posted on 2022-09-12, 11:38authored byDeirdre Ní Chuanacháin
The utopian propensity, the impulse to a better world, is found throughout human
culture. However, its expression is necessarily historically and culturally variable.
The leitmotif on which utopianism in Ireland is based has an extensive and varied
pre-history to be found in travellers’ tales, the oral tradition of the Celtic Otherworld
and in the early vision poems which reached their apotheosis in the political aisling
of the eighteenth century. Moreover, in the political realm, the vision of a nation,
lost or not yet won, resonates in speeches, songs, manifestos. The emergent
utopianism of the eighteenth century is predicated on both memory and reflections
of the past as well as on visions for the future. These memories and reflections have
been imagined and re-imagined in many different cultural forms, both in texts and
in social practice. They move from dialogue to satire, from aisling to polemic, from
visions of a golden age, to an imagined Eden far away to realistic discourses of
improvement, self-reliance and patriotism. This thesis explores these varieties of
utopianism in eighteenth-century Ireland. Based on what is recoverable and what
has been recovered to date, I argue that a distinct utopianism emerged in the early
decades of the eighteenth-century based on the improving visions of the Dublin
Society. The imperative to improve, the interface between the languages, Irish and
English, between the cultures of the Catholic and Protestant communities, and
between colonial and anti-colonial writings permeate the spaces of eighteenthcentury
Irish utopianism. Utopianism, beyond all the definitional difficulties, is
basically a process, one that is continually being reworked. The philosophy of Irish
utopianism of the eighteenth century matured steadily during the subsequent
centuries and contributed, I suggest, to the formation of an identifiably modern
society in Ireland.