In pre-independence Ireland, there was not just one potential home rule
nation, but rather a multitude of idealized Irelands, and journalists
sought to promote their versions of the future to their readers. This
work examines Irish periodicals as a network of ideas that played a
vital role as a space for public debate in the year of home rule.
Through periodicals, writers and editors debated religion, gender,
nationalism, philology and race, and promoted their visions of a new
Ireland. Nationalists, unionists, suffragists, syndicalists,
theosophists and other ideologues derided their opponents and upheld
their alternative Irelands. Exploring reactions towards subjects such as
sport, music, literature, censorship and race provides us with a greater
understanding of how post-independence Ireland was shaped by the debates
of 1912. [Subject: Irish Studies, History, Irish Periodicals, Irish
Media, Irish Nationalism]