Ireland's Opportunity: Global Irish Nationalism and the South African War

Ireland's Opportunity: Global Irish Nationalism and the South African War book cover

Ireland's Opportunity: Global Irish Nationalism and the South African War

Author(s): Shane Lynn (Author)

  • Publisher: NYU Press
  • Publication Date: April 29, 2025
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 352 pages
  • ISBN-10: 1479835609
  • ISBN-13: 9781479835607

Book Description

How the South African War transformed nationalist politics across Ireland’s global diaspora

In 1899, the British Empire embarked on a deeply controversial war against two small Boer Republics in South Africa. To many Irish nationalists, the Boers were fellow victims of British mistreatment. Defeat for the Boers, they worried, would mean defeat for the principle that small, white nations like Ireland were entitled to govern themselves. Widespread outrage sparked a dramatic resurgence in Irish nationalism after a decade of disunity and decline.

The shape and strength of this revival varied throughout Ireland’s vast global diaspora. Ireland’s Opportunity traces the impact of “Boer fever” across Ireland and the diaspora networks that connected Irish communities in the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.

Home Rulers reunited to oppose the war, even as those in Britain’s colonies asserted their loyalty to the empire and its racist underpinnings. Fenian revolutionaries, meanwhile, saw “England’s difficulty” in South Africa as “Ireland’s opportunity” to strike for independence. Explosive conspiracies hatched in Ireland and the United States failed to kindle the desired revolution. But the lessons and legacies of the South African War years would shape their fateful response when “England’s difficulty” returned after 1914.

Blending global perspectives with intimate portraits of individuals whose lives were forever changed by the war, Shane Lynn reveals how Irish nationalism was a global phenomenon with a tangled and paradoxical relationship to empire.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“It is the brave historian who tackles the politically sensitive quicksands of Irish-South African historical contacts. Shane Lynn, with great dexterity, has undertaken this admirably, building on the pioneering work of the last generation of groundbreaking scholars in the field who worked in the shadow of apartheid. Lynn has added to the knowledge field, especially in relation to Irish-America and the South African War, but has also infused the racial complexities of the situation into this bubbling mix. It is a fascinating and contradictory tale contained in this once-in-a-generation volume.” — Donal P. McCracken, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

“A seriously impressive debut by a brilliant young historian. Shane Lynn conjures a world of secret agents and transatlantic Fenian plots in vivid prose, and opens up a contentious debate about the contours of global Irish nationalism at the fin de siècle.” — Ciaran O’Neill, Trinity College Dublin

“A nimble and discerning work on a complicated international story, that of the reaction of Irish nationalists to the Second Anglo-Afrikaner War (sometimes called the Boer War). The players are treated with respect, the scholarship is sound, and one learns a good deal.” — Donald H. Akenson, A.C. Hamilton Distinguished University Professor, Queen’s University

“The book is informed by a mightily impressive range of primary sources from archives in Ireland, the UK, the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Despite the scale of this undertaking, Lynn synthesises his disparate evidence-base with remarkable fluency. Each chapter ends with a seamless segue to the next, a fluidity that is aided by clear organisation of the material.” ― Irish Historical Studies

“Shane Lynn’s Ireland’s Opportunity is an engrossing read, archivally grounded, and ambitiously transnational. For historians of Ireland, empire, policing, and political violence, Lynn offers new evidence, a persuasive synthesis, and a model of writing global Irish history without sacrificing local texture.” ― Journal of Military History

About the Author

Shane Lynn is Assistant Professor in the Department of History at McMaster University.

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