Conference:
25th Irish Conference of Historians, NUI Galway, 2001
Proceedings:
Niall Ó Cíosáin (ed.), Explaining change in cultural history: Historical Studies XXIII (Dublin, 2005).
Conference:
25th Irish Conference of Historians, NUI Galway, 2001
Proceedings:
Niall Ó Cíosáin (ed.), Explaining change in cultural history: Historical Studies XXIII (Dublin, 2005).
Conference:
24th Irish Conference of Historians, University College Cork, 20-22 May 1999: Information, Media and Power through the Ages
Further information:
Bill Sweeney, ‘Information, Media and Power through the Ages, 24th Irish Conference of Historians, University College Cork 20-22 May 1999’ in History Ireland, vii, no. 3 (1999), p. 8. (available from History Ireland)
Proceedings:
Hiram Morgan (ed.), Information, media and power through the ages: Historical Studies XXII (Dublin, 2001).
Conference:
23rd Irish Conference of Historians, St Patrick’s College, Maynooth, 16–18 May 1997: Luxury and Austerity
Proceedings:
J.R. Hill and Colm Lennon (eds), Luxury and austerity, Historical Studies, 21: papers read before the 23rd Irish Conference of Historians held at St. Patrick’s College, Maynooth, 16-18 May, 1997: Historical Studies XXI (Dublin, 1999).
Conference:
22nd Irish Conference of Historians, University College Dublin, 18-22 May 1995
Proceedings:
Judith Devlin and Ronan Fanning (eds), Religion and Rebellion: papers read before the 22nd Irish Conference of Historians, held at University College Dublin 18-22 May 1995: Historical Studies XX (Dublin, 1997).
Conference:
21st Irish Conference of Historians, Queens University Belfast, May 1993: Women in History
Further information:
Virginia Crossman, ‘Women in History’ in History Ireland, i, no. 2 (1993), p. 5. (available on JSTOR)
Proceedings:
Mary O’Dowd and Sabine Wichert (eds), Chattel, servant or citizen: women’s status in church, state and society: Historical Studies XIX (Belfast, 1995).
Conference:
20th Irish Conference of Historians, Magee College/University of Ulster, 6-8 June 1991
Proceedings:
T.G. Fraser and Keith Jeffery (eds), Men, women and war: Historical Studies XVIII (Dublin, 1993).
Conference:
19th Irish Conference of Historians, Trinity College Dublin, 8-10 June 1989
Proceedings:
Ciaran Brady (ed.), Historical Studies XVII: papers read before the Irish Conference of Historians, held in Dublin on 8-10 June 1989 (Dublin: The Lilliput Press Ltd., 1991)
Table of Contents:
Preface p. vii
Previous Volumes in the Series p. viii
Contributors p. ix
Introduction pp. 1-10
Part One
Bernadette Cunningham, Librarian, Dublin Diocesan Library, ‘The Culture and Ideology of Irish Franciscan Historians at Louvain 1607-1650’, pp. 11-30
Eamon O’Flaherty, Lecturer in Modern History, University College, Dublin, ‘The Theatre of Diversity: Historical Criticism and Religious Controversy in Seventeenth-Century France’, pp. 31-48
Bertram Wyatt-Brown, Professor of History, University of Florida, ‘Honour and American Republicanism: A Neglected Corollary’, pp. 49-65
Dorinda Outram, Lecturer in History, University College, Cork, ‘‘Rousseau’s Stutter’: The French Revolution, Philosophy and the History of the Future’, pp. 66-76
W.J. McCormack, free-lance author, ‘The Tedium of History: An Approach to Maria Edgeworth’s Patronage (1814), pp. 77-98
Luke Gribbons, Lecturer in Communications, Dublin City University, ‘’ A shadowy Narrator’: History, Art and Romantic Nationalism in Ireland 1750-1850’, pp. 99-127
Stefan Collini, University Lecturer in English, Cambridge University, ‘Genealogies of Englishness: Literary History and Cultural Criticism in Modern Britain’, pp. 128-145
Ian Green, Senior Lecturer in History, Queen’s University, Belfast, ‘’Repulsives vs Wromantics’: Rival Views of the English Civil War’, pp. 146-167
David Fitzpatrick, Lecturer in Modern History, Trinity College, Dublin, ‘The Futility of History: A Failed Experiment in Irish Education’, pp. 168-186
Part Two
Ivan Berend, President, Hungarian Academy of Sciences 1985-9, ‘History as a Scholarly Discipline and Magistra Vitae’, pp. 187-198
John Lukacs, Professor of History, Chestnut Hill, Pennsylvania, ‘Polite Letters and Clio’s Fashions’, pp. 199-210
Aidan Clarke, Professor of Modern History, Trinity College, Dublin, ‘A Commentary on John Lukac’s ‘Polite Letters’’, pp. 211-220
Notes, pp. 221-265
Index, pp. 265
Conference:
18th Irish Conference of Historians, University College Galway, 1987
Proceedings:
Conference:
17th Irish Conference of Historians, University College Cork, 1985
Proceedings:
Tom Dunne (ed.), Historical Studies XVI: papers read before the Irish Conference of Historians, held in Cork, 23-26 May 1985 (Cork: Cork University Press, 1987)
Table of Contents:
Preface, pp. ix
Historical Studies: Publishing History, pp. x
Contributors, pp. xi
Tom Dunne, Lecturer in Irish History, University College, Cork, ‘A polemical introduction: literature, literary theory and the historian’, pp. 1-9
Charles Doherty, Lecturer in Early and Medieval Irish History, University College, Dublin, ‘The Irish Hagiographer: resources, aims, results’, pp. 10-22
Donnchach O Corrain, Associate Professor of Irish History, University College, Cork, ‘Legend as critic’, pp. 23-38
John Scattergood, Professor of Medieval and Renaissance English, Trinity College, Dublin, ‘Winner and waster and the mid-fourteenth century economy’, pp. 39-57
Katharine Simms, Lecturer in Medieval History, trinity College, Dublin, ‘Bardic poetry as a historical source’, pp. 58-75
Brendan Bradshaw, Fellow of Queen’s College, Cambridge, ‘Edmund Spenser on Justice and Mercy’, pp. 76-89
Seamus Deane, Professor of Modern English and American Literature, University College, Dublin, ‘Irish national character 1790-1900’, pp. 90-113
Oliver Macdonagh, Professor of History, The Institute of Advanced Studies, Australian National University, Canberra, ‘Sandition: a Regency novel?’, pp. 114-132
Tom Dunne, Lecturer in Irish History, University College, Cork, ‘Fiction as ‘the best history of nations’: Lady Morgan’s Irish novels’, pp. 133-159
Eda Sagarra, Professor of German, Trinity College, Dublin, ‘Jewish emancipation in nineteenth-century Germany and the stereotyping of the Jew in Gustav Freytag’s Soll und Haben(1855), pp. 160-176
David Hempton, Lecturer in Modern History, Queen’s University, Belfast, ‘Popular religion and irreligion in Victorian fiction’, pp. 177-196
Owen Dudley Edwards, Reader in American History, University of Edinburgh, ‘Mark Twain: historian of a lost world’, pp. 197-226
Lawrence J. McCaffrey, Professor of History, Loyola University of Chicago, ‘Fictional images of Irish-America’, pp. 227-xx
Conference:
16th Irish Conference of Historians, Maynooth, 1983
Proceedings:
Patrick J. Corish (ed.), Historical Studies XV: papers read before the Irish Conference of Historians, held in Maynooth on 16-19 June 1983 (Belfast: Appletree Press, 1985)
Table of Contents:
Preface, pp. 7-8
Introduction, pp. 9-11
Ciaran Brady, Lecturer in Modern History, University of Dublin, ‘Conservative subversives: the community of the Pale and the Dublin administration, 1556-86’, pp. 11-32
Christopher Hill, formerly Master of Balliol College, Oxford, ‘Seventeenth-century English radicals and Ireland’, pp. 33-50
S.J. Connolly, Lecturer in History, New University of Ulster, ‘Law, order and popular protest in early eighteenth-century Ireland: the case of the Houghers’, pp. 51-68
Marianne Elliott, Research Fellow, Department of History, University of Liverpool, ‘The United Irishman as a diplomat’, pp. 69-90
L.M. Cullen, Professor of Modern Irish History, University of Dublin, ‘The 1798 rebellion in its eighteenth-century context’, pp. 91-114
Thomas Bartlett, Lecturer in History, University College, Galway, ‘Indiscipline and disaffection in the armed forces in Ireland in the 1790s’, pp. 115-134
Hugh Gough, Lecturer in History, University College, Dublin, ‘The radical press in the French Revolution’, pp. 135-150
James. S. Donnelly, Jr, Professor of History, University of Wisconsin-Madison, ‘The social composition of agrarian rebellions in early nineteenth-century Ireland: the case of the Carders and Caravats, 1813-16’, pp. 151-170
Patrick J. Corish, Professor of Modern History, St. Patrick’s College, Maynooth, ‘The radical face of Paul Cardinal Cullen’, pp. 171-184
Mary Cullen, Lecturer in Modern History, St. Patrick’s College, Maynooth, ‘How radical was Irish feminism between 1860 and 1920?’, pp. 185-202
Michael Laffan, Lecturer in Modern Irish History, University College, Dublin, ‘Labour must wait: Ireland’s conservative revolution’, pp 203-222
Denis Smyth, Lecturer in Modern History, University College, Cork, ‘We are with you: solidarity and self-interest in Soviet policy towards Republican Spain, 1936-39’, pp. 223-xx