P.W. Joyce and the Educational Shaping of the Emerging Irish Nation, 1827-1914
Historical Studies in Education
O'Doherty, Teresa/OConnor, Liam/O'Donoghue, Tom
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Zusatztext
This book provides an exposition on the professional and cultural life of Patrick Weston Joyce (1827-1914), more popularly known as P. W. Joyce, who lived and worked during the final phase of British rule in Ireland. The focus throughout is very much on how family, locale, and schooling influenced this significant Irish patriot, polymath, and pioneering pedagogue who worked across a range of disciplines, including education, language, history, and music. Moreover, attention is paid to how his achievements were possible only because of the variety of leading roles he played in the development of the Irish National School System between 1845 and 1893. Thus positioned, Joyce was in many ways a significant choreographer of a slow revolution in which education, in both formal and informal settings, was used to educate the Irish people regarding their cultural heritage.
Autorenportrait
Teresa ODoherty is President of Marino Institute of Education, an Associated College of Trinity College Dublin, Ireland. Her research interests are in the area of teacher education and the history of education. Liam OConnor is Director of the Irish Traditional Music Archive. Tom ODonoghue is Professor Emeritus of Education in the Graduate School of Education, the University of Western Australia. He is also an elected fellow of both the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia and the Royal Historical Society, UK.
Weitere Details
Erschienen: 07.09.2025
Umfang: x, 274 S., 4 s/w Illustr., 11 farbige Illustr., 27
Sprache: ENG
Einband: KT
ISBN/EAN: 9783031673788
Umbreit-Nr.: 8006393
