon; Andraste/Andrasta; Aneirin; Anglo-Irish literature; Anglo-Saxon ""conquest""; Anglo-Welsh literature; Ankou; annals; Annwn/Annwfn; Anu; Arawn; Ard Mhacha (Armagh); Arfderydd; Arianrhod ferch Dôn; Armagh, Book of; Armes Prydein; Armorica; Arras culture; art, Celtic, pre-Roman; art, Celtic, post-Roman; art, Celtic-influenced, modern, Brittany; art, Celtic-influenced, modern, Ireland; art, Celtic-influenced, modern, Isle of Man; art, Celtic-influenced, modern, Scotland; art, Celtic-influenced, modern, Wales; Arthur, historical evidence , Arthur, in the saints' livesArthurian literature, Breton; Arthurian literature, Cornish; Arthurian literature, Irish; Arthurian literature, Scottish Gaelic; Arthurian literature, texts in non-Celtic medieval languages; Arthurian literature, Welsh; Arthurian sites; Asterix; Audacht Morainn; Auraicept na néces; Avalon (Ynys Afallach); awen; badonicus mons; bagpipe; Baile Átha Cliath (Dublin); ballads and narrative songs, Breton; ballads and narrative songs, Irish; ballads and narrative songs, Scottish Gaelic; ballads and narrative songs, Welsh; Balor; Bannockburn, battle of , bard, in classical accountsbard, comparison of the professional poet in early Wales and Ireland; bard, Romantic perception; bardic order, in Ireland; bardic order, in Wales; Barzaz-Breiz; Bath; bean sí/banshee; Bede; Bedwyr; Belenos/Belinos; Belgae; Beli Mawr; Beltaine; Beunans Ke; Beunans Meriasek; Bible, in Breton and Cornish; Bible, in Irish and Scottish Gaelic; Bible, in Welsh; Bibracte; biniou and bombard; Bituriges; Blodeuwedd; Bóand/Bóinn/Boyne; Bodb; bodhrán; Bononia/Bologna; Botorrita; Boudica; Brân fab Llyr/Bendigeidfran; Branwen ferch Lyr; Breizh (Brittany); Brendan, St , Brennos (of the Prausi or Tolistobogii)Brennos (of the Senones); Bretha Nemed; Breton dialects; Breton language; Breton lays; Breton literature, beginnings to c. 1900; Breton literature, 20th century; Breton migrations; Breton music; Breuddwyd Rhonabwy; Brian Bóruma/Brian Ború; Bricriu mac Carbaid; bricta; Brigantes; Brigit (goddess); Brigit (saint); Britain; British; Britons; brochs; brooches and fibulae; Bruce, Robert de; Brug na Bóinne; bruiden; Brut y Brenhinedd; Brut y Tywysogyon; Brychan Brycheiniog; Brycheiniog; Brynaich (Bernicia); Brythonic; Burns, Robert; Cadwaladr ap Cadwallon , Cadwallon ap Cadfan , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-59884-964-6
    Language: English
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Amsterdam, The Netherlands ; : J. Benjamins Pub.,
    UID:
    edocfu_9959228703102883
    Format: 1 online resource (553 p.)
    ISBN: 1-283-54895-X , 9786613861405 , 90-272-7295-6
    Series Statement: Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science. Series V, Library & information sources in linguistics, v. 27
    Content: The intention of the current book is to provide a flexible and comprehensive bibliographical tool to those scholars working or interested in Irish English. A whole range of references (approx. 2,500) relating to Irish English in all its aspects are gathered together here and in the majority of cases annotations are supplied. The book has a detailed introduction dealing the history of Irish English, the documentation available and contains an overview of the themes in Irish English which have occupied linguists working in the field. Various appendixes offer information on the history of Irish E
    Note: Description based upon print version of record. , A SOURCE BOOK FOR IRISH ENGLISH; Editorial page; Title page; Copyright page; Table of contents; Foreword; I An historical outline; 1 Matters of terminology; 2 External history of Irish English; 2.1 Initial settlement; 2.1.1 Spread of English; 2.1.2 The linguistic situation in medieval Ireland; 2.2 Renewed dominance of English; 2.2.1 Transplantation and transportation; 2.3 The eighteenth century; 2.3.1 Hedge schools; 2.3.2 The ascendancy; 2.4 The nineteenth century; 3 English in the north of Ireland; 3.1 Emigration from Ulster; 4 Documents for the first period; 4.1 Medieval period , 4.2 Manuscripts of the medieval period4.2.1 English texts; 4.2.2 Anglo-Norman (French) texts; 5 Forth and Bargy; 5.1 Documents; 5.2 Link with medieval Irish English; Notes; II Research themes; 1. Approaching the field; 2. The history of Irish English; 3. Retention versus contact; 4. Present-day developments; 5. Linguistic levels; 6.Varieties of Irish English; 7.Irish English as non-standard English; 8.Relationships abroad; 1 Approaching the field; 2 The history of Irish English; 3 Retention versus contact; 4 Present-day developments; 5 Linguistic levels; 6 Varieties of Irish English , 7 Irish English as non-standard English8 Relationships abroad; References; III Annotated bibliography; III Annotated bibliography; 1 English in Ireland; 1.1 A first orientation; 1.1.1 Questions of nomenclature; 1.1.2 Bibliographies of Irish English; 1.1.3 Linguistic surveys of Irish English; 1.2 Overviews and general works; 1.2.1 Overviews of Irish English; 1.2.2 Works with remarks on Irish English; 1.3 Regional and sociolinguistic studies; 1.3.1 Regional studies of Irish English; 1.3.2 The language of Dublin; 1.3.3 Sociolinguistic treatments; 1.4 The historical dimension , 1.4.1 Medieval Irish English1.4.2 The dialect of Forth and Bargy; 1.4.3 The early modern period; 1.4.3.1 Thomas Sheridan; 1.4.4 The nineteenth century; 1.5 Contact and borrowing; 1.5.1 Contact between Irish and English; 1.5.2 The influence of Irish (and Celtic) on English; 1.5.3 The influence of English on Irish; 1.6 Linguistic levels; 1.6.1 The phonology of Irish English; 1.6.2 The morphology of Irish English; 1.6.3 Syntax of Irish English; 1.6.4 Tense, mood and aspect; 1.6.5 The lexicon of Irish English; 1.7 The language of literature; 1.7.1 General works; 7.7.2 Works on 'Stage Irish' , 1.7.3 The term 'Brogue'1.8 The language of individual authors; 1.8.1 Swift; 1.8.2 Synge; 1.8.3 O'Casey; 1.8.4 Joyce; 1.9 Non-linguistic studies; 1.10 The North of Ireland; 1.10.1 The history of English in Ulster; 1.10.2 Ulster Scots English; 1.10.3 General studies; 1.10.4 Individual descriptions; 1.10.5 Sociolinguistic studies; 1.10.6 The language of Belfast; 1.10.8 Non-linguistic works; 1.10.9 Works on Ulster Irish; 2 Extraterritorial varieties; 2.1 The Celtic regions; 2.1.1 Scotland; 2.1.1.1 General studies; 2.1.1.2 Scots; 2.1.1.3 Scottish lexicography; 2.1.1.4 Gaelic and English contact , 2.1.1.5 Norn , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-58811-209-8
    Additional Edition: ISBN 90-272-3753-0
    Language: English
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    London ; : Pluto Press,
    UID:
    edocfu_9959236067602883
    Format: 1 online resource (256 p.)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 0-585-42607-4 , 1-84964-053-X
    Note: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Intro -- Contents -- Introduction -- Part I. The Theoretical Context -- 1. The State and Hegemony -- Rediscovering civil society -- The State -- Hegemony and counter- hegemony -- Hegemony and political and civil society -- A philosophy of praxis -- Common sense -- 2. Coercion, Community and Civil Society -- Social control - a debate about ideological hegemony? -- The role of the state -- 3. Community as Counter-Hegemony -- In defence of community -- In defence of change -- Community as a model of change? -- In defence of local resources -- 4. The Co-option of Radicalism -- The genesis of community development -- Letting the poor manage their own poverty -- Community relations and co- option -- 5. Community, Catholicism and Communitarianism -- The communitarian influence -- Liberalism versus communitarianism: a false debate? -- Catholicism and communitarianism -- Communitarianism: a conservatism ideology -- Part II. The Case Studies -- 6. Northern Ireland: The Evolution of a Counter- Hegemony -- The community relations dimension -- Dove House Community Trust -- Community, class and ideology -- A culture of resistance -- 7. The United States: Poverty and the Catholic Worker Movement -- The Poverty Programme -- The Catholic Worker movement -- Viva House and the Catholic Worker movement in Baltimore -- 8. Romania: Charity as Social Control -- Introduction -- The problem of Aids as an example of social neglect -- Fagaras -- The Romanian Relief Fund -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Chapter 1: The State and Hegemony -- Chapter 2: Coercion, Community and Civil Society -- Chapter 3: Community as Counter- Hegemony -- Chapter 4: The Co- option of Radicalism -- Chapter 5: Community, Catholicism and Communitarianism -- Chapter 6: Northern Ireland: the Evolution of a Counter- Hegemony -- Chapter 7: The United States: Poverty and the Catholic Worker Movement. , Chapter 8: Romania: Charity as Social Control -- Bibliography -- Newspapers -- Index -- Abel-Smith, 99 -- Action for Boston, 173 -- Action for Community Employment [ACE] -- 153 -- 155 -- Adams, G. 182 -- Adamson, M. 107-8 -- Advisory Conference of Community Associations [ACCA] -- 150 -- 155 -- Africa -- 6 -- 95 -- 200 -- 203 -- 204 -- Aids 200 -- Albania 194 -- Alienation -- 60 -- 83 -- 222 -- Alinsky, S. 109 -- Almond, M. -- 193 -- 198 -- America [US] 178 -- American Civil War -- 106 -- 184 -- American Communist Party 178-9 -- Americans for Democratic Action [ADA] -- 170 -- 173 -- Anderton, J. -- 5 -- 53 -- 54 -- Annexation Act [1918] 183 -- Anti-sectarianism 218 -- Anti-semitism 181 -- Aquinas, St Thomas 127 -- Ashbridge 96 -- Ashdown, P. -- Ashdown, P 115 -- Ashdown, P 125 -- Association of Community Workers 70 -- Association of Local Authorities [ALA] 149 -- Atkinson, D. -- 114 -- 125 -- 135 -- Attlee, C. 117 -- Avanti 16 -- Babon, G. 200 -- Baine, S. 67 -- Bakunin, M. 62 -- Balkans, the 194 -- Baltimore [US] -- 8 -- 37 176 -- 180 -- 182 -- Batterham, F. 178 -- Belgium 97 -- Bernstein, E. -- 16 -- 18 -- Berrigan, D. 176 -- Bethlehem Steel 188 -- Bickham, W. -- 177 -- 183 -- 186 -- 187 -- Biddle, W. 111 -- Birmingham [UK] -- 114 -- 125 -- 129 -- Black Panthers [US] -- 170 -- 173 -- Blair, T. -- 14 -- 93 -- and stakeholders' society 125 -- Bloody Sunday [Derry] 157 -- Blueshirts [Ireland] -- 35 -- 120 -- Body, L. 210 -- Boggs, C. -- 27 -- 36 -- 63 -- Bogside Community Association -- 148 -- 157 -- 162 -- Bogside, the -- 44 -- 49 -- 70 -- 148 -- 157 -- 158 -- 160 -- 161 -- 162 -- 163 -- 164 -- 165 -- Borgos, S. 108 -- Boyle, S. -- 205 -- 208 -- 210 -- Brasov [Romania] -- 201 -- 206 -- 208 -- 223 -- Briggs, A. -- 44 -- 50 -- Britain -- 7 -- 43 -- British Charitable Organisation 94 -- British Union of Fascists -- 35 -- 125 -- Broady, M. 84. , Brown, S. 173 -- Bryant, R. 102 -- Bucharest -- 195 -- 199 -- 200 -- 223 -- Buckingham Palace 192 -- Bukharin -- 16 -- 17 -- 27 -- 34 -- 40 -- Burke, E. 45 -- Burns, E. 186 -- Bush, G. 193 -- Callaghan, J. 103 -- Cambridge Summer Conference [1948] 95 -- Campbell, G. 161 -- Canada 179 -- Capitalism -- 16 -- 57 -- 103 -- 190 -- 223 -- Caplowitz, D. 170 -- Carter, J. 188 -- Catholic Church -- 126 -- 127 -- 175 -- 177 -- Catholic emancipation 46 -- Catholic middle-class -- 7 -- 146 -- Catholic Worker community 176 -- Catholic Worker movement -- 8 -- 107 -- 171 -- 176 -- 177 -- 180 -- 182 -- 187 -- 189 -- Catholic Worker, the -- 179 -- 181 -- 190 -- Catholicism -- 115 -- 164 -- 221 -- Ceausescu, E. -- 9 -- 192 -- 193 -- 195 -- Ceausescu, N. -- 9 -- 192 -- 194 -- 195 -- 196 -- 197 -- 198 -- 200 -- 202 -- 206 -- 208 -- 209 -- 212 -- Celtic art 164 -- Central Information and Intelligence Unit 100 -- Centre for Environment Studies 100 -- Chadwick, E.R. 95 -- Chamberlain, J. 114 -- Charitable work 211 -- Chartism -- 45 -- 63 -- Chicago -- 108 -- 175 -- 177 -- Children in Need 189 -- Chile 91 -- Christian Fellowship [NI] 210 -- Citizens Planning [US] 184 -- Civil Rights -- 116 -- 139 -- 141 -- 164 -- 182 -- 217 -- Civil Rights Law 1957 [US] 172 -- Civil Rights Movement [NI] -- 4 -- 91 -- 167 -- Civil Rights Movement [US] -- 75 -- 171 -- Civil Services Department 100 -- Civil society -- 5 -- 14 -- 19 -- 43 -- 51 -- 112 -- 116 -- 120 -- 124 -- 129 -- 131 -- 132 -- 133 -- 134 -- 167 -- 182 -- 211 -- 215 -- 216 -- 218 -- 219 -- 220 -- 224 -- Claimants ' unions, -- 68 -- 70 -- Clarke, D. 128 -- Clarke, K.B. 174 -- Class Struggles in France 23 -- Clinton, W.J. 126 -- Cloward, R. -- 56 -- 174 -- Cohen, S. -- 50 -- 55 -- 61 -- Cold War, the 180 -- Cole, G.D.H. 92 -- Coleraine [NI] 139 -- Colonial Office [UK] -- 6 -- 95 -- 97 -- memorandum 97. , Combat Poverty Programme 155 -- Commins, P. 80-1 -- Commons, House of 116 -- Commonsense 29 -- Commonweal [US] 177 -- Communism -- 13 -- 50 -- 118 -- 127 -- 208 -- Communist International 3 -- Communist Party -- 106 -- 195 -- Communitarianism -- 6-7 -- 13 -- 93 -- 115 -- 116 -- 118 -- 119 -- 120 -- 123 -- 125 -- 129 -- 131 -- 132 -- 134 -- 157 -- 219 -- 221 -- and religious fundamentalism 118 -- Community -- 45 -- 72 -- 100 -- 111 -- 115 -- 130 -- 132 -- 160 -- as harmonious entity 76 -- as ideology 167 -- as social construct 116 -- as socio-therapy 56 -- Community business 70 -- Community development -- 8 -- 49 -- 69 -- 70 -- 72 -- 73 -- 76 -- 77 -- 81 -- 95 -- 96 -- 111 -- 116 -- 142 -- 143 -- 154 -- 155 -- 213 -- as process 84 -- Community Development Projects [CDP] -- 44 -- 69 -- 73 -- 74 -- 75 -- 80 -- 99 -- 100 -- 101 -- 102 -- 103 -- 112 -- 143 -- 216 -- Community Development Review Group [CDRG] -- 4 -- 74 -- 83 -- 153 -- 154 -- 155 -- Community entrepreneur 70 -- Community movement -- 50 -- 89 -- 218 -- 220 -- Community politics 75 -- Community Progress Incorporated [US] 173 -- Community Relations Commission [CRC] -- 7 -- 102 -- 140 -- 142 -- 143 -- 144 -- 145 -- 146 -- 148 -- 152 -- 155 -- 166 -- Community Relations Council [NI] -- 165 -- 166 -- Community Relations, Ministry of 145 -- Community volunteers 68 -- Community work -- as socio-therapy 69 -- as socio-therapy 71: as socio-therapy 65 -- Community worker -- 152 -- 216 -- Community Worker Research Project -- 102 -- 149 -- 150 -- 152 -- 155 -- Confederation of British Industry [CBI] 57 -- Conference of Socialist Economists -- 73 -- 76 -- Conference of the Mayors [US] 175 -- Connolly, J. 35 -- Conradh na Gaeilge [Gaelic League] -- 158 -- 159 -- 160 -- Conservatives -- 98 -- 117 -- 128 -- 134 -- 143 -- Conway Mill -- 151 -- 166 -- Cooper, I. -- 141 -- 144 -- 145 -- 147. , Corina, L. 112 -- Costello, John A. 35 -- Coventry 101 -- Crabbe, G. 45 -- Craigavon [NI] 151 -- Croce, B. -- 26 -- 36 -- Crosland, A. 98 -- Crossmaglen [NI] -- 104 -- 152 -- Crossman, R. 92 -- Crotty, R. -- 46 -- 51 -- Culture of poverty 162 -- Culture of resistance 163 -- Currie, A. 146 -- Czechoslovakia -- 67 -- 193 -- 194 -- Daily Mirror 52 -- Danube Canal 194 -- Danube Delta 194 -- Day, D. -- 8 -- 107 -- 176 -- 177 -- 179 -- 181 -- 189 -- De Valera, E. 125 -- Deane, E. 147 -- Dearlove, J. -- 51 -- 52 -- 56 -- 60 -- 67 -- 68 -- 87 -- 224 -- Demaine, J. -- 132 -- 133 -- Democratic Party [US] -- 106 -- 175 -- Democratic Unionist Party [NI] 161 -- Department of Community Relations [NI] 142 -- Department of Economic Development [DED] -- 47 -- 58 -- 141 -- 165 -- Department of Education [DENI] -- 142 -- 149 -- 150 -- Department of Health and Social Services [DHSS] 160 -- Dependency culture -- 116 -- 166 -- 223 -- Derry [NI] -- 161 -- 204 -- 205 -- 210 -- Desertification 184 -- Devlin, P. 146 -- Direct Rule [NI] 161 -- District Councils -- 145 -- 152 -- 153 -- Doherty, P. 147 -- Doherty, T. 147 -- Donegal [Ireland] 204 -- Dove House [Derry] -- 49 -- 151 -- 157 -- 158 -- 159 -- 162 -- 163 -- 164 -- 165 -- 166 -- 167 -- 189 -- 217 -- 220 -- Downtown Cluster of Organisations [Washington DC] 170 -- Dubliners, the 164 -- Durkheim, E. 128 -- Economic Opportunity Act [US] 174 -- Economism 40 -- Economist, The -- 117 -- 130 -- Education system 44 -- Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, the 23 -- Eisenhower Doctrine 170 -- Eisenhower, D. -- 6 -- 96 -- 109 -- El Salvador 191 -- Ellis Island [US] 107 -- Empiricism -- 34 -- 36 -- Engels, F. -- 20 -- 28 -- 54 -- 55 -- 61 -- 131 -- Enlightenment, the 45 -- Enterprise Allowance Scheme 88 -- Enterprise culture 42 -- Enthusiasm [Baltimore] 190 -- Entrepreneurism -- 42 -- 94 -- Etzioni, A. -- 116 -- 119 -- 120 -- 121. , 123. , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-7453-1479-1
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-7453-1474-0
    Language: English
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  • 9
    UID:
    gbv_1882045866
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (350 pages) , 4 illustrations
    ISBN: 9781800797949
    Series Statement: Studies in Franco-Irish Relations 20
    Content: This collection emerged from a conference held in TU Dublin at a time when the theme of «New Beginnings» seemed particularly apposite. In the few years prior to the gathering, COVID-19 had brought the world to almost a complete standstill. The need to recalibrate, to find new and more effective ways of dealing with the climate crisis, domestic and international politics, literary expression, and technology, was clearly felt by everyone. The fourteen essays deal with literary figures such as Jonathan Swift, George Moore, Colm Tóibín, Richard Murphy, Seamus Heaney, Michael O’Siadhail, Sally Rooney and Doireann Ní Ghríofa. Other issues broached are the diplomatic work carried out by Seán T. O’Kelly as Ireland’s envoy to Paris when an independent Ireland was seeking international recognition; depictions of the AIDS crisis in Irish theatre; the Neganthropocene in the French TV series Zone Blanche; new opportunities for learning through digital archives; strategies to save the rural Irish pub; innovative strategies employed by Ireland on the world stage, and the use of science to manipulate the French public’s beliefs about COVID-19. The diversity of material and approaches guarantees that New Beginnings will appeal to a large number of readers.
    Note: Contents: Máirtín Mac Con Iomaire and Eamon Maher: Introduction: New Beginnings: Perspectives from France and Ireland – Wording New Beginnings – Anne Goarzin: From Gulliver’s Travels to The Quick: Trans-Temporal Literature as Life Form in a Pandemic – Anke Klitzing: New Beginnings in Reading (Irish) Literature: A Gastrocritical Look at George Moore’s «Home Sickness» and Colm Tóibín’s Brooklyn – Brian A. Murphy: An Irishman in Paris: Seán T. O’Kelly as Dáil Envoy, February 1919–April 1922 – Benjamin Keatinge: «A taste for black sole»: Richard Murphy, Patricia Avis, Tony White and the Red Bank Restaurant – Ian Hickey: Seamus Heaney’s New Beginnings in «The Riverbank Field» and «Route 110» – Contemporary Representations of New Beginnings – Eugene O’Brien: «Welcoming the Difference»: Michael O’Siadhail and the Gift of Tongues – J. Javier Torres-Fernández: Disrupting the Stigmatizing Cultural Narrative of AIDS through Contemporary Irish Theatre – Sylvie Mikowski: «So What Else Is New?» The Case of Sally Rooney’s Normal People – Sarah Nolan: «This is a female text, I think»: «New Words» and Franco-Gaelic Sources in Doireann Ní Ghríofa’s A Ghost in the Throat – New Beginnings in the Post-Digital Age – Maria Parsons: Nature, the Post-Digital, and the Neganthropocene in Zone Blanche (Black Spot) – Caitríona Nic Philibín and Máirtín Mac Con Iomaire: Surfing the Irish Folklore Commission’s Schools’ Collection: New Beginnings in the Democratisation of Learning through Digital Archives – Gráinne Murphy: Learning from the UK Experience: How the Social Entrepreneurship Model Can Help Save the Rural Irish Pub – Julien Guillaumond: Ireland’s Newly Found Influence in the Twenty-First Century: New Beginnings on the World Stage? – Brigitte Bastiat and Frank Healy: Hold-Up: A Conspiracy of Lies, Damned Lies and Statistics.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781800797932
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781803740973
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe New beginnings Lausanne : Peter Lang, 2023 ISBN 9781800797932
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1800797931
    Language: English
    Keywords: Irland ; Literatur ; Geschichte ; Konferenzschrift
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  • 10
    UID:
    gbv_775671800
    Format: Online-Ressource (241 p)
    ISBN: 9789004255111
    Series Statement: The Northern World v.65
    Content: This collection of papers offers views of the interation and interdependence of Celtic and Norse populations in the the Irish Sea region in the period 800 A.D.-1200 A.D., bringing together the work of historians, archaeologists, art- and religious-historians and philologists
    Note: Description based upon print version of record , Contents; Preface; List of Illustrations; List of Contributors; Vikings' Settlements in Ireland before 1014; Names for the Vikings in Irish Annals; Saints' Cults and Gaelic-Scandinavian Influence around the Cumberland Coast and North of the Solway Firth; The Kingdom of Man and the Earldom of Orkney-Some Comparisons; No Soil for Saints: Why was There No Native Royal Martyr in Man and the Isles?; Slavery, Power and Cultural Identity in the Irish Sea Region, 1066-1171; Pagan Myth and Christian Doctrine; Ceramic and Cultural Change in the Hebrides AD 500-1300 , Homeland-Strange Land-New Land. Material and Theoretical Aspects of Defining Norse Identity in the Viking AgeViking Weapons in Irish Wetlands; From *Anleifr to Havelok: The English and the Irish Sea; Index
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9789004255128
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9789004255111
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Celtic-Norse Relationships in the Irish Sea in the Middle Ages 800-1200
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books
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