“感谢上帝,我一直在大力推动祖国”:暴力和社会在爱尔兰共和军指挥官利亚姆·林奇的通信中的作用

IF 0.2 Q4 AREA STUDIES
Thomas Earls FitzGerald
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文通过对爱尔兰共和军领袖利亚姆·林奇(1893-1923)的著作的质询,对爱尔兰共和军(IRA)在独立战争(1919-1921)和内战(1922-1923)中与暴力和社会问题的关系进行了专题考察,特别是考察了林奇对暴力、社会问题的作用的理解,以及他在内战中的关键作用。在独立战争中,林奇从科克和明斯特爱尔兰共和军的地方领袖一跃成为全国领袖之一在内战中,他成为了整个爱尔兰共和军的参谋长,直到1923年4月死于战斗。林奇是一个虔诚而害羞的人,但他也表现出对共和事业的高度忠诚,以及天生的组织天赋。与他安静而敏感的性格形成对比的是,在他的革命生涯中,林奇一直呼吁暴力措施的升级,经常设想军事和社会解决方案,这些方案从未被充分考虑过,如果实施的话,可能弊大于利。最近,杰玛·克拉克和布莱恩·休斯探讨了暴力动态的问题,而加文·福斯特则进一步加深了我们对内战中阶级冲突的理解,但这篇文章是第一次从爱尔兰革命后期爱尔兰共和军领导人的角度对这些问题进行系统分析。文章认为,虽然林奇的组织才能和奉献精神是毋庸置疑的,但他缺乏内战中必要的领导技能,而且经常根据他的地方或地区观点而不是国家观点来设想不切实际的解决方案,或者无法考虑到他的想法的后果。这篇文章认为,对林奇观点的探索揭示了许多关于革命激进主义以及独立和内战时期的情况。本文希望能进一步了解革命时期积极分子的动机、政治暴力实施的后果以及共和运动内部社会问题与民族问题之间的相互作用和紧张关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“I thank God that I have been in the very big push for the motherland”: The Role of Violence and Society in the Correspondence of IRA Commander Liam Lynch
This article is a thematic examination of the Irish Republican Army’s (IRA) relationship with both violence and social issues in the War of Independence (1919-1921) and Civil War (1922-1923) through an interrogation of the writings of Irish republican leader Liam Lynch (1893-1923), specifically, looking at Lynch’s understanding of the role of violence, social issues, and his crucial role in Civil War. Lynch went from a position of local leadership in the Cork and then Munster IRA in the War of Independence to one of national leadership by going on to become Chief of Staff of the whole IRA in the Civil War, before dying in combat in April 1923. Lynch was a highly religious and shy man but who also displayed a much remarked devotion to the republican cause, together with a natural gift for organisation. In contrast to his quiet and sensitive persona though, throughout his revolutionary career Lynch consistently called for an escalation of violent measures and often envisaged both military and social solutions which were never fully thought out and if implemented could well have done more harm than good. Issues around the dynamics of violence have recently been explored by Gemma Clark and Brian Hughes, while Gavin Foster has added further layers to our understanding of class conflict in the civil war but this article is the first systematic analysis of these issues from the perspective of the leading IRA figure during the latter stages of Ireland’s revolution. The article argues that while Lynch’s organisational talents and devotion are unquestionable, he lacked the leadership skills necessary in the civil war and often envisaged impractical solutions based on what was often his still local or regional rather than national viewpoint, or inability to consider the ramifi cations of his ideas. The article contends that an exploration of Lynch’s perspectives reveals much about revolutionary activism and of the ar of Independence and Civil war era IRA. The article hopes to further the understanding of the motivations of activists during the revolutionary period, the ramifi cations of the implementation of political violence together with the interplay and tensions within the republican movement between social issues and the national question.
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