The aim of this investigation is to reconsider the cultural confrontation between England and Ireland from a new methodological perspective, and to trace how this confrontation resulted in a particular notion, literary as well as political, of Irish nationality.
2024. History of Irish Church at the turn of 19<sup>th</sup> century and <i>The Antiquities of Ireland</i> by Edward Ledwich. Russian Journal of Church History 5:2 ► pp. 5 ff.
Baigushev, Sergey, Evgeny Khvalkov, Feliks Levin, Anastasia Novikova, Adrian Selin, Aleksandra Shisterova, Maksim Shkil & Irina Yakovleva
2020. The Image of The Other In Early Modern Imperial Discourses: Venetian Discourse About Istria and English Discourse About Ireland. SSRN Electronic Journal
Künzler, Sarah
2020. Sites of memory in the Irish landscape? Approaching ogham stones through memory studies. Memory Studies 13:6 ► pp. 1284 ff.
Petit Cahill, Kevin
2020. Creating places through language rules: A historical and ethnographic perspective on the “Rule of Irish”. Journal of Sociolinguistics 24:2 ► pp. 228 ff.
David O'Shaughnessy
2019. Ireland, Enlightenment and the English Stage, 1740-1820,
Ramos, Aida
2019. “An Invitation to All Persons:” The Dublin Society and Public Reason in Eighteenth-Century Ireland. OEconomia :9-3 ► pp. 433 ff.
Covington, Sarah
2018. Towards a new “folkloric turn” in the literature of early modern Ireland. Literature Compass 15:11
Lahive, Colin
2018. “Is this our boasted constitution? Is this our liberty?”: Reading Milton in Ireland. Literature Compass 15:11
Harris, Tim
2017. Publics and Participation in the Three Kingdoms: Was There Such a Thing as “British Public Opinion” in the Seventeenth Century?. Journal of British Studies 56:4 ► pp. 731 ff.
Pittock, Murray
2017. Literature and Nationhood. In A Companion to Literature from Milton to Blake, ► pp. 114 ff.
Flechner, Roy & Sven Meeder
2016. Introduction: Saints and Scholars. In The Irish in Early Medieval Europe, ► pp. 1 ff.
Cunningham, Niall
2015. ‘A sort of whirlwind’: mapping the changing geography of Presbyterian religious observance in Ireland. International Review of Sociology 25:2 ► pp. 218 ff.
Dubois, Claire
2015. Les voyageurs anglais en Irlande au XVIIIe siècle. Revue LISA / LISA e-journal :vol. XIII-n°3
Mackenzie, Niall
2015. Brooke, Henry. In The Encyclopedia of British Literature 1660‐1789, ► pp. 161 ff.
Prendergast, Amy
2015. Moira House Salon: A Site for Irish Scholarship. In Literary Salons Across Britain and Ireland in the Long Eighteenth Century, ► pp. 106 ff.
Clary-Lemon, Jennifer
2014. Irish emigration in the 1970s: The ‘problem’ discourse of political elites. Discourse & Society 25:5 ► pp. 619 ff.
Van Hal, Toon
2014. One continent, one language?Europa Celticaand its language in Philippus Cluverius'Germania antiqua(1616) and beyond. European Review of History: Revue européenne d'histoire 21:6 ► pp. 889 ff.
Scott, Yvonne
2012. The Renaissance of the Forest in Contemporary Art in Ireland. In Irish Contemporary Landscapes in Literature and the Arts, ► pp. 235 ff.
McElduff, Siobhán
2011. Not as Virgil has it: Rewriting the Aeneid in 18th Century Ireland. International Journal of the Classical Tradition 18:2 ► pp. 226 ff.
Breuninger, Scott
2010. Introduction. In Recovering Bishop Berkeley, ► pp. 1 ff.
Burke, Helen M.
2010. Crossing Acts: Irish Drama from George Farquhar to Thomas Sheridan. In A Companion to Irish Literature, ► pp. 125 ff.
Wright, Julia M.
2010. Introduction. In A Companion to Irish Literature, ► pp. 1 ff.
GALAMBOS, IMRE
2008. The story of the Chinese seals found in Ireland. Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 18:4 ► pp. 465 ff.
Craith, Míchál Mac
2006. Literature in Irish, c.1550–1690: from the Elizabethan settlement to the Battle of the Boyne. In The Cambridge History of Irish Literature, ► pp. 191 ff.
Denvir, Gearóid
2006. Literature in Irish, 1800–1890: from the Act of Union to the Gaelic League. In The Cambridge History of Irish Literature, ► pp. 544 ff.
Graham, Colin
2006. Literary historiography, 1890–2000. In The Cambridge History of Irish Literature, ► pp. 562 ff.
Morash, Christopher
2006. Theatre in Ireland, 1690–1800: from the Williamite wars to the Act of Union. In The Cambridge History of Irish Literature, ► pp. 372 ff.
O’Halloran, Clare
2006. Historical writings, 1690–1890. In The Cambridge History of Irish Literature, ► pp. 599 ff.
Ross, Ian Campbell
2006. Prose in English, 1690–1800: from the Williamite wars to the Act of Union. In The Cambridge History of Irish Literature, ► pp. 232 ff.
Donovan, Julie
2005. Reasons to Remember Sydney Owenson. Literature Compass 2:1
Yadav, Alok
2004. Nationalism and Eighteenth-Century British Literature. Literature Compass 1:1 ► pp. ** ff.
Harvey, David C
2003. ‘National’ identities and the politics of ancient heritage: continuity and change at ancient monuments in Britain and Ireland,c.1675–1850. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 28:4 ► pp. 473 ff.
Ferris, Ina
2002. The Romantic National Tale and the Question of Ireland,
Miller, Nicholas Andrew
2002. Modernism, Ireland and the Erotics of Memory,
Hill, Jacqueline
2001. Politics and the Writing of History: The Impact of the 1690s and 1790s on Irish Historiography. In Political Discourse in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Ireland, ► pp. 222 ff.
Kelly, James
2001. Public and Political Opinion in Ireland and the Idea of an Anglo-Irish Union, 1650–1800. In Political Discourse in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Ireland, ► pp. 110 ff.
Scholz, Susanne
2000. Astraea’s Substitute: Ireland and the Quest for National Unity. In Body Narratives, ► pp. 127 ff.
Ciosáin, Éamon Ó
1999. Attitudes towards Ireland and the Irish in Enlightenment France. In Ireland and the French Enlightenment, 1700–1800, ► pp. 129 ff.
Hadfield, Andrew
1999. Rethinking early‐modern colonialism: the anomalous state of Ireland. Irish Studies Review 7:1 ► pp. 13 ff.
Hadfield, Andrew
2004. Crossing the Borders: Ireland and the Irish between England and America. In Shakespeare, Spenser and the Matter of Britain, ► pp. 12 ff.
Pittock, Murray G. H.
1998. Jacobite Culture. In Jacobitism, ► pp. 67 ff.
Cronin, Michael
1997. Rug-headed kerns speaking tongues: Shakespeare, Translation and the Irish Language. In Shakespeare and Ireland, ► pp. 193 ff.
Cronin, Michael
2011. Ireland in translation. English Today 27:2 ► pp. 53 ff.
Maley, Willy
1996. Spenser and Scotland: Theviewand the limits of Anglo‐Irish identity. Prose Studies 19:1 ► pp. 1 ff.
Maley, Willy
1997. The View from Scotland: Combing the Celtic Fringe. In Salvaging Spenser, ► pp. 136 ff.
Maley, Willy
2007. The Irish Text and Subtext of Shakespeare's English Histories. In A Companion to Shakespeare's Works, Volume 2, ► pp. 94 ff.
Myers, Mitzi
1995. “Completing the union”: Criticalennui,the politics of narrative, and the reformation of Irish cultural identity1. Prose Studies 18:3 ► pp. 41 ff.
Corbey, Raymond & Peter Mason
1994. Limited Company. Anthrozoös 7:2 ► pp. 90 ff.
Barnard, T. C.
1993. Protestants and the Irish Language, c. 1675–1725. The Journal of Ecclesiastical History 44:2 ► pp. 243 ff.
Bradshaw, Brendan
1989. Nationalism and historical scholarship in modern Ireland. Irish Historical Studies 26:104 ► pp. 329 ff.
Geyer, Michael
1989. Historical Fictions of Autonomy and the Europeanization of National History. Central European History 22:3-4 ► pp. 316 ff.
Cunningham, Bernadette
1986. Seventeenth-century interpretations of the past: the case of Geoffrey Keating. Irish Historical Studies 25:98 ► pp. 116 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 12 december 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.