Hibernia attended by her brave volunteers exhibiting her commercial freedom." attributed to William Hincks (ca. 1776-1780)

Colonising and Decolonising the Irish Nineteenth Century (SSNCI Conference 2023)

Thursday 22 June 2023, 9 am - Friday 23 June 2023, 5 pm

This conference seeks to consider Ireland’s and the Irish diaspora’s position in relation to colonisation and imperialism during the long nineteenth century, as well as the reverberations and reconsiderations of this past in recent and ongoing scholarship and education.

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Logos of SSNCI, NWO, Redefining the Region and Heritages of Hunger

Call for papers

About Colonising and Decolonising the Irish Nineteenth Century

Though it had been part of the United Kingdom since 1801, Ireland’s position within the British Empire during the long nineteenth century was complicated. The Irish were a colonial people, yet in many ways they also contributed to the expansion and administration of the British Empire. Moreover, Irish emigration, particularly to the United States, raised the issue of Irish ‘whiteness’, but also saw many Irish endorse chattel slavery in the southern United States and contribute to the removal of the Native population in the US south and west. And as colonised or colonising subjects, or indeed both, many Irish writers, artists, and policy makers at home and abroad imagined and reimagined the country’s position within the British Empire and beyond.

In recent years, the legacies of (Western) colonialism have received increased – and necessary – scrutiny in both the academic and public spheres. This has led to initiatives such as Rhodes Must Fall, which quickly became a global phenomenon, and efforts to decolonise academic curricula and scholarship. It also sparked renewed attention to issues concerning problematic heritage, such as  the statue of John Mitchel in Newry, and the presence of colonial art and artefacts in Western museum collections. While the question of whether or not Ireland was a colony has occupied scholars for several decades (see for instance work by Stephen Howe, Joe Cleary, and David Lloyd), in recent years Irish Studies has also started to become more self-reflective with regard to the complicated question of Irish complicity in colonial and racist systems and the ongoing ramifications of this in education and research – issues discussed, for instance, in a recent roundtable in Irish Historical Studies (2021).

Submitting papers

We are particularly interested in papers on the following topics, but would of course also welcome papers on related themes not mentioned here, from many disciplinary perspectives.

Topics:

  • The Irish and the British empire
  • The Irish and settler colonialism
  • Decolonising the curriculum and the museum
  • ‘Irish whiteness’, racism and colonialism
  • Ireland, Irish North-America and issues of slavery
  • “Was Ireland a colony?”
  • Anti-imperialism/ anti-colonialism
  • Educational systems and colonialism
  • Colonialism, the visual arts and literature
  • Comparative colonial networks: Britain-Ireland and beyond
  • Religion and the ‘religious empire’
  • Colonial and imperial institutions
  • Ireland, cartography and empire
  • Revisionism and the colonial question
  • Representations of the Empire and the imperial other
  • Comparative perspectives on colonialism: Ireland and beyond
  • Immigrants from British colonies to Ireland
  • Land and language

Abstracts of 250 words for 20-minute papers can be sent to ssnci [at] ru.nl by 1 March 2023. Please also include a 50-word biographical note. We also welcome proposals for panels of no more than 3 papers.

Confirmed keynote speakers

  • Dr Shahmima Akhtar (Royal Holloway, University of London)
  • Dr Timothy McMahon (Marquette University)
  • Dr Sarah Roddy (Maynooth University)
  • Cauvery Madhavan, novelist

Read abstracts and speaker bios

Conference committee

  • Prof Dr Marguérite Corporaal
  • Dr Giulia Bruna
  • Dr Chris Cusack
  • Dr Lindsay Janssen
  • Sophie van Os MA

Practical information

Radboud University

Radboud University is located on a spacious, green campus south of Nijmegen's city centre. More information about the campus and how to get there can be found here.

Accomodation

Nijmegen offers a variety of accomodation options. An overview of hotels located within walking distance of the Central Station can be downloaded here (pdf, 77 kB).

Restaurants

Nijmegen boasts a wide range of restaurants, bistros, and gastropubs. A list of restaurant suggestions for the city's centre can be downloaded here (pdf, 115 kB).

Contact information

E-mail: ssnci [at] ru.nl 

Register

More information about registration will follow soon.