Read De Valera's Irelands Online
Authors: Dermot Keogh,Keogh Doherty,Dermot Keogh
Tags: #General, #Europe, #Ireland, #Political Science, #History, #Political, #Biography & Autobiography, #Revolutionaries, #Statesmen
This paper will be concerned more with culture than with history but I hope that it can be taken as a contribution to certain common issues of a theoretical nature that have loomed large in recent years in respect of both historiography, the writing of history and ethnography, the writing and representation of culture. I want to suggest that the emphasis given in the cultural ideolÂogy of de Valera's Ireland to folk tradition, as an exÂpression of Irish identity, served in effect to mask and to mute the actual cultural history of Ireland in the four middle decades of the century, and that another Ireland of those years has gone largely unrecorded. That other Ireland is the Ireland whose cultural expression was the popular culture of the city streets and the factories, the popular culture of town life in the urbanÂising countryside, the popular culture arising from the modernising aspects of village and rural life, as in the effect, for example, of rural electrification that culminated â in popular cultural terms â with the establishment of an Irish television station in 1961 when so many ordiÂnÂary Dublin and east coast homes were already festooned with recepÂtion masts reaching for the popular media culture of the British stations.
De Valera's inaugural address to the new Irish television audience in 1961 reinforces, in a way, his radio message to the Irish people on St Patrick's Day 1943 regarding the nature of Irish cultural identity and the noble traditional heritage that nourished and sustained it.
1
Folklore was, still, in the official cultural perspective of de Valera's Ireland, one very imÂÂportant element, perhaps the chief one in that identity and that heriÂtage, and was a main ground for the ideological bias that disregarded conÂtemÂporary and urban popular culture in the official reckoning and promoÂtion of cultural self-perception and in its official representation. This ideoÂlogical bias had its historical roots in an era much earlier than that of de Valera's Ireland but was still sufficiently current, in the de Valera years, to result in the kind of ethnographic and historical denial of actual popuÂlar cultural creativity that matches the imaginative myopia underlying the denial and suppression of literary creativity that the Censorship of Publications legislation of 1929 implied.
As regards the quality of official Irish cultural thinking then, as much was already being said in 1940 by Seán à Faoláin who wrote, in the first issue of
The Bell
, that the magazine would stand for âLife before any abÂstraction, in whatever magnificent words it may clothe itself'.
2
In the pages of his magazine, he promoted an intellectual pluralism and a culÂtural internationalism that was the antithesis of the prevailing ideolÂogy regarding Irish culture and Irish cultural identity. The folk tradition asÂpect of that view of Irish culture which
The Bell
opposed and, specificÂally, of Irish popular culture is also to be found, well in the aftermath of the de Valera years, in the closing words of an article published in 1979 and written two years earlier in commemoration of the founding a half-cenÂtury before of the Folklore of Ireland Society in 1927. The title of this artiÂcle is âThe Irish Folklore Commission: Achievement and Legacy' and its author, Bo Almqvist, Professor of Irish Folklore at UCD was successor in that position to Séamas à Duilearga, the father figure of folklore study in Ireland in the de Valera years. Bo Almqvist closed his article with this exhortation to the Irish people:
A mhuintir na hÃireann!
Do not neglect one of the greatest treasures you possess! I beseech you for your own sake, for the sake of your men and women, for the sake of past generations â all the humble but truly great men and women who cherished their national heritage and passed it on in trust to us â for the sake of underÂstanding, identity and unity in this country in these troubled times, for the sake of joy and beauty in generations to come, for the sake of truth and love of learning, for the sake of everything you hold dear, noble and holy, do not let us down in our work!
3
This passage strikingly illustrates an essentialist and essentially romantic antiquarian notion of Irish identity â at least as far as popular culture is concerned â and represents the thinking, in regard to folklore and tradiÂtional culture as the expression of Irishness, that was endorsed by Irish governments of the de Valera years to the extent of their continual supÂport of an official Irish Folklore Commission under the direction of SéaÂmas à Duilearga. à Duilearga had been a student of, and later assistÂant to, Douglas Hyde at UCD. Douglas Hyde's role was paramount in proÂmoting in IreÂland the philosophy of the Romantic Antiquarian moveÂment that underÂlay the nineteenth century nationalism of many of the European nations striving to build their identity in terms of native lanÂguage and folk tradÂition.
Roy Foster has noted that Hyde's 1892 address to the National LiteÂrary Society âOn the Necessity for De-Anglicising Ireland', delivered in the same year as his
Love Songs of Connacht
anthology of folk poetry was published, ârapidly achieved legendary status' being âcredited with inÂspiring the foundation of the Gaelic League a year later' and becoming âa canonical text of Irish cultural nationalism'.
4
In a review of Hyde's
Love Songs of Connacht
by W. B. Yeats, we have the expression by Yeats too of a perceived need, as Foster puts it, âto derive inspiration from a basic energy, by knowing one's roots' that is, I submit, on a par with the messÂage Bo Almqvist still had for the Irish people as recently as the late 1970s. In his 1893 review Yeats had written:
As for me, I close the book with much sadness. These poor peasants lived in a beautiful if somewhat inhospitable world, where little had changed since Adam delved and Eve span. Everything was so old that it was steeped in the heart, and every powerful emotion found at once noble types and symbols for its expression. But we â we live in a world of whirling change, where nothing becomes old and sacred and our powerful emotions ⦠exÂpress themselves in vulgar types and symbols. The soul then had but to stretch out its arms to fill them with beauty, but now all manner of heteroÂgeneous ugliness has beset us.
5
In the face of this modern metropolitan world, Irish cultural nationÂalism, of the sort Hyde and Yeats espoused and that de Valera was to attempt to practise â deriving, historically, from the philosophy of J. G. von HerÂder in eighteenth century Germany and flowing through the writings of Thomas Davis and the Young Irelanders â sought, in the later nineteenth and earlier twentieth centuries, to locate folk traditions at the heart of national identity. I believe that such a conviction regarding the essential nature of national identity still operated as an important eleÂment in the decision of de Valera to choose Douglas Hyde as an appropÂriate person to be inaugurated as first President of the Irish Republic in 1938.
At the level of party politics it is suggested that Hyde was not de Valera's first choice for President, but that the risk of having a party poliÂtician such as Seán T. O'Kelly rejected by the people in the aftermath of his narrow constitution referendum victory, caused de Valera to opt for someone who, in J. J. Lee's words could safely satisfy âsundry national self-images' while still guaranteeing a Fianna Fáil presidency.
6
The factÂors motivating any such potential choice are surely complex and calcuÂlated â perhaps especially so in the case of Mr de Valera â but I believe that one significant element in the choice of Douglas Hyde to fill the presidential office was that, in de Valera's perspective and that of other Irish Irelanders â within Fianna Fáil and outside it â Hyde's career and public image had given public witness to a deep allegiance to the Irish-Ireland ideal. In office as first citizen and symbolic representative of the Irish nation, Douglas Hyde would give effect to the cultural equivalent of the political policy of Sinn Féinism and the economic policy of protectÂionism which we can also associate with de Valera's Ireland. Such poliÂtical use of Hyde as a kind of cultural icon by de Valera suggests someÂthing of a renewal in the de Valera years of the ideals of the early Gaelic League era regarding the cultural expression of national identity. In fact the more imaginative, ecumenical, and potentially unifying aspects of the kind of cultural revolution that Hyde and the early Gaelic League had inÂÂtended and pioneered had not survived the lurch to physical-force nationÂalism. Instead a narrower, more conservative and, indeed, someÂwhat anti-modern tendency marked the cultural nationalism of the years between 1916 and the end of the de Valera years of power.
Mr de Valera himself would, in due course, also fill the presidential office in a manner similarly appropriate to the perception of Irish nationÂal identity as residing chiefly in matters of a conservatively defined cultÂural tradition. By then, however, the appeal-power of even the attenuatÂed version of a romantic antiquarian definition of Irish cultural identity had waned. The centrality of ancient tradition in official cultural ideology was yielding ground to the influence and implications of the fresh ecoÂnomic and social thinking of the Lemass era. This focused on the less exÂclusively insular concerns of an Irish government less preoccupied with matters of basic political stability, economic survival or external threat in a time of war.
With hindsight, we can see that the implication of the cultural ideolÂogy that prevailed in de Valera's Ireland was to privilege the memory of traditional cultural forms that were expressive of the world-view and lifestyle of former rural, relatively unsophisticated, largely under-eduÂcated and perhaps only partly-literate segments of the Irish population. This memory culture of the non-elite and non-urban tradition formed, of course, the central concern of the activities of the Irish Folklore ComÂmission that had been established in 1935 with de Valera's approval. The sense of an essential heritage of cultural riches in danger of being lost forever in the displacement and destruction of tradition by the forces of modernity was well caught in the motto of the Folklore of Ireland SocÂiety's Journal,
Béaloideas
, every number of which since 1927 has carried the Gospel quotation:
Colligite quae superaverunt fragmenta ne pereant
, a sacÂred injunction to preserve precious survivals now in danger of discard.
In Germany, we know that the implications of a similar later nineÂteenth and early twentieth century preoccupation in national cultural ideology, with the symbolic recovery and repossession of the past, had a more directly political and sinister outcome than was the case in Ireland. A recent study by Uli Linke of the focus of research in the history of German folklore scholarship has proposed a direct relationship between culture theory and the exercise of political power by the state, that is relevant to a consideration of the privileging of folk tradition in the culÂtural ideology of de Valera's Ireland. Linke's article raises issues in regard to the potentially negative side of an exclusive privileging of what Linke terms âpeasant lore' and âcommonplace culture' in showing how such a preoccupation in German folkloristics facilitated the emergÂence of social and political policies of a racist and totalitarian nature. In an introducÂtory paragraph Linke writes:
I begin, with a brief discussion of the fetishism of peasant lore, and of comÂmonplace culture in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. During this era of European nation-building, the romanticised life-world of peasants servÂed as a template for the political identity of an emerging German state. ConÂtemporary folklorists equated peasant traditions with the unÂchangÂing cusÂtoms of the past: peasant lore was presented as a pristine and authentic reÂpertoire for building a common German culture. From this discussion of âreÂgressive modernisation' â the political journey into the future by detour through the past â I extract a nationalistic concept of culture in which a theory of power is absent: the workings of power are ignored or perhaps even siÂlenced. I suggest that early German folklorists, as active participants in culÂtural politics, were not motivated to uncover or elucidate the hidden dimenÂsions of power they so skilfully manipulated. This non-treatment of power is even more pronounced in the context of Nazi folklore scholarship: by conÂcealing the strategies of power, the study of folk culture becomes a means for legitimating Hitler's imperialist policies and racial concerns for âpurity of blood' and reproduction.
7
Linke goes on to show how, in Germany, the initial romantic perception of the value of common cultural tradition (akin to the Davis position in the Irish case) gave rise to expressions of distress that âlarge segments of the German population had abandoned their native heritage in favour of foreign models of refinement' (akin to the Hyde de-Anglicisation posiÂtion). In the twentieth century in both Germany and Ireland, we know that cultural nationalism took on radically political and militarÂistic form. Here in Ireland, Hyde had claimed that his message was essentially apoliÂtical, holding that âan agenda of cultural revival should be as attractive to unionists as to nationalists since it was above politics'.
8
Hyde relinquishÂed his leadership of the Gaelic League in 1915 when he was unable to stop it from embracing an openly partisan political stance on the quesÂtion of national self-determination by military means and returned to poliÂtical office (albeit one allegedly above politics) only in 1938 to perÂsonify (at de Valera's wish) that partly self-determined nation as its President.
The significance of folklore studies in the newly established Irish Free State and in the later Republic was, meanwhile, endorsed by official government support and accorded the symbolic importance which I have argued that de Valera's choice of Douglas Hyde as President conÂtained. Its influence on social and political affairs, however, was largely confined to its diverting of official and scholarly attention away from the lived popular culture of Irish people in the 1930s and 1940s in favour of a concern for the preservation of the record of past cultural forms. Things had, as we know, taken a grimmer turn in Germany where what matches the official Irish lack of interest in urbanised popular culture is a virulent aversion to cosmopolitanism that saw cities as the locus of decadence. Linke cites two quotations that vividly illustrate this. The first, dated 1935, is from an anthropological journal entitled
Volk und Rasse
: