The Politics of Time III: Ireland After Memory
Former colonies and former empires often suffer from the same political condition: the past becomes more emotionally powerful than the future. The emotional content differs. Colonies remember humiliation. Empires remember importance. But both can become trapped by memory. Politics then slowly shifts from becoming to remembering. This helps explain the strange temporal relationship between modern Ireland and the United Kingdom. For decades after independence, Ireland possessed a powerful story about the past: occupation, famine, rebellion, sacrifice, partition, and cultural survival. These were not merely historical events. They became the emotional infrastructure of the state itself. ...