The State of Ireland
O'Connor, Arthur. Edited by James Livesey
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ISBN: 1 901866 12 2
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Description:
'Arthur O'Connor was the most important conduit between French
republicanism and Irish political radicalism in the late 1790s ... His
State of Ireland, published in 1798, created a distinctively Irish language
of radical democracy out of French sources, by fusing them with the local
political tradition and Scottish political economy.'
So writes editor James Livesey in his introduction to this new edition of
The State of Ireland, first published in pamphlet form in 1798 by Arthur
O'Connor, a prominent member of the United Irishmen. O'Connor brought to
the revolutionary movement of the 1790s a mind honed on the ideas of Adam
Smith - ideas that might not seem revolutionary today, but that had radical
implications as adapted by O'Connor and applied to the bizarre political
economy of eighteenth-century Ireland. As perhaps the
most steadfastly anti-sectarian member of the United Irish movement,
O'Connor viewed the vexed debates over 'Protestant liberty' and Catholic
Emancipation as distractions from the fundamental questions of political
and economic reform; he supported emancipation as a necessary but by no
means sufficient element of a free, democratic Irish society.
'What O'Connor's work reveals to us', Livesey writes, 'is the breadth of
vision within the United Irishmen and the novelty of their intervention in
Irish political culture ... O'Connor's text deserves to find a place in the
canon of classic political texts that have constructed and made possible,
or even imaginable, Irish democracy.'
THE EDITOR
Dr James Livesey is a Lecturer in Modern History at Trinity College,
Dublin. His research deals with the development of democratic political
culture in Revolutionary Europe.

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