The Belfast Boycott: consumerism and gender in revolutionary Ireland (1920–1922)

IF 0.3 1区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY IRISH HISTORICAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2022-05-01 DOI:10.1017/ihs.2022.5
Katie Omans
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract The Belfast Boycott was a protest designed to dislodge loyalism in Northern Ireland, punish its adherents for perceived intolerance toward Catholics and end Irish partition. The boycott was set off by the expulsion of several thousand Catholic workers from employment in Belfast in July 1920. A total boycott of all goods coming from Belfast was implemented by the Dáil in September 1920. Boycotting provided Irish nationalists with an alternative to violent retaliation that allowed for the participation of a wider segment of the Irish population and diaspora in the revolutionary movement. However, such mass mobilisation meant that nationalists had to entrust their plan for an independent Ireland to a segment of the population that they overwhelmingly viewed as politically and economically uninformed: Irish women. The boycott offers a new vantage point from which to view the actions of and attitudes towards women and the role of mass mobilisation during the revolution. This article explores nationalists’ conceptions of Irish identity, the intersection between consumerism and patriotism, and the role that women played as both political and economic actors throughout the Irish revolutionary period.
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贝尔法斯特抵制:革命爱尔兰的消费主义与性别(1920–1922)
贝尔法斯特抵制运动(Belfast Boycott)是一场旨在驱逐北爱尔兰的忠诚主义,惩罚其追随者对天主教徒的不宽容,结束爱尔兰分裂的抗议活动。1920年7月,数千名天主教工人被驱逐出贝尔法斯特,引发了抵制运动。1920年9月,Dáil实施了对所有来自贝尔法斯特的商品的全面抵制。抵制为爱尔兰民族主义者提供了一种替代暴力报复的选择,使更广泛的爱尔兰人口和流散的爱尔兰人能够参与革命运动。然而,如此大规模的动员意味着民族主义者不得不将他们的独立爱尔兰计划委托给他们认为在政治和经济上一无所知的一部分人:爱尔兰妇女。这次抵制提供了一个新的有利的角度,从这个角度来看,在革命期间,对妇女的行动和态度以及群众动员的作用。本文探讨了民族主义者对爱尔兰身份的概念,消费主义和爱国主义之间的交集,以及女性在爱尔兰革命时期作为政治和经济参与者所扮演的角色。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
7.10%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: This journal is published jointly by the Irish Historical Society and the Ulster Society for Irish Historical Studies. Published twice a year, Irish Historical Studies covers all areas of Irish history, including the medieval period. We thank William E. Vaughn of the management committee of Irish Historical Studies for his permission to republish the following two articles.
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