

On Every Tide
The Making and Remaking of the Irish World
Author: Sean Connolly
Narrator: Patrick Moy
Unabridged: 17 hr
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Basic Books
Published: 10/11/2022
Author: Sean Connolly
Narrator: Patrick Moy
Unabridged: 17 hr
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Basic Books
Published: 10/11/2022
Incredibly well researched but also very boring. A good examination of Irish immigration to the USA. Except for the shipbuilding, Ireland was a farming country and was hit hard by a potato famine. Ironic that they immigrated mostly to the northern industrial coastal cities.......more
This is much more serious research and analysis than introduction to the topic, which meant this was quite a bit to try to handle over audiobook as someone who was just mildly curious. (That's not a critique, just an FYI for anyone looking at reading this)......more
Connolly does a good job taking the reader from the first immigration from Ireland through the years of JFK and Clinton's interactions with Northern Ireland in the 1990s.......more
On a recent visit to Dublin, I visited the EPIC Museum and was drawn into the history of the emigration of the Irish and the contributions of the migrants and their descendants to the world - the world being primarily the United States. Sean Connolly in his book On Every Tide tackles describing the......more
There is a strong historical argument that it was the Irish who were the global pioneers of mass migration, who from the early 1800s were fleeing in huge numbers from the economic catastrophe of their homeland to build new lives across the world. And this is the contention of Sean Connolly in “On Ev......more
“In a sweeping historical narrative studded with original insights, Sean Connolly shows how the great migration of eight million Irish people prefigured the main patterns of international migration today. Irish migrants all over the world—roughly half of whom were women—took on the work that other people wouldn’t do, served the rich, built roads, canals, railroads, and cities, and endured sustained bigotry for their poverty, their manners, and their religion. They also plundered indigenous land and reaped the benefits of being white, Christian, and English-speaking in the colonized lands where they settled. Elegantly written, compellingly argued, and genuinely global in scope, On Every Tide is a great book by one of Ireland’s foremost historians.”—Kevin Kenny, New York University
“Stylish and lucid, this intrepid and provocative book traces in a manner at once bold and nuanced the movements of Irish migrants across space and time over the past two centuries. Sean Connolly is alert to the complex fate of victims, exploiters, soldiers of fortune, or the merely footloose who used the wide world to explore themselves. In his analysis, imaginative audacity is tempered only by sound scholarly scruple. A work of unprecedented synthesis which is magisterial and informed, yet whose challenge to conventional wisdom will generate animated debate for years to come.”—Declan Kiberd, University of Notre Dame
“Three decades ago, President Mary Robinson lit a symbolic candle in the Irish ‘White House’ to acknowledge the nation beyond, the Irish diaspora. But it is only now that we have the all-encompassing history of that diaspora—across more than three centuries and over four continents. Connolly’s quite remarkable achievement has been to document that history in a single volume, to interrogate all its complexities and contradictions, and to construct a taut narrative that is both intellectually compelling and superbly crafted.”—David Dickson, Trinity College Dublin
“What a fine book! It has all the virtues one wants in a work of synthesis. Sean Connolly has read almost everything in print on the Irish diaspora, and he distills the material in a gentle, generous, and highly readable fashion—and yet with an engaged and edgy quality. Thus, several of the myths about the Irish worldwide—such as that they had an instinctive sympathy with indigenous and racialized groups—are called into question. On Every Tide is the ideal place for anyone interested in the Irish diaspora to begin, and, for those with some previous knowledge, to recalibrate their compass.”—Donald H. Akenson, Queen’s University
“A nuanced overview of Irish migrations, focusing on the experiences of both Catholic and Protestant Irish in United States, Great Britain, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and, to a lesser extent, Argentina. Connolly offers a subtle analysis of the meaning of ‘diaspora’ in the context of the varied patterns of Irish demographics and integration across several societies. On Every Tide likewise presents shrewd observations on Ireland’s interactions with its far-flung progeny as well as on the changing nature of what it means to be Irish, whether one lives on the island or elsewhere. All readers interested in the topics of international migration, ethnicity, assimilations, and globalization should put this book on their reading list.”—Thomas J. Archdeacon, University of Wisconsin-Madison
“On Every Tide is a richly detailed, deeply insightful, and beautifully written panorama of Ireland’s history of migration. Connolly excels in explaining the causes of Irish emigration and the impact of that mobility on Ireland, the people who left home, and the societies they helped create. This impressive book constitutes a major contribution to the new, globally oriented scholarship on the Irish diaspora.”—Malcolm Campbell, University of Auckland
“On Every Tide is an expert survey of the Irish diaspora from the seventeenth century to the present day. Elegantly written, highly accessible, yet carefully researched and wonderfully comprehensive, the book displays the impressive skills of one of Ireland’s foremost historians. Connolly’s masterful contribution to our understanding of Irish emigration will not only be essential reading for students of Irish and American history, it will appeal to anyone interested in how Irish migration impacted the history of the modern world.”
—Robert Savage, Boston College
“On Every Tide is the first comprehensive history of the Irish diaspora from pre-famine times to the present. This remarkable book, which is both readable and scholarly, ranging from North America and Britain to South America, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa, highlights the diversity of the Irish diaspora: Protestant and Catholic, unionist and nationalist, and their different experiences in the places where they settled.”—Mary E. Daly, University College Dublin