Irish nationalism

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    In my eyes, this is really an intriguing article, which mainly explores the root of people’s nationalism and their resistance to outsiders, based on the Jewish philosopher Emmanuel Levinas’s analysis. I like how the author addresses that there is a “full circle” here -- supposedly, we should share our possessions “with all human beings”, but such responsibility is infinite and impossible, due to that “our identifications and differentiations always fail as adequate descriptions of others” and…

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    When we hear the word “America” most of us probably think of opportunity, success and freedom. Was America a land of Opportunity? Is a question that is asked quite oftenly. In my opinion I think that America was a land of opportunity for many reasons. In my essay I am going to cover what made America the land of opportunity. One of the main reasons I thought that America was a land of opportunity was because America gave the immigrants different life options that their country didn’t offer them.…

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    Complex concepts can have a variety of interpretations and are difficult to pinpoint because there is no definite answer. Many people believe that an American is just a U.S. citizen, but it is more complex than that. An American is a U.S. citizen or immigrant who has rights, works hard, and is progressive. To begin with, an American has a constitutional federal republic as its government. This form of government protects certain rights for its citizens. Franklin D. Roosevelt’s speech, “From the…

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    Reconstruction Dbq

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    What does it take to form a perfect union? One would imagine a place where everyone agreed with the established government, and conflict was almost non-existent. When the founding fathers, of our nation, outlined the factors that would contribute to the formation of a more perfect union, it is understood that war wasn’t a step within the process of conflict resolution. On the contrary, as the nation pursued its most controversial combat, the Civil War, it revealed that the results of a battle as…

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    early 1800s, nationalism would start to spread across Europe along with industrialization. Nationalism is showing love and devotion for one’s country, specifically, in places like Prussia and Italy at the time. Unification was brought most in part by nationalism and industrialization. Language and religion kept people divided, but also could bring them together. Multinational empires were common in Europe, especially in Russia and Italy. Many different things would impact whether nationalism was…

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    Irish Catholic Religion

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    Finally, Irish Catholics in Toronto were not completely without support, since Quebec embraced Irish Catholic culture through the dominance of Catholic cultural ideology amongst the Francophone population. This type of political, social, and economic support defined one reason why the Catholic Irish in Toronto was alienated, yet not without some resources to countermand the sectarian oppression of the Orange Order: In time the appearance and plight of these faminites became a lens through which…

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    Jamisha Fletcher Irish Literature in English Dr. Martine van Elk September 14, 2015 Thomas Davis: Repealer or Rebel? In his essay titled “Moral and Physical Force: Violence in Irish Nationalism” Perry Curtis Jr. argues that Thomas Davis hides behind the guise of being a writer whose narrowing concern is the immediate and indefinite repealing of oppressive English legislature. Curtis claims that Davis is actually an agitator. That Davis is a rabble-rouser who uses violent language in his…

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    Second, nationalism, a patriotic feeling for one’s country, used by both the working-class and capitalists resulted from the class divide. Regarding the working-class’s utilization, the Great Famine serves as an example. When the Irish population boomed, and the potato crop plummeted, a famine resulted. The British government did very little to help the struggling Irish, and nationalism became the Irish workers’ tool to counter the capitalistic British. McKay describes, “The Great Famine also…

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    Houlihan is a mythological female figure who represents Irish nationalism in literature and art. In the play Cathleen ni Houlihan written by William Butler Yeats and Lady August Gregory, she is personified as an old, suffering woman, representing Ireland’s oppression by the English. Cathleen and the martyred Saint Joan of Arc, as represented in George Bernard Shaw’s play Saint Joan, share strong similarities. Significantly, Maud Gonne, the original Irish actress chosen to portray Cathleen on…

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    Irish Diaspora History

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    The Irish Diaspora in the US is massive with the 1990 census totalling an immense 43 million Americans consider themselves to be Irish American which at the time equated to roughly 19% of the American population(Feargal Cochrane 2007:218). Beyond just equating for a fifth of the American population, a third of American…

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