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The Blueshirts

Hodnotenie knihy

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The Blueshirts were a quasi-fascist organisation founded in 1932 following de Valera s first election victory. They adopted the style and some of the substance of European fascist movements. Although relatively short-lived, they were one of the founding strands in what became the Fine Gael party. Maurice Manning s definitive history chronicles the rise and fall of the Blueshirts against the social and political background of Ireland in the late 1920s and 1930s. In many ways this book is a model. [The author s] account is clear, detailed and fully documented, his analysis of the conflicting interests and emotions dispassionate and perceptive, his conclusions balanced and sound. This is the way Irish history should be written. The Irish Times An admirably lucid and well documented book [that] describes the rise and fall of the Blueshirt movement which figured so dramatically on the public stage during the turbulent thirties. Irish Independent Manning s book is a worthy and welcome addition to a small but growing body of serious work on personalities, issues and institutions in the modern Irish state. Journal of Modern History "

Vydanie

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The Blueshirts, Maurice Manning

Jazyk
Rok vydania
2006
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Platobné metódy

3,7
Veľmi dobrá
23 Hodnotenie

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Jazyk
anglicky
Vydavateľ
Gill Books
Rok vydania
2006
Väzba
mäkká
Počet strán
274
ISBN10
0717140091
ISBN13
9780717140091
Série
Hodnotenie
3,7 z 5
Anotácia
The Blueshirts were a quasi-fascist organisation founded in 1932 following de Valera s first election victory. They adopted the style and some of the substance of European fascist movements. Although relatively short-lived, they were one of the founding strands in what became the Fine Gael party. Maurice Manning s definitive history chronicles the rise and fall of the Blueshirts against the social and political background of Ireland in the late 1920s and 1930s. In many ways this book is a model. [The author s] account is clear, detailed and fully documented, his analysis of the conflicting interests and emotions dispassionate and perceptive, his conclusions balanced and sound. This is the way Irish history should be written. The Irish Times An admirably lucid and well documented book [that] describes the rise and fall of the Blueshirt movement which figured so dramatically on the public stage during the turbulent thirties. Irish Independent Manning s book is a worthy and welcome addition to a small but growing body of serious work on personalities, issues and institutions in the modern Irish state. Journal of Modern History "