A collection of essays on Irish literary and national identity in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Risings traces two unfolding dramas: the renaissance of Irish identity through the Irish Literary Revival and and the parallel quest for Irish nationhood. This cultural movement came to serve as a crucial impetus for Ireland’s reemergent sense of self, while establishing Ireland as a worldwide literary force.
This book includes four original essays: two by masters in the field of Irish studies and two by master Irish storytellers. R.A. Foster, author of the definitive biography of poet W.B. Yeats and numerous histories of modern Ireland, provides an overview of the Irish literary and political movements of the early twentieth century. Colm Tóibín, acclaimed Irish novelist and essayist, writes of James Joyce and the meaning of his character’s names. Belinda McKeon, Irish playwright and novelist, views Yeats through his avocation as a collector. Scholar James Pethica, at work on the authorized biography of Lady Gregory, looks at her role as a political advocate and prime mover in the development of Irish cultural nationalism.
36 pages | 54 | 5.5 x 8.25 | © 2026
Guides, Manuals, and Reference:
History: British and Irish History
Literature and Literary Criticism: British and Irish Literature
Table of Contents
Timeline
Risings
R. A. Foster
Items in the Exhibition
1: The Fuse Is Lit, 1848–1900
2: The Revival in Bloom, 1900–1910
3: The Abbey Theatre: 1900–1917
4: The Dun Emer and Cuala Presses: 1903–1939
All Kinds of Courageous Things: W. B. Yeats as Collector Belinda McKeon
5: Lead-Up to Rebellion: 1910–1915
6: The 1916 Easter Rising
7: The Road to Irish Statehood: World War I, the War of Independence, and the Irish Civil War, 1916–1923
Colm Tóibín
8: Irish Literature in the Aftermath of Independence, 1922–1939
9: The Revival’s Legacy
Her Country Was Kiltartan Cross: Lady Gregory, Galway and Irish Politics
James Pethica