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91 Prison J. 3 (2011)

handle is hein.journals/prsjrnl91 and id is 1 raw text is: 

Special Issue on Prisons in Ireland
                                                            The Prison journal
Introduction: The                                      @2011 SAGE Publicati
                                                        Reprints and permission:
Significance          of   the                  sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav
                                                  DOI: 10.1 177/0032885510389532
Prison       in  Irish    Nationalist                     http://tpj.sagepub.com

Culture                                                          OSAGE



Liam Leonard, PhD'


The issue of imprisonment  in Ireland has traditionally been problematic for
a number  of reasons, including Ireland's colonial past and the struggle for
Independence  from British rule in both jurisdictions. This led, in turn, to the
use (and  abuse) of imprisonment  by forces opposed  to the independence
project. Thus, a sentimental residue of tacit opposition to the prison system
has remained  a salient characteristic of contemporary Irish life. Essentially,
the prevailing system of justice (and the prison system in particular) became
a symbol  of injustice and oppression throughout the history of British rule
for Irish nationalists in either jurisdiction.
   Consider this list of events from Irish nationalism's catalogue of injustices
that have become  part of the fabric of pan-Irish nationalist (and rogue) cul-
ture in Ireland, Britain, the United States, and Australia: the imprisonment
and execution of leaders such as Robert Emmet in Kilmainham Gaol in 1798,
the deportations of Irish nationalist activists (alongside regular convicts) to
Australian prisons throughout the 1800s, the imprisonment of 19th-century
nationalist leaders such as John Mitchel, Michael Davitt, and Charles Stewart
Parnell (see Behan, this issue), the legend of Ned Kelly in Australia, the trial
and imprisonment  of Irish writer Oscar Wilde, the Molly Maguires trials in
the United States, the imprisonment and execution of the leaders of the 1916
Easter Rising in Kilmainham Gaol, the imprisonment of republican prisoners
in Frongoch  military prison in Wales and the escape of nationalist leader


'Institute of Technology, Sligo, Ireland

Corresponding Author:
Liam Leonard, Department of Humanities, Institute of Technology, Ash Lane, Sligo, Republic
of Ireland
Email: liamleonard@yahoo.com

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