Roy Foster on Ireland's Many Unmade Futures

Roy Foster on Ireland's Many Unmade Futures

"The best history," says Roy Foster, "is written when we realize that people acted in expectation of a future that was never going to happen." While this is the case for many countries, it's especially true of Ireland—the land of The Troubles, of colonization, of revolution and reforms. This sympathy within his scholarship sets Foster's work apart. Not content to simply document the facts of what did happen, he's undertaken the role of reconstructing the motivations that animated the Irish people throughout its storied history--without which we cannot truly understand the Ireland of today.

Roy joined Tyler to discuss why the Scots got off easier than the Irish under English rule, the truths and misconceptions about Ireland as a policy laboratory for the British government, why spoken Irish faded more rapidly than Welsh, the single question that drove a great flowering of Irish economic thought, how Foster's Quaker education shaped his view of Irish history, how the Battle of the Somme and the 1916 Easter Rising cemented the rift between the Northeast and the rest of the country, what went wrong with Irish trade policies between the 1920s and 1970s, the power of Irish education, why the re-emergence of The Troubles in the 1960s may not have been as inevitable as many people believe, the cultural effects of Ireland's pro-Allied neutrality in World War II, how Irish visual art is beginning to be looked at in a similar way to Irish literature, the social and economic changes of the 1970s that began to radically reshape Irish society, the reasons for Ireland's openness to foreigners, what Irish Americans misunderstand, and more.

Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video.

Recorded February 22nd, 2022

Other ways to connect

Denne episoden er hentet fra en åpen RSS-feed og er ikke publisert av Podme. Den kan derfor inneholde annonser.

Episoder(288)

Seamus Murphy on Photographing Patterns Across Cultures

Seamus Murphy on Photographing Patterns Across Cultures

Seamus Murphy is an Irish photographer and filmmaker who has spent decades documenting life in some of the world's most challenging places—from Taliban-controlled Afghanistan to Nigeria's Boko Haram t...

3 Sep 202554min

David Brooks on Audacity, AI, and the American Psyche (Live at 92NY)

David Brooks on Audacity, AI, and the American Psyche (Live at 92NY)

David Brooks returns to the show with a stark diagnosis of American culture. Having evolved from a Democratic socialist to a neoconservative to what he now calls "the rightward edge of the leftward te...

20 Aug 20251h 10min

Nate Silver on Life's Mixed Strategies

Nate Silver on Life's Mixed Strategies

In his third appearance on Conversations with Tyler, Nate Silver looks back at past predictions, weighs how academic ideas such as expected utility theory fare in practice, and examines the world of s...

13 Aug 20251h 3min

Annie Jacobsen on Nuclear War, Intelligence Operations, and Conspiracy Realities

Annie Jacobsen on Nuclear War, Intelligence Operations, and Conspiracy Realities

Annie Jacobsen has a favorite word for America's nuclear doctrine: madness. It's madness that any single person has six minutes to decide the fate of civilization, madness that we've built weapons cap...

6 Aug 202557min

Helen Castor on Medieval Power and Personalities

Helen Castor on Medieval Power and Personalities

Helen Castor is a British historian and BBC broadcaster who left Cambridge because she wanted to write narrative history focused on individuals rather than the analytical style typical of academia. As...

23 Jul 20251h 7min

David Robertson on Conducting, Pierre Boulez, and Musical Interpretation

David Robertson on Conducting, Pierre Boulez, and Musical Interpretation

David Robertson is a rare conductor who unites avant-garde complexity with accessibility. After serving as music director of the Ensemble Intercontemporain, Pierre Boulez's storied contemporary-music ...

9 Jul 202559min

Austan Goolsbee on Central Banking as a Data Dog

Austan Goolsbee on Central Banking as a Data Dog

Austan Goolsbee is one of Tyler Cowen's favorite economists—not because they always agree, but because Goolsbee embodies what it means to think like an economist. Whether he's analyzing productivity s...

25 Jun 202558min

Chris Arnade on Walking Cities

Chris Arnade on Walking Cities

Most people who leave Wall Street after twenty years either retire or find another way to make a lot of money. Chris Arnade chose to walk through cities most travelers never truly see. What emerged fr...

18 Jun 202558min

Populært innen Fakta

fastlegen
dine-penger-pengeradet
rss-bisarr-historie
relasjonspodden-med-dora-thorhallsdottir-kjersti-idem
foreldreradet
treningspodden
rss-strid-de-norske-borgerkrigene
rss-kunsten-a-leve
jakt-og-fiskepodden
rss-sunn-okonomi
mikkels-paskenotter
sinnsyn
hverdagspsyken
gravid-uke-for-uke
rss-bak-luftfarten
rss-sarbar-med-lotte-erik
hagespiren-podcast
rss-kull
fryktlos
rss-mind-body-podden