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  • - The Roman Catholic Church and Irish Politics, 1922-37
    av Patrick Murray
    429 - 745,-

    This volume presents a detailed account of the political outlook and activities of the Roman Catholic clergy, nationally and in the localities, during the 15 years after the Treaty. Topics include the involvement of bishops and priests in pro-Treaty and anti-Treaty politics.

  • av Philip O'Leary
    1 065,-

    This volume contains a survey of prose writing - novels, plays, journalism - produced in Ireland between 1922 and 1939. All quotations are given in English with original Irish in notes.

  • - Design and Practice
    av Margaret P. Treacy
    339,-

    An introduction to nursing and midwifery research. The first part introduces the strategies and processes of doing research. The second uses instances of empirical work in Ireland to illustrate the practical application of research strategies.

  • - Histories, Identities, Issues
    av Alan Bairner
    379,-

    Focusing on the extent to which sport plays a part in the construction of Irishness, this book also makes a contribution to more general debates about the evolution of Ireland and the Irish as well as to international discussions about the relationship between sport and identity formation.

  •  
    355,-

    Drawing together the developments in mental health policy in recent years, topics covered in this textbook include international trends, health promotion, children, adolescence, women, ethnic minorities, suicide, the homeless, crime, the workplace and ageing.

  • - Women, Enlightenment and Nation
    av Cliona O Gallchoir
    355,-

  • - The Irish Connection
     
    309,-

    This reference on Irish mathematicians includes biographies on: Thomas Harriot (1560-1621); William Rowan Hamilton (1805-1865); Robert Murphy (1806-1843); George Boole (1815-1864); George Gabriel Stokes (1819-1903); George Salmon (1819-1904); and John Casey (1820-1891).

  • av Arthur Clery
    255,-

    For 30 years Arthur Clery commented on Irish life in the "Leader", and some of his most engaging pieces were reprinted in "The Idea of a Nation" in 1907. For this edition they are supplemented by other pieces, including an early review of James Joyce's "Chamber Music".

  • - A History and Personal Memoir
    av Thomas Fennell
    295,-

    Thomas Fennell provides an account, previously unpublished, of life in the Royal Irish Constabulary during the turbulent 30-year period, 1875-1905. His early accounts begin during the Land Wars, and continue up to the Irish War of Independence.

  • - Football Hooliganism as a World Phenomenon
    av Eric Dunning
    379 - 689,-

    Why have problems of hooliganism from the outset become more regularly attached to soccer than to other global sports? This volume considers soccer hooliganism in 14 countries and shows that, despite its tendencies to be associated with British culture, it has long been a social problem worldwide.

  • av Norman White
    355 - 689,-

    Gerard Manley Hopkins spent five unhappy years in Ireland before his death in 1889, during which time he wrote perhaps the most interesting group of all his poems. Working outwards from Hopkins's most intimate creations, author Norman White examines the poet's complicated and troubled personality.

  • - The Religion and Morality of Young Adults in Western Countries
    av John Fulton, Penny Long Marler, Luigi Tomasi, m.fl.
    579,-

    A study on young Catholics in the new millennium, looking at their views and behaviour in the following countries: Great Britain; Ireland; Italy; Malta; Poland; and the United States. Each chapter features an historical overview of the relevant country.

  • - Essays in Honour of Brian Farrell
     
    509,-

    This volume contains essays on Irish politics.

  • - Sport and Leisure in the Civilising Process
    av Norbert (Late of Universities of Leicester Elias
    789,-

    Argues that in highly constrained, 'civilised' societies, sports - as well as a spectrum of other cultural and leisure activities - are to be understood not in terms of 'relaxation' but rather of the need for pleasurable excitement and its pleasurable resolution.

  • av John Watt
    295,-

    The history of medieval Ireland was shaped by the friction between Irish and English cultures. The ecclesiastical dimension of this relationship is studied here, examining how a mixed episcopate evolved, with religious orders from both peoples, and how this affected Irish politics and history.

  • - Studies in Irish Identities
    av Robert Tracy
    429,-

    Irish writers who were considered Irish by the English, and English by the Irish are discussed here - including Maria Edgeworth, W.B. Yeats, J.M. Synge, Sheridan le Fanu, Elizabeth Bowen and James Joyce.

  • - An Introduction
    av Stephen (University College Dublin) Mennell
    366,-

    Gives an introduction to Norbert Elias' work that is not part of the "Collected Works of Norbert Elias".

  • - Denis Devlin and Irish Poetic Modernism
    av Alexander Tyrell Davis
    369,-

    This is a study of one of the most important poets of the mid 20th-century. This book looks at Devlin's work within the aftermath of the Irish literary revival and Anglo-American and French modernism and then relates it to the work of Devlin's contemporaries and to modernism poets.

  • - Thoughts on the British Constitution
    av William Bruce & Henry Joy
    289,-

  • av Laurence M. Geary
    379 - 635,-

    This volume concerns the history of medicine and charity in Ireland, 1718-1851.

  • av George Moore
    309,-

    Presents the author's interpretation of life in Ireland in the early 1880s.

  • av Peter le Page Renouf
    705 - 735,-

    Sir Peter le Page Renouf (1822-97), a Guernseyman, was described by Lord Acton as "the most learned Englishman I know". The letters in volume 2 cover Renouf's years as Tutor to the son of the Comte de Vaulchier in France and, from 1850, there are frequent trips to Switzerland.

  • - The Union and its Aftermath
    av Oliver MacDonagh
    289,-

    First published in 1968, this remains a thought-provoking survey of the history of Ireland from the Act of Union of 1800 until modern times. The second edition, published in 1977, which is reprinted here, includes a chapter on the period 1968-73, taking in the early years of the troubles.

  • - Wallace Stevens Nature and Community
    av Justin Quinn
    405 - 785,-

    Wallace Stevens (1879-1955) has been acknowledged by writers as diverse as Harold Bloom, Adrienne Rich and R.S. Thomas as one of the central poets of the 20th century. Justin Quinn offers a fundamental reassessment of Stevens's work and the connections it makes between nature, community and art.

  • - A Guide to Recent Research
     
    429,-

  • - Roger Casement's Congo Report and 1903 Diary
    av Sir Roger Casement
    449,-

    In 1903, Roger Casement, then a British consul, left his consular base on the Lower Congo River and made a journey through the regions of the Upper Congo to investigate at first hand reports of alleged atrocities. This edition brings together Casement's report, together with his diary of that year.

  • av Standish O'grady
    295,-

    Presents the author's last work which he was editing at the time of his death in 1928.

  • - Challenging Controversies in Food and Health
    av Mike Gibney
    315,-

    Deals with the topics of organic food, GM foods, obesity, growing old, the integrity of food research, global warming, global malnutrition, consumer perception of food-borne risk, our gut bacteria, and how nutrition during pregnancy primes us for health in later life. The author also provides examples, reports and stories from many countries.

  • - The Power and the Pleasure
     
    635,-

    Essays in English by French, Irish and German academics, which explore the relevance and interest of the tragic theatre today of the French dramatist, Jean Racine (1639-99).

  • - Or Haunting the Free State
    av W.J. Mc Cormack
    355 - 689,-

    Roger Casement was tried for treason and executed for securing German rifles to help the 1916 Rising in Ireland. He has been a focus of controversy since the 1930s, largely due to his so-called Black diaries, allegedly forged by British intelligence in c.1916. This work examines his legacy.

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