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catholic
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Journal Article
boundary 2 (2018) 45 (1): 253–272.
Published: 01 February 2018
...-discovery with that of discovering Ireland. Copyright © 2018 Duke University Press 2018 New Age Celtic spirituality religion pilgrimage Irish Catholicism References Bolger Mary Ann . 2011 . “ The Ephemera of Eternity: The Irish Catholic Memorial Card as Material Culture...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2010) 37 (1): 1–22.
Published: 01 February 2010
...Mario De Caro; Telmo Pievani For many centuries, since the beginning of the modern age, the Roman Catholic Church held an ambivalent attitude toward science, until an enlightened position seemed to prevail at the end of the twentieth century, with two papal statements that respectively concerned...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2007) 34 (3): 87–107.
Published: 01 August 2007
... of Days, and countless
others : that an exoticized, patently fictional, and some would say anticleri-
cal fantasy about Catholicism strangely empowers and elevates the very
denomination it seems to slander. The Catholic League for Religious and
Civil Rights decries these movies and novels but fails...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2015) 42 (2): 195–209.
Published: 01 May 2015
... Contreras.
6. Poole, Pedro Moya de Contreras, 132; and A. C. van Oss, Catholic Colonialism: A Parish
History of Guatemala: 1524–1821 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986), 130.
7. Ditchfield, “Tridentine Catholicism,” 22–23; and Simon Ditchfield, “San Carlo Borro-
meo in the Construction...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2012) 39 (3): 151–167.
Published: 01 August 2012
..., by giving an account of what it was like for him as a person who had grown up in an orthodox Catholic family in America in the second half of the twentieth century to suddenly find himself, in reading Milton, to be living in a world where bitsiness was the rule. He had to learn to read things literally...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2018) 45 (1): 91–110.
Published: 01 February 2018
... revolution, as its legacy was undermined by a counterrevolution. The Rising should not be viewed through an exclusively Irish lens: it involved several international actors—the British Empire, the protagonists of World War I, the women’s movement, the Catholic Church, and socialism. Ignited by international...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2018) 45 (1): 111–134.
Published: 01 February 2018
... . London : Allen Lane . Harris Mary . 1993 . The Catholic Church and the Foundation of the Northern Irish State . Cork : Cork University Press . Laffan Michael . 1999 . The Resurrection of Ireland: The Sinn Féin Party, 1916–1923 . Cambridge : Cambridge University Press...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2018) 45 (1): 231–252.
Published: 01 February 2018
... Dermot , 102 – 10 . Cork : Mercier Press . Connolly Linda O’Toole Tina . 2005 . Documenting Irish Feminism . Dublin : Woodfield Press . Cronin Michael G. 2012 . Impure Thoughts: Sexuality, Catholicism and Literature in Twentieth-Century Ireland . Manchester...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2018) 45 (1): 59–90.
Published: 01 February 2018
... , no. 3 : 625 – 52 . Larkin Emmet . (1976) 1984 . The Historical Dimensions of Irish Catholicism . Washington, DC : Catholic University Press of America . Lecky W. E. H. 1890 . A History of Ireland in the Eighteenth Century . London : Longman . MacIntyre Alasdair...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2004) 31 (1): 73–92.
Published: 01 February 2004
... also sees that this world is properly underpinned
by a more universalizing set of forces, the force of Catholicism, that currently
lies latent.
The purpose of the University will be, among other things, to set
these conditions right, so that the latent Catholic realm gradually is revealed...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2004) 31 (1): 147–178.
Published: 01 February 2004
.... By the early twentieth century, Irish
Catholics headed ‘‘more than fifty’’ of the 110 affiliated national unions of the
American Federation of Labor (AFL) and were a major component of the
unions’ second-level and shop-floor leadership.1 Nonetheless, according to
Thanks to Seamus Deane for inspiration...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2004) 31 (1): 179–205.
Published: 01 February 2004
..., Gaelic sports—was stigmatized as an example of a narrow paro-
chialism. Irish nationalism was presented as a potent home brew of atavism,
tradition, and Catholicism. Unionism in Ireland was Protestant, cosmopoli-
tan, and directed from the top down; nationalism was Catholic, indigenous,
and directed...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2004) 31 (1): 1–23.
Published: 01 February 2004
... Irlande in January 1831, clearly sig-
naled that the alliance between Catholicism and democracy in Ireland was
a lesson to France, most especially, since the Catholic faith present there
was of a strength and steadfastness long lost to the French.
Tocqueville and Beaumont agreed; like...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2004) 31 (1): 25–47.
Published: 01 February 2004
... of history onto the feu-
dal and Catholic remnants of a bygone era. This is, of course, the gothic
romance—for Fiedler, the source of the dark and often sinister double-plot
that shadows the more strident, affirmative surges of the frontier imagina-
5. Frederick Jackson Turner, ‘‘The Significance...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2004) 31 (2): 149–171.
Published: 01 May 2004
... secularization through the shifting
of perspectives, presenting Catholicism, Protestantism, and Judaism from
the ever-changing point of view of an observer whose loyalties remain stra-
tegic but are, at the same time, guided by a knowing appreciation of the
redeeming function of the critical force...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2013) 40 (1): 77–80.
Published: 01 February 2013
... the moment of the Counter-Reformation. It is fun-
damentally a Catholic project that deals with the theologico-political chal-
lenges first confronted by the Council of Trent. I am not a Catholic.
Postsecularism presupposes Protestant secularism, since the early
boundary 2 40:1 (2013) DOI...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2010) 37 (2): 1–68.
Published: 01 May 2010
...,
was his Irish Catholicism; as an Irish subject of Great Britain, Joyce was
steeped in yet detached from and disposed to parody British literary tra-
ditions; as a Catholic, he had an awareness of the wider European heri-
tage to which Ireland felt affiliated but from which it also felt, because...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2004) 31 (1): 207–241.
Published: 01 February 2004
..., the industrialized north in agrarian Italy.
The answer here surely has to do not just with a rural middle class
per se but with the vagaries of Ireland’s colonial history, which had simulta-
neously transferred most of the Irish Catholic laboring classes abroad (by
the 1860s, New York already had a larger...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2004) 31 (1): 93–118.
Published: 01 February 2004
... replacing, and what in the wake of victory did they think they would
achieve?
1
The war in Northern Ireland lasted nearly thirty years. In the late sum-
mer of 1969, when British troops had just arrived in the province, the domi-
nant feeling among the Catholic population was one...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2009) 36 (1): 7–26.
Published: 01 February 2009
.... The Polish
nation of their pamphlets and representations was indeed a nation of native
Poles, Catholic, committed to the noble principles of the Constitution of
May 3, 1792, the oldest state constitution in Europe. The reality of the rena-
scent Polish state in 1918 was quite different...
1