Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Introduction: ‘A Piece Cut Off from the Old Sod Itself’
- Part One 1800–1914
- 1 Poor Paddy: The Irish in the Liverpool Labour Market
- 2 ‘The Lowest Depth’: The Spatial Dimensions of Irish Liverpool
- 3 The Holy Sanctity of Poverty: Welfare, Charity and the Sacred Irish Poor
- 4 Faith and Fatherland: Ethno-Sectarian Collective Mutuality
- 5 Electoral Politics: Towards Home Rule
- 6 Extra-Parliamentary Politics: The American Connection
- 7 ‘Pat-riot-ism’: Sectarian Violence and Public Disorder
- 8 Cultural Politics: National Regeneration and Ethnic Revival
- 9 Leisure: Irish Recreation
- Part Two 1914–39
- Bibliography
- Index
8 - Cultural Politics: National Regeneration and Ethnic Revival
from Part One - 1800–1914
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Introduction: ‘A Piece Cut Off from the Old Sod Itself’
- Part One 1800–1914
- 1 Poor Paddy: The Irish in the Liverpool Labour Market
- 2 ‘The Lowest Depth’: The Spatial Dimensions of Irish Liverpool
- 3 The Holy Sanctity of Poverty: Welfare, Charity and the Sacred Irish Poor
- 4 Faith and Fatherland: Ethno-Sectarian Collective Mutuality
- 5 Electoral Politics: Towards Home Rule
- 6 Extra-Parliamentary Politics: The American Connection
- 7 ‘Pat-riot-ism’: Sectarian Violence and Public Disorder
- 8 Cultural Politics: National Regeneration and Ethnic Revival
- 9 Leisure: Irish Recreation
- Part Two 1914–39
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
A NECESSARY MEANS of regaining self-confidence, Irish cultural nationalism acquired accentuated resonance after the collapse of political agitation and outbreaks of ‘Pat-riot-ism’. In the aftermath, the first priority was to disabuse host attitudes, to refute the prejudice and ethnic denigration aroused to fever pitch by Irish ‘commotion’. However, while confuting the derogatory portrayal of the Irish, nationalist cultural brokers, anxious to ensure against further defamation, exhorted their less fortunate fellow-countrymen along the path of reform, respectability and rehabilitation. Liverpool, they were only too well aware, was renowned for its ‘unenviable pre-eminence in the unnecessary superfluity of its moral and material temptations to wrong-doing’. Much more than a rejoinder to ethnic defamation, respectable advocacy of Irish culture offered salvation for exiles of Erin adrift in an alien and corrupting waterfront environment.
Promotion of ‘respectable’ national values crossed the spectrum, from liberal advocates of integrative assimilation to ethnic purists campaigning for celtic separatism. At the same time, the specious ‘anti-political’ ethos of cultural activity provided ready cover for a ‘revolutionary underground’ disillusioned by the depredations, sleaze and compromise of constitutional politics. In trying to unravel some of these ironies and complexities, this chapter follows a chronological path through nationalist cultural endeavour. Most notably, it highlights a significant shift in focus from contestation of host stereotypes to inculcation of ‘Irish-Ireland’ culture, a project that exposed the gulf between cultural ‘purists’ and second-generation Liverpool-Irish. Where early nationalist culture brokers sought to rescue their fellow countrymen, confronted by the harsh realities of Liverpool life, from denigration and defamation, the new gaelic cultural nationalists of the Edwardian period displayed no such contextual awareness. Harsh critics of those whose Irishness extended no further than affection for commercially packaged sentimental representations of the ‘old sod’, the purist extremists disowned the ‘low’ Liverpool-Irish. There was no place in Irish-Ireland for those contaminated (seemingly irredeemably so by the second generation) with the vulgarities of English popular culture.
Father Nugent, the impresario of ‘Irish national entertainment’ and self-proclaimed ‘people's friend’, led the way in the sustained campaign to reclaim Irish virtue and national character. Following the anti-Irish backlash of the late 1840s, the first task was to ensure against undue Irish boisterousness on the streets.
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- Irish, Catholic and ScouseThe History of the Liverpool-Irish, 1800-1940, pp. 198 - 215Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2007