Irish Studies Sem: Ciaran O'Neill, 'Power & Powerlessness in Union Ireland'
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Irish Studies Sem: Ciaran O'Neill, 'Power & Powerlessness in Union Ireland'

Irish Studies Seminar: Dr Ciaran O'Neill (TCD) 'Power and Powerlessness in Union Ireland'

By Institute of Irish Studies

Date and time

Tuesday, May 6 · 4:30 - 6pm GMT+1

Location

Institute of Irish Studies, Queen's University Belfast

27 University Square Belfast BT7 1NN United Kingdom

About this event

  • Event lasts 1 hour 30 minutes

This exploratory book challenges assumptions about who might have been powerful, or powerless, in Union Ireland (1801-1922). It decentres sectarian division, popular and parliamentary politics, and the tradition of physical-force nationalism and emphasizes transnational phenomena, a settler colonial diaspora, and minority groups on the island. Departing from the conventional focus on political leaders, the book concentrates on the everyday dynamics of power and resistance. Structured as interlocking essays spanning the long 19th century, the book begins by defining the power structures that governed Ireland. Subsequent chapters examine the governance of Ireland, the development of infrastructure, and the mapping of its population and territory. Drawing on feminist theories of power, the book also explores marginalised groups and their agency within Irish society, debunking the myth of Irish ‘ungovernability.’ By analysing the diaspora’s influence and the phenomenon of remittances, the book challenges prevailing notions of powerlessness. By tracing a geographical journey from East to West, the book questions traditional representations of authenticity and colonisation.

Dr Ciaran O’Neill is Ussher Associate Professor in History at Trinity College Dublin and Deputy Director of Trinity Long Room Hub, with research interests in the social and cultural history of Ireland and empire, education and elites, colonial legacies, modern literature, and public history in the long nineteenth century. He las led projects on ‘Seeing Ireland: Art, Culture, and Power in Paris 1922’, and on Trinity’s Colonial Legacies His first monograph, Catholics of Consequence (2014) won the J.S. Donnelly Prize at the American Conference for Irish Studies. He is editor (with Finola O'Kane Crimmins) of Ireland, Slavery and the Caribbean (Manchester, 2023). His new book Power and Powerlessness in Union Ireland: Life in a Palliative State was published by Oxford University Press in 2024.

This seminar will be available in hybrid form, in-person and online via Teams. Please indicate your preference when registering.

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