REBEL CITY:
Larkin, Connolly and the Dublin Labour Movement
by John
Newsinger
A study of the great labour revolt in Ireland and of the development of
Irish trade unionism and syndicalism. It focuses on the relationship between
Larkin and the Dublin labour movement, and considers the influence of syndicalism
and Marxism in the theory and activity of James Connolly.
Newsinger studies the condition of the Irish Labour in the years running up
to the start of the First World War: social, economic and cultural conditions,
the influence of the Church, gender relations and the campaign for women’s
suffrage, the ideology of the republican movement, and developing traditions
of labour solidarity and militancy. He chronicles the organisation of the
Irish Transport and General Workers Union, (ITGWU) and the impact of the Irish
Worker newspaper.
1913 and 1914 were crucial years in Irish history: Newsinger considers the
Dublin lockouts, (also studied by Yeates). He puts these events in context
looking at the relationship between the ITGWU and the Irish Volunteers, the
impact of the First World War, the formation of the Citizen Army, relations
with the British Labour Movement, and Connolly’s links with to the Irish
Republican Brotherhood.
He discusses Sean O’Casey’s views of this period and offers new
perspectives on the Lock-outs defeat of 1913-14, on the political trajectory
of James Connolly, and on the role of the working class in the Easter uprising
of 1916.
John Newsinger is Senior lecturer in the School of History and Cultural Studies, Bath Spa University College, He is the author of United Irishman (Merlin, 2001) Orwell’s Politics and British Counterinsurgency (both Palgrave).
ISBN. 085036518X
Paperback
£14.95