'Comerford was appointed to the department of modern history, NUI Maynooth, in 1977, and was professor and head of department from September 1989 to November 2009. From 1989 to 1992 he was Dean of Arts. His main research area was in political mobilisation in modern society, with particular reference to Ireland and, for purposes of comparison, several other countries like the Netherlands. From 1977 he personally supervised about seventy successful major theses, including thirty PhDs and from 1988 he directed the department's research programme in the production of about one hundred and fifty major theses. Last February he retired from the university and this collection of essays has been published in his honour to mark the event. Former colleagues and students have contributed on subjects of interest to Comerford, particularly on how popular perceptions of the past and history are constructed. Topics include the past in popular song from 1798 to 1900, Irish Catholic emigrants and the national past, Isaac Butt and C. S. Parnell, and the progress of nationalism. The introduction gives a biographical sketch of Professor Comerford and an appendix lists his publications.' Books Ireland May 2010 'The purpose of this collection of essays is to examine the polemical nature of Ireland's past or how history has been manipulated and misinterpreted. They were written on the occasion of the retirement from NUI Maynooth of R. V. Comerford as professor of history. It was long a concern of Comerford himself how history was understood and used in Ireland. So the essays are not about past controversies but rather about the controversial nature of history. - essays cover the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries, focusing on local, regional and national concerns. They vary too in theme, including popular songs, national school text-books and even the country house. They all share the common view that the misunderstanding of history has caused many problems in Ireland and, the other side of the same coin, that some groups have deliberately exploited particular versions of the past. Taken as a whole this book provides some interesting ideas on Irish history and postulates the idea, perhaps indirectly, that many of Ireland's woes derive from a misunderstanding of the past. There are many thought-provoking essays here and Professor Comerford would no doubt approve of the approach and conclusions put forward by his colleagues and former students.' Books Ireland December 2010 'The wide-ranging focus of the essays - the mentalite of Protestant clerics, popular songs, memory and politics within Irish localities, the teaching of history, women's writing, emigration, Home Rule politics, the march of nationalism, tourism, and the fate of the 'Big House' in Ireland - reflect many strains within Comerford's own broad scholarship. Indeed, his influence on many of the contributors is undeniable. - The process of re-imagining the national past is one that this book expertly navigates from a range of perspectives; it stands as an important and fascinating book in its own regard, and is thus a most fitting tribute to R. V. Comerford, a pioneering scholar and writer of the first rank within modern Irish historiography.' English Historical Review cxxvi: 523 (Dec. 2011)