Now showing items 1-7 of 7

    • The Body Politic: The Ethics of Responsibility and the Responsibility of Ethics 

      O'Brien, Eugene (Oxford University Press, 2008)
      This chapter examines Heaney’s translations of Antigone in terms of its being a vehicle for an ethical interrogation of the laws and loyalties and of the contrast between the loyalty to one’s tribe and a broader intersubjective ...
    • Ethics & values in a digital age 

      McMillan, Barry; Kitt, Tom; Desmond, William; Martin, Diarmuid; McDarby, Gary; Conway, Eamonn (Department of the Taoiseach [Ireland], 2004)
      The Information Society Commission established a Working Group on Values and Ethics in February 2004. This was the final Working Group to be established by the Commission, and consisted of the following ISC members: Michael ...
    • The NCCA’s proposed ERB and ethics curriculum for primary schools: a critique 

      Conway, Eamonn; Greer, Kerry; Van Nieuwenhove, Rik; Hession, Anne; Finnegan, Thomas (NCCA [National Council for Curriculum and Assessment], 2016)
    • North: The Politics of Plurality 

      O'Brien, Eugene (Nua: Studies in Contemporary Irish Writing, 1999)
      This essay will offer a theoretical reading both of North, and its critics; it will also analyse the criticisms of North in terms of its speaking with the voice of the tribe. I hope to demonstrate that, in fact, what is ...
    • Religion and the primary schools 

      Connolly, Patrick (The Furrow, 2014)
      In the current debates about religion and schooling in the Republic of Ireland, the primary sector has become the lightning rod of discontent with the current system, as we saw during the Forum on Patronage and Pluralism ...
    • Seamus Heaney and the Ethics of Translation 

      O'Brien, Eugene (Canadian Journal of Irish Studies, 2003)
      This essay deals with two of Heaney’s major translations, Sweeney Astray and The Cure at Troy, are connected in terms of their ability to enunciate the voice of the other as well as to convey increasingly more complex ...