In:News with an Attitude: Ideological perspectives in the historical press
Edited by Claudia Claridge
[Discourse Approaches to Politics, Society and Culture 105] 2025
► pp. 82–107
Chapter 5Transformations and the dynamics of memory
Gladstone and the Phoenix Park Murders
Published online: 16 January 2025
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.105.05bak
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.105.05bak
Abstract
In this study, we explore how the Phoenix Park murders were written about in public and private
discourse, utilising the Nineteenth Century Newspaper Corpus, personal diaries and historiography. With the use of
social actor analysis (van Leeuwen, 2008), we examine how events underwent
‘transformations’ as they moved from reality to record, and how over time these records worked to shape the dynamics
of memory, particularly in relation to notions of accountability. Gladstone was blamed by The Times
for allowing the murders to take place but, by focussing on personal relationships, the Liberal press portrayed events
far more sympathetically. Soon after Gladstone’s death, an influential biography by his friend, John Morley, worked to
prove that Gladstone’s reputation was beyond reproach.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Theory and method
- 3.Data
- 3.1The newspapers
- 3.2Gladstone’s Diary and Morley’s ‘Life of Gladstone’
- 4.Setting the scene
- 5.Case study 1 — The appointment of Frederick Cavendish
- 5.1Public transformation
- 5.2Private to public transformation
- 6.Case study 2 — The discovery of the news
- 6.1Public transformation
- 6.2Private transformation
- 6.3Private to public transformation
- 7.Case study 3 — Legislation following the murders
- 7.1Public transformation
- 7.2Private to public transformation
- 8.Conclusion
Notes References
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