Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 March 2016
Ireland in World War Two: neutrality and survival. Edited by Dermot Keogh and Mervyn O’Driscoll. Pp 352. Cork: Mercier Press. 2004. €16.95.
Propaganda, censorship and Irish neutrality in the Second World War. By Robert Cole. Pp 196. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. 2006. £50.
Con Cremin: Ireland’s wartime diplomat. By Niall Keogh. Pp. 352. Cork: Mercier Press. 2006. €20.
1 Drisceoil, Donai Ó, Censorship in Ireland, 1939–1945 (Cork, 1996)Google Scholar; Girvin, Brian and Roberts, Geoffrey (eds), Ireland and the Second World War (Dublin, 2000)Google Scholar; O’Halpin, Eunan (ed.), M.I.5 and Ireland, 1939–1945: the official history (Dublin, 2003)Google Scholar; Grob-Fitzgibbon, Benjamin, The Irish experience during the Second World War: an oral history (Dublin, 2004)Google Scholar; Hull, Mark M., Irish secrets: German espionage in wartime Ireland, 1939–1945 (Dublin, 2003)Google Scholar; Longaigh, Seosamh O, Emergency law in independent Ireland, 1922–1948 (Dublin, 2006)Google Scholar.
2 Keogh & O’Driscoll (eds), Ireland in World War Two, pp 21–35.
3 Ibid., pp 126–43.
4 Ibid., pp 144–58.
5 Ibid., pp 81–92.
6 Ibid., pp 173–86.
7 Ibid., pp 211–29.
8 Ibid., pp 36–47, 63–80.
9 Ibid., pp 187–210.
10 Ibid., pp 244–58.
11 Cole, Propaganda, censorship & Irish neutrality, p. 91.
12 Ibid., p. 167.
13 Ibid., pp 166–8.
14 Keogh & O’Driscoll (eds), Ireland in World War Two, pp 11–19, 285–93.
15 Ibid., p. 291.
16 ‘Ireland’s Nazis’, a two-part documentary shown on R.T.É. on 9 and 16 Jan. 2007, reinforces this conclusion.