Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 ‘Reform’ in English public life: the fortunes of a word
- 3 Parliament, the state, and ‘Old Corruption’: conceptualizing reform, c. 1790–1832
- 4 ‘Old wine in new bottles’: the concept and practice of law reform, c. 1780–1830
- 5 English ‘church reform’ revisited, 1780–1840
- 6 Medicine in the age of reform
- 7 British antislavery reassessed
- 8 ‘The age of physiological reformers’: rethinking gender and domesticity in the age of reform
- 9 Reforming the aristocracy: opera and elite culture, 1780–1860
- 10 Reform on the London stage
- 11 Reforming culture: national art institutions in the age of reform
- 12 Irish reform between the 1798 Rebellion and the Great Famine
- 13 Empire and parliamentary reform: the 1832 Reform Act revisited
- 14 Reforms, movements for reform, and possibilities of reform: comparing Britain and continental Europe
- Index
- Past and Present Publications
12 - Irish reform between the 1798 Rebellion and the Great Famine
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 ‘Reform’ in English public life: the fortunes of a word
- 3 Parliament, the state, and ‘Old Corruption’: conceptualizing reform, c. 1790–1832
- 4 ‘Old wine in new bottles’: the concept and practice of law reform, c. 1780–1830
- 5 English ‘church reform’ revisited, 1780–1840
- 6 Medicine in the age of reform
- 7 British antislavery reassessed
- 8 ‘The age of physiological reformers’: rethinking gender and domesticity in the age of reform
- 9 Reforming the aristocracy: opera and elite culture, 1780–1860
- 10 Reform on the London stage
- 11 Reforming culture: national art institutions in the age of reform
- 12 Irish reform between the 1798 Rebellion and the Great Famine
- 13 Empire and parliamentary reform: the 1832 Reform Act revisited
- 14 Reforms, movements for reform, and possibilities of reform: comparing Britain and continental Europe
- Index
- Past and Present Publications
Summary
What is the place of Irish reform in the British ‘age of reform’, and how did the 1801 Act of Union between Britain and Ireland affect the development of reform in Ireland? The historical literature on reform has usually focused on the development of centralized interpretations of reform, their imposition on the ‘periphery’, and the local responses to central initiatives. These themes are particularly prominent in the Irish case since English historical interpretations of reform in Ireland usually focus on Ireland as a problem for British reformers or as a ‘social laboratory’, while Irish interpretations usually concentrate on responses to British policy (including reforming initiatives) as key elements in the emergence of two opposed forms of political identity in Ireland, namely Irish nationalist and Protestant Unionist identities. In contrast, this chapter considers reform movements that emerged within Ireland, which were locally led, and which represented responses to changing Irish circumstances, but which were shaped by their competitive relationship with one another, and by a changing relationship between locality and centre under the Union.
In Ireland there were two main and competing approaches to reform during the first half of the nineteenth century, which shared an emphasis on using British political structures to achieve Irish ends, and which can therefore be seen as different ways of positioning Ireland within the framework of the Union.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Rethinking the Age of ReformBritain 1780–1850, pp. 271 - 294Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003