A man in a black jacket pointing at something

Irish Republican Storytelling

Revolutionary Ireland

Lorcan Collins
No items found.
1
/
9
Submission
IADT Dublin
Language
English
Source
Public Domain
Format
Podcast
Era
Late Modern: 1800—1945
Sphere
Political
Submission
IADT Dublin
Language
English
Source
Public Domain
Format
Podcast
Era
Late Modern: 1800—1945
Sphere
Political

Lorcan Collins' podcast Revolutionary Ireland demonstrates how digital media, community engagement, and passionate storytelling can bring historical research to life. Through rigorous grassroots investigation and compelling narration, Collins crafts historical narratives that connect past and present, shedding light on key moments in Ireland's struggle for independence.

The podcast's focus on key figures, battles, and political landscapes demonstrates how shared narratives are constructed through selective emphasis on dramatic moments and heroic individuals. By distilling complex historical processes into vivid narratives centred on identifiable protagonists, Collins creates accessible frameworks for understanding national identity that follow established patterns of mythological storytelling while maintaining historical credibility through informed research.

Collins' engaging narrative style demonstrates how effective contemporary history maintains emotional resonance while addressing factual complexity. By balancing compelling storytelling with historical accuracy, the podcast creates experiences that function simultaneously as entertainment and education, allowing audiences to develop emotional connections to historical events while enhancing their factual understanding. This dual functionality parallels traditional mythological narratives, which typically combined instructive content with engaging delivery.

The podcast format itself represents significant evolution in how national narratives are transmitted and consumed. By creating episodic audio content accessible through digital platforms, Collins adapts traditional storytelling to contemporary media consumption patterns, ensuring historical narratives remain accessible to audiences accustomed to on-demand digital content. This adaptation exemplifies how historical thinking maintains cultural relevance through continuous media evolution, finding new vessels for transmission while preserving core narrative structures and symbolic frameworks.

𝌇 READ: "1916 Rebellion Walking Tour", Lorcan Collins; ▷ LISTEN: "Revolutionary Ireland", Apple Podcasts.

↑ ▢ "Lorcan Collins leading the 1916 Rebellion Walking Tour", 2023. Irish historian and author Lorcan Collins speaking during his Revolutionary Ireland walking tour in Dublin; Source: Collins. |<– ▢ ▢ ▢ –>| Irish Easter Rising 25th anniversary postage stamp (1941) showing a Volunteer at the GPO with proclamation text; The shell of the GPO on Sackville Street after the 1916 Rising (May 1916); Irish Citizen Army group outside Liberty Hall under banner "We serve neither King nor Kaiser, but Ireland!" (1914); Irish revolutionaries imprisoned at Frongoch Internment camp in Wales after the Easter Rising (1916); Captured Irish soldiers in Stafford Gaol with Michael Collins marked with an 'x' (1916); Sources: Irish Minister of Posts and Telegraphs, National Library of Ireland, The Irish Times; Public domain.