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James Quinn . Young Ireland and The Writing of Irish History. Dublin: University College Dublin Press, 2015. Pp. vii + 227. $33.42 (paper).

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 January 2017

John Morrow*
Affiliation:
University of Auckland, New Zealand
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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © The North American Conference on British Studies 2017 

In Young Ireland and The Writing of Irish History James Quinn, the author of an earlier study of John Mitchel (2008), provides a wide-ranging, well-informed, and elegantly written account of the “Young Ireland” group to which Mitchel was attached in the 1840s. Fittingly, given his role as the managing editor of the Dictionary of Irish Biography, Quinn provides readers with a series of useful biographical notes on key figures.

Quinn frames this study by exploring Young Ireland's promotional engagement with the written history of Ireland. This was, however, such an important concern for those who established the Nation in 1842 that a well-grounded treatment of it illuminates the entire history of the movement and its twentieth-century legacy. The prime movers in the Nation project were Thomas Davis, John Blake Dillon, and Charles Gavan Duffy. Davis and Duffy were key figures in utilizing a distinctive view of Irish history in their promotion of national reform and national independence. Young Ireland's campaign built upon the success of temperance initiatives by stressing the importance of popular education and providing resources that could contribute to that mission. Those resources included the Nation itself and a series of historical and literary works published under the general title of the Library of Ireland.

Having initially been significant figures in Daniel O'Connor's Repeal Association, members of Young Ireland became disillusioned with his attachment to conventional political action and promoted a more radical approach that culminated practically in a farcically abortive rising in late July 1848. Quinn describes the leader of this affray, William Smith O'Brien, as “stumbling” into a “disorganised insurrection” in reaction to the arrest of many of his colleagues and the imposition of a fourteen-year term of transportation for “treason-felony” on Mitchel (96). It is indicative of Young Ireland's utilization of a historical lens in their political program that while travelling in the country outside Dublin before the attempt, O'Brien reflected on the proud history of insurrection in the area.

Quinn regards the failed rising as marking the end of the first phase of Young Ireland's engagement with the history of the country. The first stage saw the establishment of The Nation as a vehicle for the dissemination of historically focused works of poetry and prose and the related program of book-publishing in the Library of Ireland series. Young Ireland writers drew upon recent developments in Irish historical scholarship, and while Quinn does not claim any great originality for them as historical writers, he makes a compelling case for the cultural and political significance of their endeavors. He thus provides insightful evaluations of Young Ireland's utilization of works produced by serious, manuscript-based research conducted by scholars associated with the antiquarian revival (29). Quinn notes that Davis thought that supporting the interpretation of Irish antiquities was a key project for a future Irish government but not one that could be contemplated under existing circumstances.

Young Ireland's interest in antiquities and adherents' practice of visiting the scenes of significant past events would have pleased the Scottish historian and social critic Thomas Carlyle. Duffy and some of his friends called on Carlyle in Chelsea, and he returned the courtesy by visiting Dublin and touring parts of the south and west with Duffy. Together with Thierry, Carlyle was an important source for the romantically inclined approach to history which became a key aspect of Young Ireland's program. Carlyle and members of Young Ireland expressed a personal regard for each other, and a qualified endorsement of various political views. As the latter moved away from O'Connell, Carlyle's vivid portrayal of the French Revolution, his critique of aspects of modern capitalist society, and his stress on personal veracity seemed appealing enough to partly counteract his rejection of the need for and the feasibility of Irish independence. In the early 1850s, when the Irish population struggled with the aftermath of the Famine, Duffy's concentration on practical social and economic issues such as land reform provided additional shared ground.

Davis, Duffy and their colleagues advanced their views in accounts of the Irish past and historically freighted discussions of the present that were to inspire an independent republican future (61–62). In prose, poetry, and song they sought to kindle pleasure and pride in Ireland's past in place of shame and shamefaced frivolity. They sought, for example, to “raise the tone” of popular song and remove it from the tendency to slapstick or dirges that marked prevailing genres. Quinn quotes William Hazlitt's remark that “if Moore's Irish Melodies with their drawing-room, lackadaisical patriotism, were really the melodies of the Irish nation, the people of Ireland deserved to be slaves forever” (45–46).

Having initially focused on the more distant history of Ireland in ways that stressed its cultural vigor and the confident, proud military spirt of its heroes and their followers, Young Ireland's writers turned increasingly to the history of recent times, dwelling on the events leading to the rebellion and treating their own experiences as emblematic of the history of their country. Michael Doheny's The Felon's Track (1849) and Mitchel's Jail Journal (1854) were sharply critical of O'Connell and sought to vindicate the decision to rebel. The latter also attacked Duffy's turn to constitutional politics in the early 1850s. Quinn notes that Mitchel's later account of the Famine as an instrument of British policy had a lasting impact on Famine historiography.

Mitchel's legacy is but one manifestation of the enduring impact of Young Ireland's historical writings. In the closing chapters of his book, Quinn traces their influence on members of the Irish Republican Brotherhood, who were critical of the deracinating agenda of state-sponsored schools in Ireland, and on the creation of a New Library of Ireland. Although writers such as W. E. H. Lecky brought a new professionalism to the writing of Irish history which challenged Young Ireland's nationalist narratives, Quinn shows that these writings continued to play a key ideological role before and after independence.