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The Machine and Its Ruins: Irish Penal Laws and Cultural Genocide, 1695-1829
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The Machine and Its Ruins: Irish Penal Laws and Cultural Genocide, 1695-1829
By None
Current price: $5.99


By None
The Machine and Its Ruins: Irish Penal Laws and Cultural Genocide, 1695-1829
Current price: $5.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
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The Machine and Its Ruins: Irish Penal Laws and Cultural Genocide, 1695-1829
Between 1695 and 1829, the Irish Penal Laws constituted one of history's most comprehensive attempts at cultural genocide. This groundbreaking work examines how Protestant Britain pursued the systematic destruction of Irish Catholic culture through legal mechanisms designed to eliminate a people without mass killing—what scholar Raphael Lemkin termed "cold genocide."
Drawing on extensive research, this book reveals how the Penal Laws attacked every mechanism of cultural survival: prohibiting Catholics from owning property, practicing law, voting, or receiving education; forcing subdivision of estates until Catholic holdings became unsustainable; suppressing the Irish language; criminalizing Catholic worship; and creating economic conditions that would culminate in the catastrophic Great Famine. Yet this is also a story of extraordinary resilience—of hedge schools teaching classics in ditches, of Mass celebrated at secret rocks in the hills, of communities protecting hunted priests, and of Daniel O'Connell's genius in creating the first modern mass political movement.
Through vivid narratives of individual lives alongside rigorous analysis of legal structures, this work demonstrates how cultures survive even comprehensive assault, what such survival costs, and how the machinery of oppression ultimately failed because ordinary people refused to be erased. Essential reading for understanding cultural genocide, colonial oppression, and human resilience.
The Machine and Its Ruins: Irish Penal Laws and Cultural Genocide, 1695-1829
Between 1695 and 1829, the Irish Penal Laws constituted one of history's most comprehensive attempts at cultural genocide. This groundbreaking work examines how Protestant Britain pursued the systematic destruction of Irish Catholic culture through legal mechanisms designed to eliminate a people without mass killing—what scholar Raphael Lemkin termed "cold genocide."
Drawing on extensive research, this book reveals how the Penal Laws attacked every mechanism of cultural survival: prohibiting Catholics from owning property, practicing law, voting, or receiving education; forcing subdivision of estates until Catholic holdings became unsustainable; suppressing the Irish language; criminalizing Catholic worship; and creating economic conditions that would culminate in the catastrophic Great Famine. Yet this is also a story of extraordinary resilience—of hedge schools teaching classics in ditches, of Mass celebrated at secret rocks in the hills, of communities protecting hunted priests, and of Daniel O'Connell's genius in creating the first modern mass political movement.
Through vivid narratives of individual lives alongside rigorous analysis of legal structures, this work demonstrates how cultures survive even comprehensive assault, what such survival costs, and how the machinery of oppression ultimately failed because ordinary people refused to be erased. Essential reading for understanding cultural genocide, colonial oppression, and human resilience.


















