"The enjoyments of this book are its many elaborate periods, wonderful put-downs and instantly memorable <i>apercus</i>: practically every paragraph ends with a punch-line." <i>Reviews</i><br /> <p>"This volume invites comparison to Robert Tracy's recent <i>The Unappeasable Host: Studies in Irish Identities.</i>" <i>Choice</i><br /> </p> <p>"is ambitious in its scope, and it offers an original and compelling exploration of the networks that formed the 'outsized village' that was nineteenth-century Dublin". <i>History of Education</i></p>
1. Colonial Intellectuals.
2. Portrait of a Clerisy.
3. Savants and Society.
4. The Dismal Science.
5. Young Irelanders and Others.
Index.
Their work, much of it published in the pages of the Dublin University Magazine, was deeply caught up in networks of kinship, shared cultural interests and intersecting biographies in the outsized village of nineteenth-century Dublin. Eagleton explores the preoccupations of this remarkable community, in all its fascinating ferment and diversity, through the lens of Antonio Gramsci's definitions of "traditional" and "organic" intellectuals, and maps the nature of its relation to the Young Ireland movement, combining his account with some reflections on intellectual work in general and its place in political life.
Scholars and Rebels is essential reading for all those concerned to understand not just the complexities of nineteenth-century Irish intellectual culture and the emergent Irish Revival, but the formation also of Irish culture in the twentieth century.