Journal of a Frustrated Soul: John Henry Newman’s Dublin Diary (November 1853—March 1856) and the Perceived Failure of the Catholic University of Ireland

Volume XXXII (Supplement) of The Letters and Diaries of John Henry Newman, published in October 2008, includes a previously unpublished journal of his time in Dublin which Newman had kept from November 1853 to March 1856. The diary covers a range of administrative and other details to do with his Re...

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Main Author: Pádraic Conway
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée 2009-12-01
Series:Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/cve/4854
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spelling doaj-34ebc4bc1d32422cbc1d7de7ac6231632020-11-25T00:57:27ZengPresses Universitaires de la MéditerranéeCahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens0220-56102009-12-017010.4000/cve.4854Journal of a Frustrated Soul: John Henry Newman’s Dublin Diary (November 1853—March 1856) and the Perceived Failure of the Catholic University of IrelandPádraic ConwayVolume XXXII (Supplement) of The Letters and Diaries of John Henry Newman, published in October 2008, includes a previously unpublished journal of his time in Dublin which Newman had kept from November 1853 to March 1856. The diary covers a range of administrative and other details to do with his Rectorship of the Catholic University of Ireland but its most significant entries relate to Newman’s relationships with the Irish bishops. One entry in particular raises the question whether and to what extent the bishops were actually committed to the Catholic University project or whether their primary concern was not the more negative one of blocking the efforts of the Queen’s Colleges. While this or very similar material had been reproduced in the Autobiographical Writings and picked up by early biographers such as Wilfrid Ward, it is given an enhanced impact when read in its original context in the Dublin journal. This prompts us to reconsider that historiography which tends to reduce considerations of the success or otherwise of the Catholic University to a clash between Newman and Archbishop Paul Cullen. It must be acknowledged that Newman’s subsequent—i.e. non-contemporary—writing on the matter has been a key determinant of this trend. It is timely then, in the light of the publication of Newman’s Dublin Diary to reassess current thinking and identify more clearly the challenges for historians of the period.http://journals.openedition.org/cve/4854
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pádraic Conway
spellingShingle Pádraic Conway
Journal of a Frustrated Soul: John Henry Newman’s Dublin Diary (November 1853—March 1856) and the Perceived Failure of the Catholic University of Ireland
Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
author_facet Pádraic Conway
author_sort Pádraic Conway
title Journal of a Frustrated Soul: John Henry Newman’s Dublin Diary (November 1853—March 1856) and the Perceived Failure of the Catholic University of Ireland
title_short Journal of a Frustrated Soul: John Henry Newman’s Dublin Diary (November 1853—March 1856) and the Perceived Failure of the Catholic University of Ireland
title_full Journal of a Frustrated Soul: John Henry Newman’s Dublin Diary (November 1853—March 1856) and the Perceived Failure of the Catholic University of Ireland
title_fullStr Journal of a Frustrated Soul: John Henry Newman’s Dublin Diary (November 1853—March 1856) and the Perceived Failure of the Catholic University of Ireland
title_full_unstemmed Journal of a Frustrated Soul: John Henry Newman’s Dublin Diary (November 1853—March 1856) and the Perceived Failure of the Catholic University of Ireland
title_sort journal of a frustrated soul: john henry newman’s dublin diary (november 1853—march 1856) and the perceived failure of the catholic university of ireland
publisher Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée
series Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
issn 0220-5610
publishDate 2009-12-01
description Volume XXXII (Supplement) of The Letters and Diaries of John Henry Newman, published in October 2008, includes a previously unpublished journal of his time in Dublin which Newman had kept from November 1853 to March 1856. The diary covers a range of administrative and other details to do with his Rectorship of the Catholic University of Ireland but its most significant entries relate to Newman’s relationships with the Irish bishops. One entry in particular raises the question whether and to what extent the bishops were actually committed to the Catholic University project or whether their primary concern was not the more negative one of blocking the efforts of the Queen’s Colleges. While this or very similar material had been reproduced in the Autobiographical Writings and picked up by early biographers such as Wilfrid Ward, it is given an enhanced impact when read in its original context in the Dublin journal. This prompts us to reconsider that historiography which tends to reduce considerations of the success or otherwise of the Catholic University to a clash between Newman and Archbishop Paul Cullen. It must be acknowledged that Newman’s subsequent—i.e. non-contemporary—writing on the matter has been a key determinant of this trend. It is timely then, in the light of the publication of Newman’s Dublin Diary to reassess current thinking and identify more clearly the challenges for historians of the period.
url http://journals.openedition.org/cve/4854
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