The Catholics of Ulster Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

The Catholics of Ulster Book

Marianne Elliott was born a Catholic in Ulster, and this history of her people--The Catholics of Ulster--will change the world's view of the nationalist Catholics in that province of Northern Ireland. Elliott's revisionist claims are many, and they are large. She denies the proposition that there was any such thing as a Gaelic Catholic race. She argues that Catholic gentry disappeared not because they were exiled and dispossessed by their Protestant neighbors, but because they were converted. She claims that the Penal Laws were not intentionally anti-Catholic. She believes that the English were not substantially to blame for the Potato Famine. And she claims that the IRA has never enjoyed much popular support. These arguments are part of a detailed, comprehensive history of Ireland's tangled Troubles that she makes as clear as one could hope for. Elliott's unwillingness to reduce Ulster's story to any simple opposition between good and bad is unwavering. And her gift for self-criticism, suggested in the book's prologue ("I have discovered in myself lingering prejudices and sensitivities which I either believed I had left far behind or never recognized in the first place"), informs every chapter. --Michael Joseph Gross Read More

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  • Product Description

    In the first definitive history of Ulster, an award-winning Irish historian shatters cultural myths and challenges old pieties. There can be few European communities more soaked in their bloody history than the Province of Ulster, but the Catholic and Protestant communities' faulty understanding of their past has had ruinous effects on the lives of its inhabitants. In The Catholics of Ulster, Marianne Elliott slices through this dense thicket of obscuring myth, lies, and half-truths and emerges into the relative clarity of history. Some of Elliott's provocative claims include: There was no such thing as a Gaelic Catholic race;The Catholic gentry was decimated through conversion to Protestantism, not exile and dispossession; Catholic landowners often welcomed Scottish and English tenant farmers in Ulster; The English were not as culpable as previously claimed in exacerbating the Potato Famine. Arriving at a fragile juncture in the uncertain peace process, The Catholics of Ulster is sure to spark great controversy, inflame passions, and provoke spirited debate.

  • 046501903X
  • 9780465019038
  • Marianne Elliott
  • 30 March 2001
  • Basic Books
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 650
  • 1st Edition.
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