Dublin: A Cultural History

Front Cover
Oxford University Press, 2005 - History - 300 pages
Europe's most westerly capital city was established by invaders and was for most of its history the locus of colonial administration, the engine room of foreign power, and a major site of indigenous resistance. From The Act of Union through nineteenth-century decline and into the early years of Irish independence it was a city identified with poverty, dirt, and decaying splendor. The Celtic Tiger (as Ireland's recent economic boom been called) produced sweeping changes, including massive new building projects, and the surprising revelation that Dublin has become fashionable. Siobhán Kilfeather finds the legacy of the past undergoing a series of transformations in the vibrant atmosphere of contemporary Dublin.
 

Contents

The Delights of Bray
1
Dubh LinnBaile Átha Cliath
15
From the Glorious Revolution to the Act of Union
44
A Promenade on the South Side
71
From the Union to the Famine
105
Kilmainham
132
Dublin after the Famine
141
Parnell Square
188
The Capital since Independence
201
Never Get Old Culture and CounterCulture
229
An Abcdarium
245
Further Reading
273
Index of Literary Historical Names
279
Index of Places
293
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