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The
historical significance of the First World War is taken for granted
in most European countries. In Ireland, however, as Charles Townshend
has noted, 'the memory of the war was for a long time marginalised.
A kind of collective amnesia discarded it as a British experience,
dwarfed by an event that was, in physical comparison with the titanic
battles on the western and eastern fronts, tiny.'1
It was the Easter Rising, not the Great War, that was seen as the
watershed in Irish history, responsible for rousing nationalist
public opinion from its apparent torpor and revitalising separatist
republicanism. This view of Irish history has undergone a series
of challenges in recent years and few academic historians would
now dispute the importance of the War in Irish history. It is this
'historiographical revolution' that Keith Jeffery seeks both to
synthesise and to build upon his book, Ireland and the Great
War. This is the first single-authored, academic study of the
impact of the Great War on Ireland, and it performs this pioneering
role admirably. It provides an essential introduction to the subject
and suggests avenues for further study. It is no criticism of the
author to say that he raises far more questions than he answers.
The book, which originated as a series of four
lectures, does not attempt to provide a comprehensive history of
the Great War. Anyone coming to it seeking a sustained analysis
of the impact of the war on Irish politics, or on Anglo-Irish relations,
will be disappointed. Rather it provides a discursive treatment
of some of the ways in which the war impacted on Ireland, and on
individual Irish men and women. Indeed, it is in the use of telling
examples and quotations that Jeffery is at his strongest. The book
is divided into four chapters. These examine recruitment and enlistment,
military experience during the war, cultural responses to the war,
and finally the commemoration of the war. A brief bibliographical
essay closes the work. This structure dictates a somewhat fractured
and fragmentary approach. There are, however, a number of themes
running through the different sections that help to bind them together.
One of these is the author's belief that the Great War was 'the
single most central experience of twentieth-century Ireland, not
just, nor least, for what happened at the time, but in its longer-term
legacy'. (p. 2) This is a large claim (more central than partition?)
but it does provide a framework whereby the political divisions
and divergent experiences of the war years can be integrated into
one story. By this process the history of this period becomes the
history of all the people of the island, not just one part of it.
One effect of the outbreak of war in 1914 was
to wrench Irish politics off-course, though whether that course
was heading towards a compromise agreement or civil war is open
to dispute. The Home Rule Bill received royal assent on 18 September
1914 but its implementation was held over until the end of the war,
the Unionist leader, Edward Carson, having received an assurance
that provision would be made for Ulster before the Act came into
force. The conflict between nationalists and unionists over the
position of Ulster was thus suspended but not settled. Both sides
had gone partway towards achieving their objectives, but neither
had obtained their ultimate goal. It was against this background
that Carson and John Redmond, the leader of the constitutional nationalism,
called on their respective supporters to enlist. Both leaders saw
political advantages to be gained from assisting the war effort.
Thus while the war appeared to offer an opportunity for the two
communities to unite in a common cause, it also provided for the
advancement of their own, divergent interests.
The early stages of the war saw a massive mobilisation
in Ireland. 50,000 men joined up in the first six months, and while
recruitment declined from 1916 (not picking up again until 1918)
it did so at a broadly comparable rate to that in Great Britain.
Ireland contributed over 200,000 men in total, of whom about sixty
percent were Catholic. Mutual hostility and suspicion were not,
however, easily overcome, either within Ireland or between Ireland
and Britain. The contrast in the official attitude adopted towards
the 36th (Ulster) division created out of members of the Ulster
Volunteer Force, and the two 'Irish' divisions formed to accommodate
Redmond's Irish Volunteers along with other Catholic recruits, reflected
the perception of the two communities within the British establishment.
Whereas the Ulster division incorporated the UVF command structure,
the 10th and 16th 'Irish' divisions were officered predominantly
by Protestants. The survival of the 'old enmity' was also evident
amongst Irish prisoners of war, causing men from the 16th division,
for example, to sleep outdoors rather than share the quarters with
men from the 36th division. (p. 64)
Analysing the reasons for enlistment (there was
no conscription in Ireland) Jeffery rejects monocausal explanations
and considers a wide range of motivations: moral, political, economic,
social, and psychological. He concludes that a similar range of
motivations were present among those who enlisted in the British
army and those who chose to join the Irish Volunteers to fight for
the establishment of an Irish republic. This might not seem surprising,
but it is a comparison that would have been firmly rejected in Ireland,
north or south, until relatively recently. One of Jeffery's central
arguments is that issues such as enlistment, mobilisation and fighting,
'actually constitute a series of "parallel texts" in which the similarities
might be more significant than the differences'. (p. 2) It is only
by recognising these similarities, Jeffery suggests that Irish people
will be able to live in peace with their neighbours. This is in
many ways a very personal work and Jeffrey is refreshingly open
about his personal and political agenda. He draws upon his own family
history, citing in his discussion of recruitment the case of his
great-uncles, William and Robert Hackett, who enlisted in Canada
having emigrated from Dublin some years previously. William was
killed in France in November 1918. Robert survived the war and returned
to Canada where he remained for the rest of his life. (pp 35-36)
Both men took the opportunity while on leave in 1917 to revisit
their family in Dublin; the war reunited Irish families as well
as separating them.
By the time the war was over, the political scene
in Ireland had been altered beyond recognition. Constitutional nationalism
in the form of the Irish Party had been replaced as the dominant
force in Irish politics by the republicanism of the reconstituted
Sinn Féin. Divisions within Ireland between nationalists
and unionists were even deeper than they had been prior to the war.
Having so conspicuously demonstrated their loyalty to King and country,
Ulster Unionists were in a stronger position to resist their inclusion
in a settlement which would hand power to the very people who had
not only refused to support the war effort, but had sought assistance
from Britain's enemies. These developments are perceptively discussed
in this book. But if politics within Ireland were transformed, so
too were international relations and in ways that had important
ramifications for the Irish situation. Before the war the concept
of a balance of power in Europe had dominated the thinking of the
great powers. Linked to this concept was the assumption that Europe
should be made up of a small number of large states. Even before
the war ended, the balance of power idea had been largely superseded
by self-determination as a guiding principle. This had implications
for both nationalists and unionists since the principle of self-determination
could clearly be applied to both groups.2
Jeffery has nothing to say about these issues and there is no attempt
to locate Irish experience within a larger international or European
context. I wondered, for example, how far 'the common factors and
impulses' (p. 2) that motivated Irish people, nationalist and unionist,
during the war years, were common to all those involved in the war,
not just to those in Ireland.
Perhaps the most original chapters in the book
are those on imagination and commemoration. These provide a wide-ranging
discussion of literary and visual representations of and responses
to the war. Both contemporary and modern works are examined, and
care is taken to place each work and each artist in their social,
political and artistic context. This provides some fascinating insights
and illuminates many of the themes highlighted in the previous chapters.
Thus the theme of collective amnesia about the war is neatly illustrated
by the fate of Mainie Jellett's prize-winning painting of 1920.
The picture, which depicts the painter's two sisters together with
two other young women relaxing on a beach, was originally exhibited
under the title Peace, but was subsequently renamed The
Bathers' Pool. In retrospect, the clouds shown bubbling up on
the horizon provide a prophetic signal of the uncertain future of
Jellett's family and class. 'Jellett's painting', Jeffery, observes,
'encapsulates the last peaceful summer of Ascendancy Ireland: a
unionist (and female) vision of tranquillity'. (pp 72-73)
The author's comments are generally instructive
but there are some odd throwaway remarks which, while they might
provide light relief in a lecture, require further elucidation in
print. Referring to Sir John Lavery's triptych, The Madonna of
the Lakes, Jeffery notes that with this work, 'Lavery, though
he was no bigot, clearly identified himself with Irish Catholicism'.
(p. 77) Are we to assume that the adoption of Catholic religious
imagery and Celtic motifs inevitably invoke the spectre of bigotry?
Similarly, in the midst of a discussion of William Orpen's painting,
Armistice Night, Amiens, we are reassured that Orpen was
'no prude or misogynist, far from it'. (p. 81) Amiens functioned
as a 'rest and recreation' centre, the most popular forms of recreation
being drink and sex. Orpen regarded both as dangerous to the health
of soldiers. His description of officers and men being preyed on
by 'strange women - the riffraff from Paris, the expelled from Rouen,
in fact the badly diseased from all parts of France', (p. 81) reflected
a common middle-class anxiety regarding the link between prostitution
and disease. Prostitutes were widely believed to pose a threat to
men, and particularly to soldiers, as carriers of disease, polluting
not only their clients but also society. That the reverse might
also be true was rarely considered, and clearly had not occurred
to Orpen however free he may have been from prudery or misogyny.
Jeffery's account of the building of the Irish
national war memorial, eventually sited at Islandbridge, across
the River Liffey from Phoenix Park, is particularly moving and poignant.
The project was delayed for so many years that plans for an opening
ceremony in 1939, to be attended by representatives from both parts
of Ireland, were abandoned on account of the 'tenseness of the international
situation' and the 'consequent ferment' in Ireland. (p. 123) The
tortuous history of the memorial provides ample evidence of the
reluctance of Free State ministers to adopt wholeheartedly the 'policy
of appeasement and reconciliation' urged upon them by those like
William Archer Redmond, son of John, whose political and personal
loyalties lay with the dead. Public acknowledgement was nevertheless
given to the sacrifice and patriotic motives of those who had served
in the British Army during the war. To expect the Free State to
have done more is to ignore the circumstances in which it came into
being. For, as Kevin O'Higgins pointed out in a Dail debate on the
national war memorial in 1927, while no-one denied the sacrifice
of those who had fought in the war, it was not 'on their sacrifice
that this State is built'. (p. 114) That some official ambivalence
should be displayed towards the commemoration of Ireland's Great
War dead was perhaps inevitable; more surprising is the slow and
partial progress made towards commemorating those who died in the
fight for the Irish republic. A Celtic cross was erected on the
lawn of the Irish parliament building (Leinster House) in 1923 as
a memorial to Arthur Griffith and Michael Collins, but this was
only a temporary structure and was removed ten years later. It was
eventually replaced in 1947 by an obelisk, whose 'discreet height'
and 'position behind an elaborate railing make it almost invisible'.
Thus, as Jeffery tellingly observes, 'in a curious way, this national
monument reflects the public invisibility of Lutyens's garden in
distant Islandbridge'. (p. 125)
As previously suggested, this is a largely inward-looking
study. It examines the Great War in the context of Irish history
past and present, and does so with great skill, but it rarely looks
beyond Ireland. It would clearly be unfair to expect too much from
one short study, but it is difficult not to be disappointed with
the narrowness of the author's focus. There is, for example, no
sense of engagement with some of the key conceptual questions presently
exercising historians of the Great War. This is particularly striking
in relation to the current debate over the impact of the war on
gender relations. In Britain the initial impact of the war had the
effect of emphasising and reinforcing gender divisions. Men actively
supported the war effort by joining up and going off to fight. Women
were required to wait passively behind. Their primary means of supporting
the war was to urge their male relatives to enlist. But as the war
continued and women became more actively involved both at the front
as nurses and VADs, and at home as war workers, there were increasing
signs of gender confusion. While some men were emasculated by their
experiences in the trenches, some women were empowered by the experience
of taking over male occupations and responsibilities.
It is to Jeffery's credit that he does not ignore
women - he discusses women's war-related employment for example
(pp 28-30, 32-33) - but he makes no attempt to use Irish evidence
to engage in the broader debate over gender relations. For women
throughout Europe the war saw both an expansion of opportunities,
in terms of employment, education and national service, and the
reinforcement of gender roles and perceptions. Women's primary role
was still perceived to be that of motherhood. In countries such
as Britain, France and Germany, this role acquired increasing importance
as public attention focused on the need to replace those lost during
the war.3
Women's participation in the war effort was seen as essential but
also as potentially damaging to the fabric of society. Working mothers
might neglect their children. Young female workers living apart
from their families might become promiscuous. Such concerns are
reflected in the efforts of the various states to police female
behaviour. Similar efforts are evident in Ireland. Women's patrols
were established in Dublin and Belfast, for example, in order to
monitor women's night-time activities. In Ireland, however, the
political context in which such measures were undertaken was very
different from that in Britain (or elsewhere). In Britain public
hostility to separation women (dependants of British soldiers) was
linked to their perceived immorality. In Ireland it was their perceived
lack of nationality that caused most outrage. Attitudes to motherhood
were also different. Maintaining the Irish birth-rate was not a
matter of concern to the British government. It was a matter of
concern to the nationalist movement. Within nationalist ideology
motherhood occupied a central and iconic role. Irish women found
it very difficult to operate outside established gender roles, and
the majority of female political activists, whether nationalist
or unionist, found themselves restricted to supporting their male
colleagues largely by means of such traditional tasks as cooking
and nursing. Although he refers to the 'conventional allocation
of gender roles' (p. 28) within nationalist organisations such as
Cumann na mBan (the female auxiliary of the Irish Volunteers), Jeffery
neither explains why this was, nor discusses the broader, ideological
context. An exploration of gender relations in Ireland during the
period the Great War is long overdue. While Jeffery may not have
been in a position to undertake such an exploration himself, it
would have been helpful to have outlined the terms and parameters
of the current debate and to have located Ireland within them. A
book that claims to assess the impact of the war 'across the broadest
range of experience' (jacket blurb), can reasonably be expected
to address the role of women and of gender issues more generally.
It would be wrong to end on a negative note. This
is an immensely valuable book that is certain to become a standard
text. It is engagingly written, well illustrated and will be of
benefit to, and enjoyed by, anyone interested in Irish history.
Reflecting on the central theme of the work, the shared experience
of enlistment, fighting, destruction and loss, I increasingly came
to feel that the real lesson of the War may be less one of similarities
previously overlooked and unacknowledged, but of the acceptance
of difference. Reconciliation in Ireland surely depends not on seeing
the experiences of different sections of Irish people as essentially
the same, but on acknowledging the ways in which their experiences
did differ, and respecting the different perspectives from which
these experiences were and are viewed.
October 2001
1.
Charles Townshend, Ireland: The 20th Century (London, Arnold:
1999), p.68.
2.
Seamus Dunn and T.G. Fraser (eds.), Europe and Ethnicity: World
War I and Contemporary Ethnic Conflict (London, Routledge: 1996).
3.
For a recent analysis of these issues see Susan R. Grayzel, Women's
Identities at War: Gender, Motherhood, and Politics in Britain and
France during the First World War (University of North Carolina
Press, Chapel Hill: 1999).
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