Search
Now showing items 1-10 of 10
Sylvester O'Halloran: Miso-Dolos
(Galway Archaelogical and Historical Society, 2007)
Fostering an Irish identity through art: A letter from Sylvester O'Halloran (1728-1807) to James Barry (1741-1806) in May 1791
(Cork Historical & Archaeological Society, 2010)
In 1843 an article from the secretary of the Cork Art-Union, which had appeared originally in the Southern Reporter, was sent to and published on page 12 of The Nation on the 2 December 1843. Included with this article was ...
Central places in a rural archaeological landscape
(Eagle Hill Institute, 2018)
Archaeological survey in western Ireland has identified the existence of clusters of activity within the mapped
landscapes of the 5th to 12th centuries A.D. Exploring this further, it is possible to identify elements ...
A journey of found and lost: The concept of East Galway regional style in Irish traditional music
(Department of Folklore and Ethnology, UCC, 2008)
[No abstract available]
From Milan to Kilbaha: Bronzing Irish traditional music
(Irish American Cultural Institute, 2019)
Monuments represent important anchoring devices, tying “collective remembering” to physical places and mobilizing a sense of
shared memory and identity consolidation (Rowlands and Tilley
500).1
In the specifically Irish ...
The crustiest and most personally unbiddable of instruments : Éamonn Ceannt and the pipes
(Na Píobairí Uilleann, 2016-04)
É is perhaps one of the least AMONN CEANNT well-known leaders of the 1916 Rising. De- 1 scribed variously as a reserved, quiet, somewhat
taciturn and private figure, he has been easily eclipsed by
ies amongst the other ...
The man and his music: Gender representation, cultural capital and the Irish traditional music canon
(International Council for Traditional Music Ireland (ICTM Ireland), 2021-03-27)
Through a re-examination of canonical Irish traditional music texts and the music-making
spaces and practices these inform, this paper proposes that Irish traditional music, as social
practice, has normalised hegemonic ...
‘Sinn Féin permits … in the heels of their shoes’: Cumann na mBan emigrants and transatlantic revolutionary exchange
(Cambridge University Press, 2020-08-11)
The emigration of female revolutionary activists has largely eluded historical studies; their global movements transcend dominant national and regional conceptions of the Irish Revolution and challenge established narratives ...
"Ní cathair mar a tuairisg í": (Mis)Representing the American city in the literature of the Gaelic Revival?
(Irish American Cultural Institute, 2018)
[No abstract available]