Skip to content
Main navigation menu
Syracuse University Press home website
  • open cartGo to cart cart
  • site searchSearch the site search
  • New Books
  • Browse
  • About
  • Resources
  • Contact Us
  • News and Events
  • Blog
Cover for the book: Making Ireland  Irish
Request Exam or Desk Copy

Making Ireland Irish

Tourism and National Identity since the Irish Civil War

Eric G. E. Zuelow

Hardcover $39.95x | 9780815632252Add to cart

Subjects: Irish studies, cultural studies

"Well researched and written, and provides an excellent insight into how Irish tourism policy was developed and who engineered it."—American Historical Review

"Zuelow wisely resists any simple endorsement of the view that tourism changed the Irish people. . . . There is much then to think over with this stimulating and challenging study."—Journal of Tourism History

Description

From the dark shadow of civil war to the pastel-painted towns of today, Making Ireland Irish provides a sweeping account of the evolution of the Irish tourist industry over the twentieth century. Drawing on an extensive array of previously untapped or underused sources, Eric G. E. Zuelow examines how a small group of tourism advocates, inspired by tourist development movements in countries such as France and Spain, worked tirelessly to convince their Irish compatriots that tourism was the secret to Ireland’s success. Over time, tourism went from being a national joke to a national interest. Men and women from across Irish society joined in, eager to help shape their country and culture for visitors’ eyes. The result was Ireland as it is depicted today, a land of blue skies, smiling faces, pastel towns, natural beauty, ancient history, and timeless traditions.

With lucid prose and vivid detail, Zuelow explains how careful planning transformed Irish towns and villages from grey and unattractive to bright and inviting; sanitized Irish history to avoid offending Ireland’s largest tourist market, the English; and supplanted traditional rural fairs revolving around muddy animals and featuring sexually suggestive ceremonies with new family-friendly festivals and events filling today’s tourist calendar. By challenging existing notions that the Irish tourist product is either timeless or the consequence of colonialism, Zuelow demonstrates that the development of tourist imagery and Irish national identity was not the result of a handful of elites or a postcolonial legacy, but rather the product of an extended discussion that ultimately involved a broad cross-section of society, both inside and outside Ireland. Tourism, he argues, played a vital role in “making Ireland Irish.”

About the Author

Eric G. E. Zuelow is assistant professor of modern European history at the University of New England. He is coeditor of Nationalism in a Global Era: The Persistence of Nations.


Related Interest

Industrial Development and Irish National Identity, 1922-1939
Riverscapes and National Identities
Representing the National Landscape in Irish Romanticism

Series: Irish Studies

6 x 9, 380 pages, 10 black and white illustrations

March 2009

  • X
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • Bluesky

Syracuse University Press

  • 621 Skytop Road, Suite 110 map this locationGoogle map location
    Syracuse, New York 13244-5290
  • f: 315.443.5545
  • supress@syr.edu

For book orders, contact:

  • Longleaf Services, Inc.
  • 800.848.6224
  • orders@longleafservices.org

UBPF Logo

Give to the press link

View available book on EBSCO

Copyright © Syracuse University Press

  • Accessibility
  • Privacy