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“Alas Poor Ireland!”: British Prejudice, “The Irish Precedent, ” And The Origins Of The American Revolution, David Arthur Salzillo, Jr.
“Alas Poor Ireland!”: British Prejudice, “The Irish Precedent, ” And The Origins Of The American Revolution, David Arthur Salzillo, Jr.
History & Classics Undergraduate Theses
Of all the claims in the Declaration of Independence, its surety about the existence of an intentional British “design to reduce” the colonists “under absolute Despotism” is perhaps the most questionable one to modern ears. Contemporary historians have largely dismissed such language, and the accompanying concerns about an alleged British plot to “enslave” its Atlantic possessions. However, this paper argues that such a view fails to properly consider the role of “the Irish precedent” of English imperial exploitation in sparking American resistance and rebellion. Namely, through a careful study of what American colonists read and wrote about in the …
Defining Womanhood: Ancient Greek Inspirations For Our Modern Ideas, Carrie Selwood
Defining Womanhood: Ancient Greek Inspirations For Our Modern Ideas, Carrie Selwood
History & Classics Undergraduate Theses
What does it mean to be a woman today? Perhaps to start exploring an answer to that question, we need to look to history, to one of the cultures that has profoundly influenced our own: ancient Greece. The myths and culture cultivated by the Greeks in the first millennium BCE are of deep import to many modern societies, and they are still utilized as a common cultural touchstone for diverse populations. But what is the point of harkening back to a dead civilization from two thousand years ago to talk about modern womanhood? What can those women, the real ones …
Reconsidering Dorothy Day: The Distinctly American Catholic, Emma Strempfer
Reconsidering Dorothy Day: The Distinctly American Catholic, Emma Strempfer
History & Classics Undergraduate Theses
Dorothy Day’s (1897-1980) life and work fell during a period of rapid social change in America. She lived as a bohemian radical and a self-proclaimed anarchist when she entered the political scene as a journalist for The Call. Disillusioned with hypocrisy and censorship on far-left socialist media, she explored and deepened her faith. Following conversion to Catholicism, Day founded the Catholic Worker. She worked to publish stories on as many different individuals as possible, even sometimes for her story, living alongside them for weeks. When aiding the poor directly, her approach was individual-based. She stressed financial freedom, and …
When The Silenced Became The Voice: Argentina’S Military Dictatorship And The Fight For Memory And Justice, Brigid Mcevoy
When The Silenced Became The Voice: Argentina’S Military Dictatorship And The Fight For Memory And Justice, Brigid Mcevoy
History & Classics Undergraduate Theses
No abstract provided.
Dorrite Prisoners Of War, Russell J. Desimone
Dorrite Prisoners Of War, Russell J. Desimone
Dorr Scholarship
Following two failed armed attempts in May and June 1842 by Thomas Wilson Dorr, the People’s governor, to establish the People’s government in Rhode Island, the opposing Charter government’s legislature enacted Martial Law throughout the state. During a period lasting several weeks forces allegiant to the Charter government and its governor, Samuel Ward King, commenced an all-out effort to arrest more than 260 pro-Dorr citizens. Some of Dorr’s followers fled the state to avoid arrest but those arrested appeared before a commission formed to interrogate the prisoners. Listed here are the actual accounts of each interrogation providing the reader with …
Spymaster Of Setauket: The Impact Of Benjamin Tallmadge And The Culper Spy Ring On The American Revolution, Kyle Burgess
Spymaster Of Setauket: The Impact Of Benjamin Tallmadge And The Culper Spy Ring On The American Revolution, Kyle Burgess
History & Classics Undergraduate Theses
Despite the staunch support that British occupiers enjoyed in New York and Long Island amongst Anglicans, there still remained plenty of citizens whose disdain for their new overseers provided Tallmadge with a large pool to recruit agents. In Patriot super spy Benjamin Tallmadge’s home of Suffolk County, Presbyterians endured an oppressive occupation at the hands of the British Army as many became wartime refugees following the destruction of their farms. This made many of them eager participants in Tallmadge’s schemes and some would even accompany Tallmadge on his whaleboat raids. Although none of these skirmishes proved decisive in tipping the …
The Evolution Of United States Supreme Court Jurisprudence Under The Leadership Of Chief Justices Melville Fuller And Edward White From 1888 To 1911, Christine Cromie
The Evolution Of United States Supreme Court Jurisprudence Under The Leadership Of Chief Justices Melville Fuller And Edward White From 1888 To 1911, Christine Cromie
History & Classics Undergraduate Theses
The phrase “What is Old is New Again” is a timeless adage. Indeed, on a deeper level, this sentiment can relate to political issues and governmental problems. Questions about how involved the federal government, especially the judicial system and Supreme Court, should be in the lives of the public tend to repeat themselves. A close reading of today’s headlines about monopolistic power as it relates to technology and the rise of Google, Facebook, Amazon, and Apple harkens back to similar issues and concerns at the turn of the nineteenth century as the United States moved from the Gilded Age to …
Allah And The Armalite: The Origins, Religiosities And Material Conditions Of Anti-State Terror-Nationalist Groups In Belfast And Gaza, James Fanning
Allah And The Armalite: The Origins, Religiosities And Material Conditions Of Anti-State Terror-Nationalist Groups In Belfast And Gaza, James Fanning
History & Classics Undergraduate Theses
This thesis will examine the histories of nationalism and religion in two conflicts where religion is thought to be a major cause of conflict, Israel-Palestine and the Troubles in Northern Ireland. It will explore the relationship between religion and both Irish and Palestinian nationalism. It will examine the use of religion in the propaganda, actions and organizational culture of Hamas, the “Old” IRA and the Provisional IRA. Additionally, it will examine said groups’ relations with the religious and political traditions that said groups have in order to understand how said groups conform and divert from establishes religious orthodoxy. Lastly, this …
When Art Becomes Political: An Analysis Of Irish Republican Murals 1981 To 2011, Maura Wester
When Art Becomes Political: An Analysis Of Irish Republican Murals 1981 To 2011, Maura Wester
History & Classics Undergraduate Theses
For nearly thirty years in the late twentieth century, sectarian violence between Irish Catholics and Ulster Protestants plagued Northern Ireland. Referred to as “the Troubles,” the violence officially lasted from 1969, when British troops were deployed to the region, until 1998, when the peace agreement, the Good Friday Agreement, was signed. Despite the changes in the government system, two things have not changed in Northern Ireland since the Good Friday Agreement: the pride both Loyalists and Republicans have in their cultures and their means to express this: murals. Traditionally a Loyalist practice dating back to late 1920s, Republican murals did …
Contemptible Cravens And Dumb Beasts: The Story Of The Wiggans Patch Massacre, Kevin Cranney
Contemptible Cravens And Dumb Beasts: The Story Of The Wiggans Patch Massacre, Kevin Cranney
History & Classics Undergraduate Theses
On the evening of December 9, 1875, around forty masked men broke into the boardinghouse of the elderly widow Margaret O’Donnell in Wiggans Patch, a mining town outside of Mahanoy City, and killed her pregnant daughter and her son, an alleged Molly Maguire. The perpetrators of the Wiggans Patch Massacre literally got away with murder. One of the most brutal crimes of a particularly violent era was soon forgotten, especially when the Molly Maguire trials began the following month. How did this happen? Why was the Wiggans Patch Massacre forgotten when within the next few years (1876-1879) twenty men were …
Do Traditional Models Of Assimilation Still Apply?: Models Of Assimilation Among Albanian Americans Of St. George Cathedral In The Twentieth And Twenty-First Centuries, Stephanie A. Callahan
Do Traditional Models Of Assimilation Still Apply?: Models Of Assimilation Among Albanian Americans Of St. George Cathedral In The Twentieth And Twenty-First Centuries, Stephanie A. Callahan
History & Classics Dissertations and Masters Theses
Very few studies of any kind exist on the historical or contemporary Albanian- American community. Prior to 1990 the fairly homogenous Albanian-American community was subject of Dennis Nagi’s 1982 project, titled Ethnic Community as it Applies to a Less Visible National Group: The Albanian Community of Boston, Massachusetts, which studied modes of assimilation adopted by the multiple generations of Albanian-American members of St. George Orthodox Cathedral in the Greater Boston area, classifying them using four traditional models of assimilation: Anglo-Conformity, the Melting Pot, Cultural Pluralism, and Acculturation-but-not-Assimilation. Over the past thirty-two years, however, more generations of Albanian Americans have arrived, …
Remarks On The Theological Aspect Of The Hell-Motif In Síaburcharpat Con Culaind, Darcy Ireland
Remarks On The Theological Aspect Of The Hell-Motif In Síaburcharpat Con Culaind, Darcy Ireland
Theology Student Scholarship
The early Middle Irish story Síaburcharpat Con Culaind unfortunately suffers from a lack of scholarly attention, particularly from the theological perspective. This paper proposes that the five quatrains which occupy lines 9438-9458 of the Lebor na hUidre copy together serve as the potent, appropriate apex to a tale which not only functions as an ode to Cú Chulainn but also as a forum through which are raised theological queries concerning the fate under the Christian dispensation of pre-Christian Celtic legendary figures.
Initial focus will be cast on the significance of the hell-motif within the Síaburcharpat (including a remark on the …
‘The People’S Own Mp’: How The 1981 Hunger Strike Changed The Republican Movement In Ireland, Ryan Fink
‘The People’S Own Mp’: How The 1981 Hunger Strike Changed The Republican Movement In Ireland, Ryan Fink
History & Classics Undergraduate Theses
The 20th century was a period of turmoil for the people of Ireland. After fighting for independence in the first quarter of the century, Ireland was partitioned into two separate entities, the Irish-controlled Republic of Ireland in the South and the British-controlled Northern Ireland in the Northeast. The middle half of the century saw bloody violence and sectarian fighting between the Irish Republican Army (IRA) and the various Unionist paramilitary forces in Northern Ireland. This paper looks at the period from 1970 to 2000, and evaluates how and why the bloody sectarian conflict shifted into a partially more peaceful political …
The Galway Rambler: Anthony Raftery And The Roots Of Irish Cultural Identity, Caroline O'Shea
The Galway Rambler: Anthony Raftery And The Roots Of Irish Cultural Identity, Caroline O'Shea
English Student Scholarship
My project looks at the impact of Anthony Raftery, a 19th century blind poet and fiddle player from Co. Mayo, Ireland, on Ireland’s cultural landscape upon his ‘discovery’ by Irish writers Lady Augusta Gregory and Douglas Hyde, and his influence upon E. B. Yeats. Explorations of Scottish folk collections and Homeric influences upon Raftery’s poetry and the art of folk music preservation are also examined.
Growing Gardens And Nurturing Community In The Urban Environment, Katie Shaw
Growing Gardens And Nurturing Community In The Urban Environment, Katie Shaw
Global Studies Student Scholarship
The following literature will analyze how urban agriculture (UA), and more specifically community gardens, address the rising global pressures on urban areas by rebuilding local networks. First, it will present community gardening as a solution to the global food crisis. Second, five case studies will compare cities’ community garden projects throughout the world: Accra, Shanghai, St. Petersburg, Havana, and Philadelphia. The next section will study the demographics of community gardeners, especially its impacts on marginalized members of society: children, women, elderly, immigrants and ethnic minorities, and physical and mentally challenged. And finally, the issues of city planning and green design …
A Brief History Of Providence College, Donna T. Mccaffrey
A Brief History Of Providence College, Donna T. Mccaffrey
History & Classics Faculty Publications
A New York City native drawn to Providence College by the love and example of her uncle, Rev. Cornelius P. Forster, O.P., Dr. Donna T. McCaffrey ’73G, ’83 Ph.D., and ’87G was a seminal figure in the history of the College — the same history she chronicled so fondly and scrupulously. Her 522-page doctoral dissertation, “The Origins and Early History of Providence College Through 1947,” described in vivid detail the people and the events that aligned a century ago to realize the bold vision of the Right Rev. Matthew Harkins, D.D., bishop of Providence, to build a Catholic college in …
Godfather Death: A European Folktale And Its Spanish Variants, Lou Charnon-Deutsch
Godfather Death: A European Folktale And Its Spanish Variants, Lou Charnon-Deutsch
INTI: Revista de literatura hispánica
No abstract provided.
Volume 24, Number 4 - Summer 1942
Volume 24, Number 4 - Summer 1942
The Alembic
Volume 24, Number 4 – Summer 1942. 55 pages including covers and advertisements.
- Kenny, Joseph "A Woman of Letters"
- Rosen, Louis "The Gazette Goes to Press"
- Gerhard, John "When the War is Over"
- Young, Peter "Need Money?"
- Shiel, James "Alembichords"
- Gerhard, John "The Truck"
- Sherman, James "Conquistador"
- Gorman, Jeffrey "On Late-Comers"
- Sharkey, John "St. Georgie and the Dragon"
- "By the Way'
Volume 24, Number 3 - March 1942
Volume 24, Number 3 - March 1942
The Alembic
Volume 24, Number 3 – March 1942. 49 pages including covers and advertisements.
- Cavanaugh, Paul "Captain Charles E. Rosendahl, U.S.N."
- "New Fingers in the Pi"
- Mulligan, Thomas "Writing for the Alembic"
- F.M., Extension School "God Bless Them"
- Bracq, Edward "'Liberal Education'"
- McCormick, William "Certitude"
- Young, Kenneth "The Chinese Language"
- Murphy, James J. "In the Land of the Shamrocks"
- O'Shea, Joseph "The New Fleet"
- Maguire, Frank "Alembichords"
- Rosen, Louis S. "Futility"
- "The Enchanting Young Ghost"
- Shiel, James "By the Way"
Volume 23, Number 4 - May 1941
Volume 23, Number 4 - May 1941
The Alembic
Volume 23, Number 4 – May 1941. 66 pages including covers and advertisements. (Only 36 pages available in archival copy.)
- The Quality of Decorum
- Conway, Joseph A. "For the Fatherland"
- Rich, Harold "End of a Visit"
- Gallagher, Matthew P. "How Long, O Lord?"
- Murphy, James J. "Holy Man of Dublin"
- J.A.C. "Records and Discords"
- Greene, John "Thought"
- Maguire, F.J. "In Quest of Arcady"
- Jodaitis, Annie T. of the Extension School "Women's Posiition in the Early Social World"
- "By the Way'
Volume 21, Number 4 - May 1939
Volume 21, Number 4 - May 1939
The Alembic
Volume 21, Number 4 - May 1939. 67 pages including covers and advertisements.
- "En Avant"
- Crowley, Francis, "Tick-Tick-Tick"
- Farrell, Thomas, "To Her"
- Healey, Robert C., "Alas, Poor Cobb"
- Gallagher, Matthew P., "The Glory of an Empire"
- Landry, Lionel J., "The Common Touch"
- Hayes, John T., "Solitary Solitude"
- Williams, Jr., T., "One Never Knows"
- McGovern, Charles T., "Loved I Not Honor More"
- Kenny, Herbert, "Well Done, My Son"
- Honnen, Jr., William H., "Papist Propaganda"
Volume 21, Number 3 - March 1939
Volume 21, Number 3 - March 1939
The Alembic
Volume 21, Number 3 - March 1939. 56 pages including covers and advertisements.
Contents
- Editorial, "Urbi et Orbi"
- Wardle, Irving, "Tavern on the Turnpike"
- Carignan, Norman J., "Bad, Bad Benny"
- Landry, Lionel, "A Clear Prophet"
- Williams, Jr., Ira T., "Welcome Home"
- Houlihan, John T., "Adaptation of XXI of Les Regrets"
- Hayes, John T., "Bag of Oats"
- Sasso, Anthony R., "The Old Masters"
- Houlihan, John T., "I Hold a Drop of Water"
- Gallagher, Matthew P., "Armageddon"
- Ryan, Mark John, "Climbing Mount McHenry"
- Reidy, John J., "I Lose a Friend"
- Sherman, Seymour A., "On Water"
Volume 21, Number 1 - October 1938
Volume 21, Number 1 - October 1938
The Alembic
Volume 11, Number 1 - October 1938. 65 pages including covers and advertisements.
Contents
- Healey, Robert C., "What Floor, Please?"
- Carignan, Norman J., "Decision"
- Lincoln, Milton, "Rebuff"
- Mulligan, Thomas, "We Wuz Robbed"
- Wardle, Irving, "Guns for Spain"
- FitzGerald, Louis, "A Couple of Years Ago..."
- Healey, Robert C., "Sights and Sounds"
- Landry, Lionel J., "Prelude"
- Gibbons, Walter, "Brother Sebastian's Monkey"
Volume 19, Number 4 - May 1937
Volume 19, Number 4 - May 1937
The Alembic
Volume 19, Number 4 - May 1937. 64 pages including covers and advertisements.
- Hughes, Edward Riley, "Commencement"
- Geary, William Denis, "O Salutaris Hostia"
- Ryan, John J., "On Propaganda and Art"
- Gibbons, Walter F., "Escape"
- Serry, Franklin, "His Is The Cool Of A Mountain Pool"
- Geary, William Denis, "Dawn Comes For Cathleen"
- Campbell, Walter E., "Sorcery To Socialization"
- Smith, E. Allan, "Sweet Sorrow"
- Healey, Robert, "Why?"
- Fanning, John H., "Elementary, Watson!"
- MacArthur, Daniel J., "Notes From A Freshman's Log"
- Hughes, Walter Appleton, "Rossetti, Poetic Expatriate"
- "Editorials"
- "The Collegiate World"
- "Book Reviews"
Volume 17, Number 4 - May 1935
Volume 17, Number 4 - May 1935
The Alembic
Volume 17, Number 4 - May 1935. 73 pages including covers and advertisements.
- Murphy, Robert T., "Homecoming"
- Scowcroft, George T., "Current Trends"
- Fanning, John H., "Air Raid"
- Hart, Daniel J., "Prosperity and Depression"
- Murray, Jr., Herbert F., "Gypsiana (verse)"
- McCarthy, John B., "Lines from Lethe (verse)"
- Sullivan, Eugene J., "Pride Goeth"
- Brunell, Richard, "The Words of Men (verse)"
- Sullivan, William J., "Blowout"
- "Senior Class Poll"
- "Editorial"
- "How Tomes Have Changed!"
- "Campus Chronicle"
- "Press Box"
- "In Memoriam (verse)"
Volume 17, Number 2 - February 1935
Volume 17, Number 2 - February 1935
The Alembic
Volume 17, Number 2 - February 1935. 58 pages including covers and advertisements.
- Cavanagh, John F., "Birdlets at Play"
- Devenish, Jr., Joseph E., "Our Chord of Music"
- Shelley, Percy Bysshe, "Music (poem)"
- Sullivan, Jr., William J., "Chicken"
- Sullivan, Eugene J., "On Essaying"
- Smith, A., "Pangs of Muteness"
- McGowan, J. Ford, "Submarine Terrace"
- Czech, Max, "Winter's Dawn"
- Fanning, John H., "Fog Night"
- "Editorial"
- "How Tomes Have Changed!"
- "Campus Chronicle"
- "Bottoms Up!"
- "Press Box"
Volume 14, Graduation Supplement - June 1934
Volume 14, Graduation Supplement - June 1934
The Alembic
Volume 14, Graduation Supplement - 1934. 69 pages including covers and advertisements. (Volume incorrectly numbered as XVI on cover.)
- "Foreword"
- Doran, Thomas F., "Class History"
- "Biographies"
- Haylon, William T., "Memories"
Volume 13, Number 6 – March 1933
Volume 13, Number 6 – March 1933
The Alembic
Volume 13, Number 6 – March 1933. 23 pages including covers and advertisements.
- Sullivan, Francis J., "The Making of a Mate"
- Connolly, Paul F., "It's Fun To Be Fooled"
- "What Do You Think?-Two Papers"
- Mulhearn, Charles E., "The Locket-A Playlet"
- "Editorial"
- Higgins, Daniel J., "Merely Players"
- "Checkerboard"
- Skenyon, Francis J., "Athletics"
- Lyons, Edward J., "Alumni Corner"
- "Who's Who Herein"
Volume 12, Number 7 - May 1932
Volume 12, Number 7 - May 1932
The Alembic
Volume 12, Number 7 – May 1932. 32 pages including covers and advertisements.
- "Who's Who in the Alembic"
- McGowan, James F. "Interview"
- McDonough, John "Sapphics for May"
- McDonough, John "Spring Moon"
- Silk, Bernard "It Happened in Changsha"
- Popkin, George "Lunatic?"
- Hackett, James M. "Smell of Smoke"
- Tierney, Thomas F. "The Nationalism of Mr. Shea"
- "Editorials"
- Flanagan, Edward J. "West of Suez"
- Haylon, William D. "Checkerboard"
- Sullivan for Tebbetts "Athletics"
- Alembic Writing Contest
Volume 12, Number 5 - March 1932
Volume 12, Number 5 - March 1932
The Alembic
Volume 12, Number 5 – March 1932. 26 pages including covers and advertisements.
- "Who's Who in the Alembic"
- Cox, John F. "Friend of New Ireland"
- McDonough, John "Alcaics for March"
- LaCroix, John "Good Friday"
- Shunney, Walter J. "Tax Gathering"
- Murray, Herbert "Skyscrapers"
- Meister, Joseph L. "Complex - A Story"
- Tiernet, Thomas F. "Music and Metaphysics"
- Shunney, Walter J. "'Babelon' - A Playlet"
- "Editorials"
- Cleary, John J. "Individualism and the Depression"
- "Olla Podrida - A Collection of Essays"
- Haylon, William D. "Checkerboard"
- Tebbetts, George "Athletics"