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El. knyga: On Dangerous Ground

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  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-Nov-2021
  • Leidėjas: The Lilliput Press Ltd
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781843518204
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-Nov-2021
  • Leidėjas: The Lilliput Press Ltd
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781843518204

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On Dangerous Ground is the revolutionary period memoir of Republican Mįire Comerford (18931982). This striking memoir, one of the last of its era, includes Comerfords original text, written mainly in the 1940s and 50s, and new material unearthed from her extensive archive that also contains a wealth of photographs and memorabilia from the period.





The memoir begins with Comerfords recollection of Sunday strolls to Avondale, former home of Charles Stewart Parnell, who was a neighbour of her father, the mill owner James Comerford. As a young woman, she experiences a political awakening at the hands of a fierce Unionist woman in a secretarial college in London. Mįire Comerford (the only Catholic in the class) begins to engage with Irish history books to counterbalance this brush with religious sectarianism. On her return to County Wexford to live with her mothers people a move necessitated by the familys change of fortune she re-enters the genteel world of fox hunting and luncheon parties. The memoir paints an intriguing picture of rural life of the time heralding the arrival of the motorcar, social and economic conditions, the rise of the Gaelic League, debates about Home Rule, and the First World War.





While the description of her surroundings as a young adult is intriguing and often charming, change is in the air in Ireland and a sharp and wide-ranging political analysis is ever present throughout her writing. Following Comerfords witness account of Dublin during the 1916 Rising, she begins a life of political engagement, joining Cumann na mBan, Sinn Féin and the Gaelic League. In 1919, she moves permanently to Dublin to live with and work for renowned historian and nationalist, Alice Stopford Green. There, she becomes immersed in Republican politics and the War of Independence.





Comerfords memoir gives voice to the experience of Republican women during revolutionary times, highlighting the immense contribution of women in the struggle for an Irish Republic. She works all over the country, moving arms, carrying dispatches, finding safe houses, researching atrocities and working assiduously for Ireland. She experiences raids, prison vigils, funerals of her comrades and dangers of all kinds, but nothing cuts as deep as the sense of utter betrayal following the signing of the Treaty in 1922. Comerford takes the anti-Treaty side, is imprisoned a number of times and endures a 27-day hunger strike. Following her release, she leaves Ireland on a tour of east coast American cities to raise funds for the Republican cause at the behest of de Valera. She returns to a harsh, poverty-stricken and lonely existence, eking out a living on a hilltop poultry farm in Wexford. But while her memoir ends in bleak times, her overarching vision suggests an unquenchable optimism and that the fight will go on. An epilogue by the editor chronicles the years between 1927 and her death.

Recenzijos

Described as the last comprehensive witness account of the revolutionary period, it is an absorbing read. In 1923, a Daily Mail report called her the Jeanne dArc of the Republican cause, the most daring woman working for the Republican movement. -- Mary Burke * The Tuam Herald * This first-hand account includes Comerfords original text, written mainly in the 1940s and 50s, and new material unearthed from her extensive archive. * The Journal * This is a fascinating diary written by a republican true believer. -- J. Anthony Gaughan * The Irish Catholic * In this decade of centenaries, some of those who made their mark 100 years ago have had their lives and contributions critically examined.





However, there has also been an acceptance that a number of women who lived through those times had not heretofore been recognised for their contributions.







Mįire Comerford is one such woman and her recently published memoir is probably the last first-person account we are likely to see written by a witness and participant in extraordinary times. -- The Mick Clifford Podcast * Irish Examiner * This book does something important: it adds new insights and understanding to events in Ireland, 1916-mid 20s, the most analysed and described epoch in modern Irish history. -- John Kirkaldy * Books Ireland * Mįire Comerfords words are truly inspiring and no Republican home should be without this book. * An Phoblacht * Comerfords memoir places the reader in the lived reality of the time, showing how ordinary lives crossed over with history. Editor Hilary Dully not only has access to original documents, photos and stories, but can also see the direct personal impact Comerford has on the lives of people around her. While Mįires memoir ends in bleak times, her overarching vision suggests an unquenchable optimism. * Wexford Local * Having access to original documents, photos and stories, Hilary also knows directly personal impact Comerford had on the lives of people around her. -- Cathy Lee * The Independent * These memoirs took more than forty years to be published and are well written and most interesting for any student of Irish history. -- Eva Ó Cathaoir * National Graves Association * 'Meticulously edited by Hilary Dully from the original typescript, its a terrific read, a page-turner   illustrated with richly evocative photos Of all the first-person memoirs Ive read, this is by far the most inspiring. Comerford has an unforgettable, idiosyncratic voice, her language rich with imagery, full of physical movement. Both astute and tender, she feels modern. I could identify with her. Was it her sense of humour? Her honesty? Her lack of self-aggrandisation? Her intense love for animals? I was certainly drawn to all of these qualities. And her characters hum with life.'





Martina Evans, Irish Times

Preface vii
Introduction: Maire Comerford -- an appreciation xi
On Dangerous Ground
1(2)
Avondale
3(7)
Rathdrum
10(7)
Ballycourcey
17(5)
From School to Rotten Row
22(10)
Home Rule
32(8)
World War
40(7)
Etchingham
47(5)
Rising
52(7)
The Risen People
59(13)
Ashe
72(4)
Sisters
76(7)
Conscription
83(5)
Women
88(5)
1918 Election
93(5)
The First Dail
98(7)
Living on the Green
105(9)
My Half-Mile Radius
114(4)
Inside Nos 6 and 76
118(7)
Close Shaves, and Vigils
125(7)
Raids, Escapades and Escapes
132(4)
Visits and Visitors
136(8)
Bodenstown to Leitrim
144(6)
Trips to Tipp
150(8)
A Spy and a Mystery Man
158(4)
Wicklow and Local Bodies
162(4)
Unwelcome Visitors
166(4)
1920--21
170(7)
Arrests and Escapes
177(6)
White Cross
183(7)
Housekeepers
190(8)
Thin Red Line
198(8)
Truce
206(7)
Beds
213(6)
Dresses and Delegations
219(7)
The Split
226(7)
Flying the Flag
233(5)
Making and Breaking Pacts
238(5)
The '22 Election
243(8)
Post-election '22
251(7)
Inside the Courts
258(9)
The Hotel
267(8)
Driving and Dodging
275(8)
The Final
Chapter
283(8)
Epilogue: What Maire Did Next 291(6)
Acknowledgments 297(2)
Appendix: Newspaper Articles on Maire Comerford, 1923 299(8)
Index 307
Mįire Comerford (18931982) was an Irish Republican from County Wexford who witnessed central events of the Irish Revolution 1916-23 and remained a committed historical researcher, republican activist and writer until her death in 1982. She worked as a journalist for the Irish Press for over thirty years, editing the Womens Page, and was last arrested in 1974 for her republican activities, aged 81. Hilary Dully is a documentary filmmaker, film teacher and writer. Her film work has been shown on RTÉ, Channel Four, TG4 and at a number of international festivals. She lives with her family in East Clare. She has a family connection with Marie Comerford and has integrated archival photographs and letters to enhance the memoir.