"We will have liberty and equality in Ireland": the contested geographies of Irish democratic cultures in the 1790s

Featherstone, D.J. (2013) "We will have liberty and equality in Ireland": the contested geographies of Irish democratic cultures in the 1790s. Historical Geography, 41, pp. 94-119.

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Publisher's URL: https://ejournals.unm.edu/index.php/historicalgeography/article/view/3090

Abstract

This paper explores the contested geographies of Irish democratic political cultures in the 1790s. It positions Irish democratic political cultures in relation to Atlantic flows and circulations of radical ideas and political experience. It argues that this can foreground forms of subaltern agency and identity that have frequently been marginalized in different traditions of Irish historiography. The paper develops these arguments through a discussion of the relations of the United Irishmen to debates on slavery and anti-slavery. Through exploring the influence of the ex-slave and abolitionist Olaudah Equiano on these debates it foregrounds the relations between the United Irishmen and the blackAtlantic. The paper examines the limits of some of the United Irishmen’s democratic politics. It argues that the articulations of liberty and equality by Irish sailors in mutinies in the late 1790s dislocated some of the narrow notions of democratic community and politics associated with the United Irishmen.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Featherstone, Professor David
Authors: Featherstone, D.J.
Subjects:G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation > G Geography (General)
College/School:College of Science and Engineering > School of Geographical and Earth Sciences
Research Group:Human Geography Research Group
Journal Name:Historical Geography
Publisher:Association of American Geographers
ISSN:2331-7523

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