Humanism and “The Priest in Politics”: Sean O’Faolain, Edward Said and John Henry Newman

The November 2012 death from septicaemia of an Indian woman, Ms Savita Halappanavar, at an Irish hospital and the subsequent claim from her husband that she had repeatedly asked for a termination of her pregnancy over a three-day period but was refused on the grounds that Ireland was a “Catholic cou...

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Main Author: Alfred Markey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Asociación Española de Estudios Irlandeses 2013-03-01
Series:Estudios Irlandeses
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.estudiosirlandeses.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Alfred_Markey_8.pdf
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spelling doaj-90abbf12c1f5492f8e9a075624dae2462020-11-25T00:34:22ZengAsociación Española de Estudios IrlandesesEstudios Irlandeses1699-311X1699-311X2013-03-01885364882Humanism and “The Priest in Politics”: Sean O’Faolain, Edward Said and John Henry NewmanAlfred Markey0 University of León, Spain The November 2012 death from septicaemia of an Indian woman, Ms Savita Halappanavar, at an Irish hospital and the subsequent claim from her husband that she had repeatedly asked for a termination of her pregnancy over a three-day period but was refused on the grounds that Ireland was a “Catholic country”, has once again brought to the fore the issue of the separation of Church and State in Ireland. In response to the controversy that has arisen, this paper revisits the inspiring figure of Sean O’Faolain with a view to showing his relevance to today’s debates. Reading O’Faolain in relation to the humanistic language of Edward Said, and consciously influenced by the latter’s recommendation that scholarship be attuned to currents of the past as well as the present, this paper looks closely at O’Faolain’s polemic, “The Priest in Politics”, in which he invokes the inspiring, humanistic, intellectual example of Cardinal Newman, with a view to showing the importance of public intellectuals in bringing about change and the value of the strategic use of humanism in order to contest the hegemony of powerful institutions such as the Catholic Church.http://www.estudiosirlandeses.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Alfred_Markey_8.pdfChurch and StateHumanismEdward SaidSean O’FaolainJohn Henry Newman
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alfred Markey
spellingShingle Alfred Markey
Humanism and “The Priest in Politics”: Sean O’Faolain, Edward Said and John Henry Newman
Estudios Irlandeses
Church and State
Humanism
Edward Said
Sean O’Faolain
John Henry Newman
author_facet Alfred Markey
author_sort Alfred Markey
title Humanism and “The Priest in Politics”: Sean O’Faolain, Edward Said and John Henry Newman
title_short Humanism and “The Priest in Politics”: Sean O’Faolain, Edward Said and John Henry Newman
title_full Humanism and “The Priest in Politics”: Sean O’Faolain, Edward Said and John Henry Newman
title_fullStr Humanism and “The Priest in Politics”: Sean O’Faolain, Edward Said and John Henry Newman
title_full_unstemmed Humanism and “The Priest in Politics”: Sean O’Faolain, Edward Said and John Henry Newman
title_sort humanism and “the priest in politics”: sean o’faolain, edward said and john henry newman
publisher Asociación Española de Estudios Irlandeses
series Estudios Irlandeses
issn 1699-311X
1699-311X
publishDate 2013-03-01
description The November 2012 death from septicaemia of an Indian woman, Ms Savita Halappanavar, at an Irish hospital and the subsequent claim from her husband that she had repeatedly asked for a termination of her pregnancy over a three-day period but was refused on the grounds that Ireland was a “Catholic country”, has once again brought to the fore the issue of the separation of Church and State in Ireland. In response to the controversy that has arisen, this paper revisits the inspiring figure of Sean O’Faolain with a view to showing his relevance to today’s debates. Reading O’Faolain in relation to the humanistic language of Edward Said, and consciously influenced by the latter’s recommendation that scholarship be attuned to currents of the past as well as the present, this paper looks closely at O’Faolain’s polemic, “The Priest in Politics”, in which he invokes the inspiring, humanistic, intellectual example of Cardinal Newman, with a view to showing the importance of public intellectuals in bringing about change and the value of the strategic use of humanism in order to contest the hegemony of powerful institutions such as the Catholic Church.
topic Church and State
Humanism
Edward Said
Sean O’Faolain
John Henry Newman
url http://www.estudiosirlandeses.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Alfred_Markey_8.pdf
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