[Brown] demonstrates the existence of a significant Enlightenment project in Ireland in the 18th century, a project premised on the basic humanist principle that âman, not God, is the starting point of understanding.â In so doing, Brown recommends that we go beyond the received view of Ireland as a culture crippled by sectarian politics and restore its intellectual heritage within a more capacious horizon of European and Atlantic history. Against the colonial prejudice that saw Ireland as a place of mayhem and barbarism, Brown constructs a counter-narrative of a vibrant intellectual culture informed by ideas of civility and tolerance. He claims that an important Irish Enlightenment flourished for a period between the War of the Two Kings (James and William, 1688â1691) and the 1790s, before regressing into conflicts of ethnic and religious identity in the 19th century⌠This controversial reading of the modern Irish mind is a very welcome addition to the ongoing 2016 debates about where Ireland comes from and where it hopes to go.
- Richard Kearney, Irish Times
As Michael Brown points out in <i>The Irish Enlightenment</i>, Jonathan Swift, George Berkeley, and Edmund Burke are among several writers who gave the age of reason a distinct Irish accent.
- Brendan Walsh, The Tablet
Masterfully guided by Brown, whose comprehensive gaze embraces books both canonical and obscure, texts written in Gaelic as well as those written in English, works written by women and men, and writings emerging from all fractions of society, we are led to see traces of Enlightenment in the most unlikely places. This is exemplary history. It both reformulates an important problem, and draws swathes of new material into the scholarly conversation.
- David Womersley, Standpoint
The Irish Enlightenment has always been seen as something of a poor relation to its English and Scottish siblings. Michael Brownâs groundbreaking book explodes the caricature, revealing how Irish thinkers and writers had a passionate âcommitment to a life of the mindâ that matched anything elsewhere in Europe or the Americas. Bold engagement with social, religious and political issues revealed an Ireland that was most certainly not âin a moribund, catatonic state.â
Catholic Herald
Impressively detailed scholarshipâŚBrownâŚhas written a big, brave and important book. He has authoritatively shown that a debate about enlightenment took place in Ireland and that the debate was in part constitutive of the phenomenon itself.
- David Dwan, Times Literary Supplement
A comprehensive survey of this understudied field.
- M. G. Spencer, Choice
With <i>The Irish Enlightenment</i>, Brown has produced a distinctive, illuminating and often challenging synthesis, with which historians both of Ireland and of the wider Enlightenment need to engage⌠Above all, <i>The Irish Enlightenment</i> leaves its readers enlightened.
- Robert Armstrong, History Today