FACULTY OF ARTS: Recent submissions
Now showing items 161-180 of 975
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"The soul exceeds its circumstances" : the later poetry of Seamus Heaney (Pre-published version)
(University of Notre Dame Press, 2016) -
Tracing the cultural legacy of Irish Catholicism: from Galway to Cloyne and beyond (Pre-published version)
(Manchester University Press, 2017) -
From prosperity to austerity: a socio-cultural critique of the Celtic Tiger and its aftermath (Pre-published version)
(Manchester University Press, 2014) -
War of the words: literary rebellion in France and Ireland (Pre-published version)
(T.I.R. [Université Rennes 2], 2010) -
La France face a la mondialisation/ France and the struggle against globalization (Pre-published version)
(Edwin Mellen Press, 2007) -
Early genealogies of West Clare
(Kilrush and District Historical Society, 2015) -
Blood of the Dubliners
(Dublin City Library, 2013) -
The descendants of Brian Boru
(GGI [Genetic Genealogy Ireland], 2015) -
Surname research and DNA: Publications, possibilities and pitfalls
(Dublin City Library, 2015) -
Paddy le Carpenter and surname formation in the mid-west
(UCD [University College Dublin], 2015) -
The multilingual origins of medieval Irish surnames
(ISOGG [International society of Genetic Genealogy], 2015) -
Negotiating the self – the spectral mobile subject (Pre-published version)
(Peter Lang, 2009) -
The subjective real in William Trevor’s ‘Justina’s Priest’ (Pre-published version)
(Presses universitaires d'Angers, 2015) -
Killaloe – royal and ecclesiastical power on the merchants’ river
(UCD [University College Dublin], 2015) -
Brian Boru’s origins and the kingdom of North Munster (Pre-published version)
(History Publications Ltd., 2014)Cathy Swift examines the tradition that Cormac Cas was buried at Duntryleague Hill, near Galbally, Co. Limerick, and what it tells us about the rise of his descendent, Brian Boru. -
Migrancy in Medieval Ireland: Merchants, monks, miscreants and mercenaries
(UCC [University College Cork], 2018) -
History and identity in the Irish primary school classroom in 2016
(Education Matters, 2017)Dr Swift discusses the tension between Irish identity/culture and multiculturalism in the history curriculum in primary schools and poses important questions about how we define ‘Irishness’ -
Brotherly love and ancestral veneration in early Ireland
(JPI on Culturale Heritage, 2016) -
What is an Irish clan?
(GGI [Genetic Genealogy Ireland], 2015)

