Unapproved Routes - Peter Leary

Unapproved Routes

Histories of the Irish Border, 1922-1972

(Autor)

Buch | Hardcover
268 Seiten
2016
Oxford University Press (Verlag)
978-0-19-877857-8 (ISBN)
46,75 inkl. MwSt
While 'the border question' raged throughout twentieth-century Ireland, citizens near the border continued with everyday life. Peter Leary uses histories of the Foyle Fisheries dispute, cockfighting tournaments, smuggling, and local conflicts over cross-border roads to explore how the border was experienced and incorporated into people's lives.
The delineation and emergence of the Irish border radically reshaped political and social realities across the entire island of Ireland. For those who lived in close quarters with the border, partition was also an intimate and personal occurrence, profoundly implicated in everyday lives. Otherwise mundane activities such as shopping, visiting family, or travelling to church were often complicated by customs restrictions, security policies, and even questions of nationhood and identity. The border became an interface, not just of two jurisdictions, but also between the public, political space of state territory, and the private, familiar spaces of daily life.

The effects of political disunity were combined and intertwined with a degree of unity of everyday social life that persisted and in some ways even flourished across, if not always within, the boundaries of both states. On the border, the state was visible to an uncommon degree -- as uniformed agents, road blocks, and built environment -- at precisely the same point as its limitations were uniquely exposed. For those whose worlds continued to transcend the border, the power and hegemony of either of those states, and the social structures they conditioned, could only ever be incomplete. As a consequence, border residents lived in circumstances that were burdened by inconvenience and imposition, but also endowed with certain choices.

Influenced by microhistorical approaches, Unapproved Routes uses a series of discrete 'histories' -- of the Irish Boundary Commission, the Foyle Fisheries dispute, cockfighting tournaments regularly held on the border, smuggling, and local conflicts over cross-border roads -- to explore how the border was experienced and incorporated into people's lives; emerging, at times, as a powerfully revealing site of popular agency and action.

Peter Leary is from Enniskillen in County Fermanagh. He studied at Goldsmiths', University of London and the University of Ulster at Magee in Derry, before completing a PhD in Irish History at Queen's University Belfast in 2014. He is currently the Canon Murray Fellow in Irish History at the University of Oxford.

1: Introduction: 'A House Divided'
2: The Time of Partition and the Power of Space in the Evidence Presented to the Irish Boundary Commission, 1925
3: 'The Big Fish and the Little Fellow': Property and Territory on Lough and River Foyle
4: Cocks, Cops, and Writing-men: 'Deep Play' on the Irish border
5: Smuggling: A Border Perspective on Society, Culture, and Authority
6: Border-Crossing-Roads: Material Culture at the Limits of Governmentality
7: Conclusions: Hegemony and Histories of the Everyday

Erscheinungsdatum
Zusatzinfo 19 black and white images and maps
Verlagsort Oxford
Sprache englisch
Maße 141 x 223 mm
Gewicht 434 g
Themenwelt Geschichte Allgemeine Geschichte Neuzeit (bis 1918)
Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Regional- / Ländergeschichte
Geschichte Teilgebiete der Geschichte Kulturgeschichte
Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung
ISBN-10 0-19-877857-0 / 0198778570
ISBN-13 978-0-19-877857-8 / 9780198778578
Zustand Neuware
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