Future Directions in Rural History: Ireland, the First World War, and the Search for Historical Evidence
« Future Directions in Rural History: Ireland, the First World War, and the Search for Historical Evidence », Rural History. Economy, Society, Culture (34), no. 1, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2023, pp. 137-146.
Auteur.e.s membre de l'UMR : Emmanuel Destenay (FRHistS FHEA)
Axe(s) de recherche : 4. Temps, traces et territoires de guerre
Lien vers l'éditeur : Cliquez ici
A social history of Ireland (encompassing rural communities) is needed if historians are to fully come to terms with what really happened between 1914 and 1918 and to properly tackle the question of ‘consent’ and ‘constraint’ in relation to the war effort. In addition, historians need to devote a comprehensive book-length research to the April 1918 Conscription Crisis in Ulster (but more generally to the anti-conscription movement in Ulster), determining if the urban/rural – Belfast/countryside divide existed (and, if so, what its magnitude was). Finally, in a few years’ time, anyone will be able to say if the Republic of Ireland of today opted to anchor the global conflict in the collective memory of its people, or if the Centenary of the First World War was just a politically motivated parenthesis to commemorate a lost generation that still struggles to find its rightful place in modern Irish history.


