R.F. Foster's Luck and the Irish: A Brief History of Change, 1970-2000 examines how the country has weathered thirty years of rapid transformation, and what these changes may mean in the long run.
From 1970, things were changing in Ireland - the Celtic Tiger had finally woken, and the rules for everything from gender roles and religion to international relations were being entirely rewritten. By the end of the twentieth century, Ireland had become a global brand, and the almost completely unexpected wave of prosperity had brought with it upheavals in economics, sexual mores and culture, as well as a shift in North-South attitudes.
Roy Foster also looks at how characters as diverse as Gerry Adams, Mary Robinson, Charles Haughey and Bob Geldof have contributed to Ireland's altered psyche, and uncovers some of the scandals, corruption and marketing masterminds that have transformed Ireland - and its luck.
'Examines our society with fierce intelligence and insight' Colm Tóibín, Irish Times Books of the Year
'Occasionally angry, sometimes whimsical and frequently hilarious ... Appeals both to those who know nothing and those who think they know everything' Conor Gearty, Financial Times
'The brilliance of the writing places him as a historian in a league of his own ... A balanced work offering his own distinctive, original and elegant insights' Diarmaid Ferriter, Times Literary Supplement
R. F. Foster is Carroll Professor of Irish History at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of Hertford College, Oxford. His books include Modern Ireland: 1600-1972, The Irish Story and W. B. Yeats: A Life.
In trying to provide a coherent analysis of the huge changes that Ireland has undergone in the last 35 years, R.F. Foster has set himself an impossible task. It's not surprising, therefore, that he doesn't entirely succeed. But he does acquit himself very well in the attempt.
The book is short (~200 pages) and divided into five, densely argued, chapters:
1. The Miracle of Loaves and Fishes 2. How the Catholics became Protestants 3. The Party Fight and Funeral 4. 'Big Mad Children': the South and the North 5. How the Short Stories became Novels
These are concerned with, respectively
* the 'Celtic Tiger', that is, the extraordinary economic boom that Ireland experienced, beginning in 1987 (and which was still underway when this book was written, though it hasn't escaped the recent havoc) * social changes, including changes in women's roles, the complete erosion of influence of the Catholic hierarchy, and liberalization of laws pertaining to contraception, divorce, and homosexuality * the role of Fianna Fail in Irish politics in the late 20th Century * the evolution of attitudes in the Republic towards the North that helped pave the way to the Good Friday agreement of 1998 * the flourishing of the most recent generation of Irish writers and musicians
For me, chapters 1, 2, and 5 were the most successful, though this may reflect the aspects of recent Irish history that interest me the most. Foster's analyses of the economic and social changes, the beginnings of which he traces back to the 1970s, seem particularly insightful. The writing is generally pretty clear, though it can become a little dense on occasion. In general, he does presuppose a general familiarity with Irish history and politics, so this is not a book for someone looking for a basic primer.
It is, however, a fascinating and thought-provoking analysis of recent developments in Irish history.
It was a great book to read - dense with information. But as a complete outsider to Ireland, I found it difficult to keep up with the multitude of characters and references of the book. I started reading the Cambridge Social History of Modern Ireland at the same time. Though the book is quite long compared to this one, it took its time to examine history in smaller and more manageable chunks. Better for some one with little knowledge of Ireland compared to RF Foster
A masterly little book from the Professor of Irish History at Oxford whose last work was the definitive biography of Yeats. He documents the changes from Dev's Ireland to the presentday covering all sections of Irish life and the relation with the North. To give an idea one chapter heading is 'How the Catholics Became Protestants'.
This is a book based on five lectures given by Roy Foster in Belfast in 2004, published in 2007. It is sobering to realise just how different the world (and Ireland) looked before the crash of 2008. Brexit, of course, is the latest twist in the post-crash settling of world affairs as it affects Ireland (the Trump Presidency is more significant on a global scale, but affects Ireland less). In 2004 (or 2007) it was possible to write a book or set of lectures about the recent past, finish the final paragraph and think, job done. I don't think any historian could confidently do that in 2019.
And in fairness to Foster, he sort-of sees it coming - one of his warnings, particularly in the third chapter which concentrates on Fianna Fail, is that the relationship between property investors and politicians was far too close. The story of Charles Haughey's rampant and blatant corruption is always worth telling again, but this was enabled by a political system that saw no problem with linking property development and executive power. He doesn't completely see it coming, of course; in 2003, 2004 and 2005, Ireland's GNI per capita rose by 20%, 26% and 18%, and it was impossible at that point to envisage that the figures for 2009-12 would be -8% followed by three consecutive years of 4% decline. But historians are supposed to tell us about the past, not the future.
Foster's aim is to explain how Ireland modernised between 1970 and 2000. I don't think he quite manages to convey a grasp of the very big picture (he basically puts it down to luck and accident), but each of the chapters is a good scrutiny of important elements of the story. Chapter two is on the change in status of the Catholic Church; chapter three on Fianna Fail; chapter four on the Republic's attitude to Northern Ireland (where I think he is completely right to say that the South accepted Partition in 1926 and is still not seriously contemplating any other arrangement); and chapter five on the arts and literature. It's tremendously well written, and although some might feel that the critique of Charles Haughey is a bit over the top, the fact is that Haughey himself was well over the top. (Younger readers may need reminding that in the summer of 1982, during Haughey's first government, a nationwide hunt for a man who had killed two people in broad daylight with no apparent motive ended with the murderer's arrest in an apartment belonging to the Attorney-General; not Haughey's own fault, of course, but somehow symbolic of the times.)
Even though the book was out of date within a year of publication, it's a good encapsulation of the era.
Overwhelms with detail without making novel connections. The one exception to this is the last chapter, in which historian becomes cultural critic and gives air to all manner of dubious theories about what can be inferred about Irish society from its artistic output.
Foster’s heavily laden prose is a chore to read. Sentence after sentence is needlessly burnished, repeatedly leaving the reader to ponder ambiguities.
There must be better books than this on the period.
It's a fascinating and entertaining book. Foster writes perceptively and wittily about modern Ireland. From my point of view the best chapter is about changing attitudes in the Republic to Northern Ireland, and the effects this has had on cross-border relations and the peace process in the North.