Book description
REVISED AND EXTENDED SECOND EDITION Rebellions is an
autobiography, an astonishingly clear-sighted and lucid account of a
tragic and disputed episode in Irish history and a polemic. The book's
importance, originality and real value arise from the way the
personal, the political and the scholarly are each offered as
passionate witness and not separated. The rebellion of 1798 in Wexford
and its two hundredth anniversary have found a brilliant and fearless
chronicler. This is essential reading for anyone interested in the
arguments about how the past cut deeply into the way we live in
Ireland now.'- Colm Tóibín. This is a new, extended edition of an
unusual book, which generated considerable interest and controversy
when it was first published in 2004, and won the Ewart Biggs Memorial
Prize the following year. In its original form it had three elements,
a memoir giving the author's intellectual and political formation and
his family connection to 1798 in Wexford, a critique of the
bicentenary of the rebellion and of writing about it, and a detailed
account of the pivotal battle of New Ross and the massacre nearby at
Scullabogue. The new edition adds a fourth layer of exploration,
analysing the reception of the book, by historians, by those involved
in the bicentenary, and by the many individuals who wrote to the
author. The most unusual response came from the Ryan Commission on
child abuse, which explored with the author his experiences as a
junior member of the Irish Christian Brothers, and quoted him
extensively in its report. The new chapter focuses on the theme common
to all of these responses, the conflict between emotional
identification with a community's history and the evidence for
contrary realities.