Richard J. Butler
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Architecture of the state in Ireland
The colonial question, 1800–1922
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This chapter will tackle the contested nature of the ‘colonial’ built environment in nineteenth-century Ireland, building on the work of Edward McParland, Alistair Rowan, Lindsey Proudfoot, Alex Bremner, and others. It comprises two parts: the first is an analysis of the processes of production of ‘state’ architecture, with a focus on the network of courthouses, prisons, asylums, and workhouses erected in the early nineteenth century. The study will be based around the Irish grand jury system of local administration and a small number of specific case studies. The colonial question is framed through a Four Nations approach and focuses on the tensions and conflicts within and between Westminster, Dublin Castle, and Irish local government. The second part considers the legacy of this built environment in the early twentieth century; how political events shaped representations of these buildings; and how processes of destruction and demolition codified interpretations and meanings of the colonial question. Moving beyond the high-profile destruction of Dublin’s Four Courts and General Post Office during the revolutionary period, this analysis will look at the fate of lesser-known public buildings in provincial towns into the early 1920s.

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Inner empire

Architecture and Imperialism in the British Isles, 1550–1950

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