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Current Search:
'Irish' in all fields;
19802 items found
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Displaying Results 176 - 200 of 19802 on page 8 of 793
Marked
Mark
Figuring Phantasmagoria: The Tradition of the Fantastic in Irish Modernism.
(2011)
Beville, Maria
Figuring Phantasmagoria: The Tradition of the Fantastic in Irish Modernism.
(2011)
Beville, Maria
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/1773
Marked
Mark
Speaking of Silence: Comments from an Irish Studies Perspective.
(2012)
Beville, Maria; Dybris McQuaid, Sara
Speaking of Silence: Comments from an Irish Studies Perspective.
(2012)
Beville, Maria; Dybris McQuaid, Sara
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/1770
Marked
Mark
The state and cultural policy in Ireland: the case of the Irish audiovisual sector
(1991)
Keenaghan, Celia
The state and cultural policy in Ireland: the case of the Irish audiovisual sector
(1991)
Keenaghan, Celia
Abstract:
This thesis examines the relationship between the Irish state and the Irish audiovisual sector in an attempt to examine where the future of Irish cultural policy lies. Chapter one examines the nation as an "imagined community" and the importance of the media in that imagining. It establishes how important the media were to developing the cultural basis of the Irish nation-state. It indicates that with increasing internationalism and consumerism, the importance of the cultural field is becoming more unclear and how a redefinition of the public sphere is occurring in increasingly consumerist terms. Chapter two presents a history of broadcasting and film in Ireland, paying particular attention to concepts of nation-state, consumer-citizen and the changing definitions of public service. Chapter three extends this into the present day and shows how policy in the area of film and television is more and more being based on commercial rather than cultural criteria. Chapter four ...
http://doras.dcu.ie/19153/
Marked
Mark
Discipline in Irish parliamentary parties
(1997)
Martin, Shane G.
Discipline in Irish parliamentary parties
(1997)
Martin, Shane G.
Abstract:
The level and nature of discipline in modern political parties remain two of the most fascinating aspects of politics. This study provides a review of the literature on the role of political parties and the perceived need for some form of collective action within parliament. A survey of work on party discipline in other countries is also provided, followed by a closer examination of what is meant by ‘discipline’ . We explore the level of cohesion and discipline in Irish parties. The organisation of Irish parties and the development of the whip system is examined along with other influences on the behaviour of TDs, such as the electoral system and Irish political culture. A systematic account and analysis of cases of indiscipline between 1969 and 1997 is provided and analysed. The work concludes with a social-psychological explanation of TDs behaviour which is tested using available empirical evidence and a laboratory experiment. The thesis argues that the high levels of discipline ...
http://doras.dcu.ie/19506/
Marked
Mark
Assessment of the Irish Ports & Shipping Requirements for the Marine Renewable Energy Industry : June 2011
(2011)
Wells, N.; McDonnell, M.
Assessment of the Irish Ports & Shipping Requirements for the Marine Renewable Energy Industry : June 2011
(2011)
Wells, N.; McDonnell, M.
Abstract:
The study identifies a spatial framework of first-phase port locations for wind, wave and tidal developments. If Ireland is successful in developing a strong supply chain in offshore renewable energy, many Irish ports and harbours will be involved in related economic activity. The report sets out the background, the economic growth requirements and the nature of the infrastructure required for offshore, wind, wave and tidal sectors, and the locations that over the medium term are well placed to provide this growth. The study begins by establishing the geographical distribution of ocean renewable energy around the Irish coast. In terms of shipping, the study assesses the vessel type and the numbers required for various deployment scenarios for marine renewable energy in Ireland. The study highlights the importance of developing Ireland’s shipping and ports facilities in order to facilitate the future growth of our marine renewable industry and contains a detailed analysis of th...
http://hdl.handle.net/10793/645
Marked
Mark
The Global and the Local : Mapping Changes in Irish Childhood
(2013)
Inglis, Tom
The Global and the Local : Mapping Changes in Irish Childhood
(2013)
Inglis, Tom
Abstract:
The global image of Ireland has changed. It has moved from De Valera’s dream of a nation of romping, sturdy children, athletic youths and comely maidens, to one in which innocent boys and girls were incarcerated in industrial and reformatory schools where they were demeaned, abused, and brutalized. And yet the Irish seemed deeply committed to children, at least to having them. Throughout most of the twentieth century Irish fertility was higher than that in most other Western societies. It would appear that successive generations of women who married wanted to have large families. For many people, growing up with numerous brothers and sisters was central to childhood. Now fertility is more controlled, families are smaller, and more mothers are working. Given this change in demographics, Luddy and Smith (2009, 6) ask some simple questions: “What if anything is new about how childhood is currently understood in Ireland? How has the understanding of Irish childhood changed over time? An...
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/5161
Marked
Mark
Field Observations on Larvae of the Dublin Bay Prawn Nephrops norvegicus (L.) in the Western Irish Sea
(1974)
Hillis, J P
Field Observations on Larvae of the Dublin Bay Prawn Nephrops norvegicus (L.) in the Western Irish Sea
(1974)
Hillis, J P
Abstract:
The occurrence of Nephrops norvegicus larvae in the western Irish Sea determined by survey cruises during 1969, 1970 and 1971 showed distribution patterns of the Irish coastal population which appeared to be, to some extent, separated from others adjacent (e.g. S.W. Manx), Vertical distribution showed the greatest numbers at 10-15 fm depth by day, ascending by approximately 5 fm around dusk; numbers deeper than 20 fm were very small except late in the season when they increased greatly. Differences between the Irish Sea and Faeroe, north~eastem English and Adriatic waters in larval season and rate of development were also found.
http://hdl.handle.net/10793/141
Marked
Mark
Proceedings of the Second Irish Marine Biotoxin Science Workshop
(2001)
Marine Institute; Bord Iascaigh Mhara
Proceedings of the Second Irish Marine Biotoxin Science Workshop
(2001)
Marine Institute; Bord Iascaigh Mhara
Abstract:
The Marine Institute’s objectives for Irish Biotoxin programme are to support the continued development of the Irish Shellfish Industry and to promote food safety, by building the best Biotoxin Management System in the Northern Hemisphere. The Marine Science Biotoxin Workshops are part of Marine Institute’s role as the National Reference Laboratory. The EU mandate for Reference Labs emphasises the need for dissemination of information. The objectives of the Marine Science Biotoxin Workshop are: (1) Take Stock of developments since last Workshop, April 2000; (2) Review Irish Monitoring System & Trends; (3) Summarise current Irish Research in HAE/Phytoplankton; (4) Compare with International Best Practice in New Zealand and USA; (5) Provide a Forum for Debate/Feedback
http://hdl.handle.net/10793/580
Marked
Mark
The bloom of youth: conceptualising a theory of educative experience for Irish traditional music in post-primary music education in Ireland
(2013)
Johnston, Thomas Joseph
The bloom of youth: conceptualising a theory of educative experience for Irish traditional music in post-primary music education in Ireland
(2013)
Johnston, Thomas Joseph
Abstract:
The world of Irish traditional music is one defined by its multiple, porous, and overlapping experiential contexts. This dynamic, living, and continuously evolving system of meanings, values, and intentions is sustained by its communities of individuals who engage in complex and adaptive processes of transmission. Moving from an overview of the broad historical trajectory of Irish traditional music in postprimary music education, which includes a consideration of its present-day position as a core and compulsory aspect of the Junior and Leaving Certificate Music syllabi, this thesis explores the nature of experience of Irish traditional music as it interfaces with and negotiates the realities of the post-primary music classroom. Traversing these diverse and disparate musical landscapes, the primary focus of this thesis is its conceptualisation of a philosophically charged theory of educative experience for the experience of Irish traditional music in post-primary music education. Wi...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3599
Marked
Mark
Irish consumer law: asserting a domestic agenda
(2013)
Donnelly, Mary; White, Fidelma
Irish consumer law: asserting a domestic agenda
(2013)
Donnelly, Mary; White, Fidelma
Abstract:
This article asserts the importance of developing a distinct Irish consumer law and argues that the matter of consumer protection cannot simply be ceded to Europe. In developing this argument, the article first identifies the hybrid common law and European origins of Irish consumer law. It then traces the development of consumer law in this jurisdiction and focuses on the re-activation of the national consumer protection agenda, both in Ireland and across the European Union, in the last decade. The article also argues that a necessary pre-requisite in setting a domestic agenda is a comprehensive understanding of the nature and distinguishing features of the domestic consumer. Hence, the article undertakes a critical analysis of available data indicating the ways in which Irish consumers understand and use consumer law, drawing on annual surveys commissioned by the National Consumer Agency; an extensive EU wide Eurobarometer study on Consumer Empowerment and a focussed Irish study ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/1355
Marked
Mark
The musical enculturation of Irish traditional musicians: An ethnographic study of learning processes
(2013)
Cawley, Jessica
The musical enculturation of Irish traditional musicians: An ethnographic study of learning processes
(2013)
Cawley, Jessica
Abstract:
The enculturation of Irish traditional musicians involves informal, non-formal, and sometimes formal learning processes in a number of different settings, including traditional music sessions, workshops, festivals, and classes. Irish traditional musicians also learn directly from family, peers, and mentors and by using various forms of technology. Each experience contributes to the enculturation process in meaningful and complementary ways. The ethnographic research discussed in this dissertation suggests that within Irish traditional music culture, enculturation occurs most effectively when learners experience a multitude of learning practices. A variety of experiences insures that novices receive multiple opportunities for engagement and learning. If a learner finds one learning practice ineffective, there are other avenues of enculturation. This thesis explores the musical enculturation of Irish traditional musicians. It focuses on the process of becoming a musician by drawing on...
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/1548
Marked
Mark
Gender in Irish between continuity and change
(2011)
FRENDA, ALESSIO SALVATORE
Gender in Irish between continuity and change
(2011)
FRENDA, ALESSIO SALVATORE
Abstract:
The gender system of Irish appears to have undergone a process of simplification: traditionally depending on both formal and semantic assignment rules, agreement in contemporary spoken Irish is still rather conservative within the noun phrase, but almost exclusively semantic anaphorically. Language contact and the resulting obsolescence seem to have had some influence on these developments: for instance, structures that have a functional counterpart in English seem more resilient than others. But language-internal developments, particularly the phonetic erosion and loss of word-final syllables, may have played an important role, too: similar developments have been observed in non-obsolescent languages like Dutch and French. In this article, I illustrate some specific aspects of the Irish situation with examples drawn from a corpus of spoken Irish and frame the simplification process in terms of structural convergence in the context of language contact.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/63710
Marked
Mark
Trade statistics of the Irish Free State in 1924: introduction [to Symposium]
(1925)
Oldham, C. H.
Trade statistics of the Irish Free State in 1924: introduction [to Symposium]
(1925)
Oldham, C. H.
Abstract:
The Irish Free State is a new world economic unit. Our business at this meeting is to consider the Trade Statistics of the Irish Free State for 1924, which is the first evidence we have got as to its actual stature both as a producer and a consumer. This Grey Book, published in March, 1925 (price 2s.), must here be taken as read. By various contributions we now propose to discuss what this new evidence amounts to, what it proves as to the economic connections of the Irish Free State with other countries.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/21202
Marked
Mark
An analysis of the journal article output of Irish-based economists, 1970 to 2001
(2003)
Barrett, Alan; Lucey, Brian M.
An analysis of the journal article output of Irish-based economists, 1970 to 2001
(2003)
Barrett, Alan; Lucey, Brian M.
Abstract:
This paper provides, for the first time, a comprehensive analysis of the journal article output of Irish-based economists over a thirty-year period. Using EconLit data, and supplementing where necessary, we provide details of the journals wherein Irish-based economists have published, provide details of the publishing histories of high volume publishers and discuss the evolving productivity profile of Irish-based economists. Our evidence shows that in general Irish-based economists have greatly increased the levels of output in the 1990s, but that this may have been at the expense of quality.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/60946
Marked
Mark
Irish identity and the modern step dancing costume
(2008)
Churchill, Sarah
Irish identity and the modern step dancing costume
(2008)
Churchill, Sarah
Abstract:
The early step dancing costume was developed in concurrence with the Celtic Revival as a response to the need for visible national identity. Today's step dancing costume, by contrast, stresses the individual, looking outward to more global influences. As an academic subject, the Irish step dancing costume is often overlooked, resulting in very little field research and analysis on the topic. I aim to achieve the following: catalog and analyze the mdoern motifs and evolving dress forms; investigate the genesis of the new forms and motifs; record methods of design and production; and finally, discuss the relationship between the modern costume and new concepts of Irish identity.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/21420
Marked
Mark
An economic basis for an Irish rural civilisation
(1948)
Johnston, Joseph
An economic basis for an Irish rural civilisation
(1948)
Johnston, Joseph
Abstract:
The general argument of this paper is that if we would establish a suitable economic basis for a worth-while Irish rural civilisation we must have, not only co-operation of farmers living in their scattered homesteads, but large-scale co-operative farming units dotted all over the country, and, wherever possible, making use of the mansions and estates that were formerly associated with Anglo-Irish landlordism.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/3697
Marked
Mark
Developments in the structure of Irish agriculture, 1960-75 with special reference to the situation in 1975
(1978)
Embleton, F. A.
Developments in the structure of Irish agriculture, 1960-75 with special reference to the situation in 1975
(1978)
Embleton, F. A.
Abstract:
The State and county results of the June, 1975 Agriculture Enumeration were issued recently and a detailed analysis of a representative sample of the returns is nearing completion, the results of which will be published in the near future. In many ways, therefore, it is timely that the Society has afforded me this opportunity to present a paper on the subject of structural developments in Irish Agriculture.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/6938
Marked
Mark
Darwin's Irish correspondence
(2008)
DEARCE, MIGUEL
Darwin's Irish correspondence
(2008)
DEARCE, MIGUEL
Abstract:
peer-reviewed
Searches of Darwin?s correspondence show that some 160 letters crossed between him and naturalists and others with an Irish address. While few in number, compared to Darwin?s 14,000 other known letters, some of this correspondence provoked frequent exchanges between Darwin and his closest collaborators, occasionally leading to amendments to The origin of species or becoming material for Darwin?s other publications. The absence of Darwin references in the contemporaneous Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy or journals of the Royal Dublin Society, where local naturalists published their work, has to be viewed together with the absence in those journals of references to the Irish famines. Other publications of a broader cultural focus engaged both topics in a lively way. Darwin?s correspondence was also surveyed for the subject of the island of Ireland, in relation to observations on the distribution of a small group of plants common to Asturias in northern Spain a...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/25099
Marked
Mark
The ecology of the Irish stoat
(1987)
Sleeman, David Patrick
The ecology of the Irish stoat
(1987)
Sleeman, David Patrick
Abstract:
The Irish stoat, Mustela erminea hibernica (Thomas and Barrett-Hamilton), has been regarded as an intermediate between the British stoat and the weasel. In this study Irish stoats, mainly from road casualties, were collected and studied. A small number were also live-trapped and radio-tracked. Thus information was gathered on the stoat’s ecology, in particular its form (size and coat colours), reproduction, food habits, parasites, habitat utilisation mortality and predation. The Irish stoats studied were clearly not intermediate in size between British stoats and weasels. They showed considerable size overlap with British stoats, and marked size variation within Ireland. It is argued that size of stoats is determined by food supply early in life. The ventral coat pattern of Irish stoats is apparently unique in the Palaearctic, being similar to that of some stoats found on the west coast of North America. It is argued that this is an example of parallel evolution resulting from adapt...
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/1824
Marked
Mark
Nasalance scores for typical Irish English-speaking adults
(2012)
Lee, Alice S.; Browne, Una
Nasalance scores for typical Irish English-speaking adults
(2012)
Lee, Alice S.; Browne, Una
Abstract:
The aim was to establish normative nasalance values for Irish English-speaking adults. Thirty men and 30 women with normal resonance read aloud 16 sentences from the Irish nasality assessment protocol, the Zoo passage, and the Rainbow passage. The speech samples were recorded using the Nasometer II 6400. Results of a mixed between–within subjects ANOVA indicated no significant gender effect on nasalance scores. The speakers showed significantly higher nasalance scores for high-pressure consonant sentences than low-pressure consonant sentences, and for the Rainbow passage than total test sentences. There was no significant difference between high-pressure consonant sentences and the Zoo passage. Compared to previous studies, the Irish young adults had lower nasalance scores than Irish children and than young adults with North American dialects.
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/3111
Marked
Mark
M?it?feanna agus ?omh?ineachas M?leata sa D?n D?reach
(2012)
Herbert, Trevor
M?it?feanna agus ?omh?ineachas M?leata sa D?n D?reach
(2012)
Herbert, Trevor
Abstract:
THESIS 9772
This thesis discusses military motifs and images found in the corpus of Classical Irish poetry, composed between c. 1200 and c. 1650. Extensive use is made of examples from the strictest syllabic metre in Classical Irish poetry, d?n d?reach, taken from published Poem-books, or duanair?, or from manuscript sources, as well as poems only recently made available with the publishing of A Bardic Miscellany, which were hitherto only available on the Irish Bardic Poetry Database compiled by Trinity College Dublin?s Department of Irish. Poems in other syllabic metres, such as ?gl?chas or br?ilingeacht, are also used, as are prose or historical works from the period to clarify the use of certain motifs.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/79043
Marked
Mark
A labour history of Irish film and television drama production 1958 - 2016.
(2017)
Murphy, Denis
A labour history of Irish film and television drama production 1958 - 2016.
(2017)
Murphy, Denis
Abstract:
Filmmaking in Ireland has been outward-looking since the early decades of the twentieth century, when film production activity in Ireland coincided with the first moves towards a globalised Hollywood production model. Despite the prototypical foreign direct investment represented by incoming productions from as early as the 1910s, however, there is little evidence that any significant native Irish labour was expended in their making until much later. The underuse of local labour would remain a challenge even after the establishment of Ardmore Studios in 1958, when the envisaged ‘skills transfer’ strategy for training native film workers was resisted by British trade union moves to protect the employment of their own members. This thesis presents a labour history of Irish film and television production, employing a political economy of labour perspective to explore the power relations operating at the point of production. The emphasis is on the role played by Irish film workers to co...
http://doras.dcu.ie/21543/
Marked
Mark
The embarrassments of Irish nationalist commemorations for Western Europe, from Fontenoy in 1907 to the Easter Rising in 1966
(2016)
aan de Wiel, Jérôme
The embarrassments of Irish nationalist commemorations for Western Europe, from Fontenoy in 1907 to the Easter Rising in 1966
(2016)
aan de Wiel, Jérôme
Abstract:
The commemorations of the Battle of Fontenoy of 1745 and the Easter Rising of 1916 were major events for Irish nationalism and separatism. For Western European governments of the European Economic Community (EEC), however, they could cause serious diplomatic embarrassments in their relations with the United Kingdom. The same commemorations could also be politically manipulated. Much depended on the contemporary international situation. This article examines how these two commemorations were perceived and handled by the governments of France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Italy and (West) Germany from 1907 until 1966, and also by the Irish government notably at the time of its application for EEC membership. The article also shows how the diplomatic corps of the EEC member states based in Dublin analysed the fiftieth anniversary of the Easter Rising in 1966 and formed the opinion that the event was not a grandiose display of Irish nationalism or anti-British sentiment.
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/4843
Marked
Mark
Balancing Diversities: Multiculturalism and Cultural Identity in a Selected Number of Works of Modern Irish Fiction
(2016)
Fischer, Dore
Balancing Diversities: Multiculturalism and Cultural Identity in a Selected Number of Works of Modern Irish Fiction
(2016)
Fischer, Dore
Abstract:
Since the mid-1990s Ireland has rapidly changed into a multicultural society and the migrant population is increasingly becoming a well-established part of modern Ireland. This article is linked to one of the conference themes, 'literature as multicultural criticism', and is a contribution to the wider debates in the Irish media and academic circles on multiculturalism and cultural diversity in Ireland. From the beginning of the new millennium, these topics have started to have an impact on Irish literature. The article discusses a small number of Irish literary texts (by Hugo Hamilton, Dermot Bolger and Roddy Doyle, published between 2001 and 2007), which explore, articulate and reflect the development of Ireland into a multicultural society and its associated challenges. Irish identities, as represented in these stories, are in a process of significant change, with the concept of ‘Irishness’ becoming increasingly diffuse.
https://arrow.dit.ie/priamls/vol1/iss1/14
Marked
Mark
Crossing Boundaries and Early Gleanings of Cultural Replacement in Irish Periodical Culture
(2016)
Uí Chollatáin, Regina
Crossing Boundaries and Early Gleanings of Cultural Replacement in Irish Periodical Culture
(2016)
Uí Chollatáin, Regina
Abstract:
The first Irish language periodical, Bolg an tSolair, was published in Belfast in 1795 although journalism in a modern context through the medium of Irish did not begin to flourish until the early years of the twentieth century. The ‘Gaelic column’ in English newspapers; Philip Barron’s Waterford-based Ancient Ireland – A Weekly Magazine (1835); Richard Dalton’s Tipperary journal Fíor-Éirionnach (1862); alongside some occasional periodicals with material relating to the Irish language, ensured that the Irish language featured as an element of a modern journalistic print culture (Nic Pháidín, 1987: 71-2).
https://arrow.dit.ie/icr/vol12/iss1/4
Displaying Results 176 - 200 of 19802 on page 8 of 793
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