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Judging Dev: A Reassessment of the Life and Legacy of Eamon De Valera
Diarmaid Ferriter
€ 30.00
€ 22.92
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Description for Judging Dev: A Reassessment of the Life and Legacy of Eamon De Valera
Hardcover.
Eamon de Valera is the most controversial figure in modern Irish history and as this book argues, the most misunderstood. `Dev' has been characterised as a stern, un-bending, devious and divisive politician, in scholarship and in popular culture. Here, Diarmaid Ferriter investigates the far more complex personal and public identities of the revolutionary fighter, Fianna Fail party founder, taoiseach (prime minister) and president who reimagined the state both literally, in its first constitution, and figuratively, offering a much mocked vision of Ireland as a pre-industrial, pastoral island. Ferriter presents an in-depth analysis of De Valera using previously unpublished letters, government documents and photographs to chronicle his long and remarkable career. One such letter contradicts the conventional wisdom that de Valera escaped execution in 1916 because of his American citizenship, offering the leader's personal account of events. Engagingly written and tactile to hold, Judging Dev won four prestigious Irish book awards and awakened a national conversation through a parallel RTE radio series and RIA exhibition. When an Irish taoiseach launched this book in 2007 it was fittingly said it would be `equally invaluable in classroom, in college and in the home'.
Product Details
Publisher
Royal Irish Academy
Format
Hardback
Publication date
2007
Condition
New
Number of Pages
396
Place of Publication
Dublin, Ireland
ISBN
9781904890287
SKU
V9781904890287
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 3 to 5 working days
Ref
99-94
About Diarmaid Ferriter
Diarmaid Ferriter is a Professor of Modern Irish History at the School of History, University College Dublin. His main research interest is the social, political and cultural history of twentieth century Ireland. His book Judging Dev: A Reassessment of the Life and Legacy of Eamon De Valera was published by the Royal Irish Academy in 2007. He also contributed a chapter, ``A figurative scramble for the bones of the patriot dead': Commemorating the Rising, 1922-65', to the publication 1916 in 1966: Commemorating the Easter Rising (2007).
Reviews for Judging Dev: A Reassessment of the Life and Legacy of Eamon De Valera
The Sunday Business Post 14/10/2007 Reviewed by Emmanuel Kehoe Ferriter's thoughtful and timely new work is unique in that it reproduces in wonderful detail large numbers of original documents...sight of original documents is usually denied to the hobby historian and the quality of the reproduction, complete with all the originals, errors and corrections, is so good one can almost feel the bite of the typewriter on the paper and smell the dried ink. The Sunday Tribune 14/10/2007 Reviewed by Kevin Rafter Judging Dev is a resounding success for both the author and his publisher, the Royal Irish Academy. The book is wonderfully produced with its text inter-spread by photographs and illustrations, many of which will be new to even the strongest readers of Irish history. The Sunday Independent 21/10/2007 Reviewed by John A Murphy The book's great and original source is the deValera archive in UCD, which was not freely available to earlier scholars. Is supplies the marvellously illustrated material at the heart of this publication - longhand and typewritten letters and documents which give a striking sense of historical immediacy, and beautifully reproduced photographs never seen before, freshly touching on every phase of Dev's career and concisely contexted by the author. All this stuff alone is worth much more than the (very reasonable) publication price of Euro 30. The photos and documents take up approximately 250 out of the book's 370 pages so that the text is relatively brief. It is a sustained analytical essay on de Valera's career, richly drawling from the UCD archive but also taking into account the judgements of past and present de Valera scholars and commentators. Overall Ferriter's assessments are superbly fresh, independent and sophisticated.