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Ireland during the Second World War
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23 December 2015

HISTORY / Europe / Ireland, Second World War, HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / General, Modern warfare, European history
'For historians, magpies novelists and anyone interested in Irish life at this time, Evans' book is an informative and often captivating read.'
Dermot Bolger, Sunday Business Post, April 2014
'Bryce Evans' new book raises a number of important issues, which go far beyond the traditional focus within the literature on diplomacy, neutrality and security'
Andy Bielenberg, Irish Times, July 2014
‘Ireland during the Second World War: Farewell to Plato’s Cave is a rewarding if at times demanding read. It provides a valuable insight into Irish society and demonstrates that Ireland was not just the postcolonial backwater of popular memory until the boom of the 1950s. We can hope that Evans’s revisionist interpretation of the Irish home front during the Emergency will lead to revisionist interpretations of other elements of Irish history during the Emergency and beyond.’
Augustine Meaher, Air University, H-War April 2017
1. Introduction: Farewell to Plato’s cave
2. Anglo-Irish trade and business relations
3. Moral policemen of the domestic economy
4. Conditions in town and country
5. Smuggling
6. Church and state
7. Coercion in the countryside
8. The state and the small man
9. Conclusions
Bibliography
Index