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Opinion We at Irish universities owe it to our students to address our imperial legacies

Trinity professor Ciaran O’Neill says it’s time for Irish universities to address their own dark imperial past as students now seek real change.

THE #RHODESMUSTFALL CAMPAIGN began in the University of Cape Town in 2015, worked its way through several South African Universities, before rolling to a standstill in Oxford in 2016.

It is easy to see why the statue of British imperialist Rhodes fell in Cape Town, and easier still to see why he didn’t in Britain. In a 2014 poll, 59% of Britons thought that the British Empire was something to be proud of, and 49% thought that those countries colonised by Britain had gained more from it than they had lost.

Many of us here in Ireland are far from proud to be associated with that same empire and yet our links to it are complex and multi-layered, and nowhere more so than in our universities.

The statue question

The summer of 2020 has seen a renewed focus on the legacies of empire in British Universities. In June 2020 Oriel College in Oxford – a sister college of Trinity College Dublin – voted to remove its statue of Cecil Rhodes only for the University Vice-Chancellor (and Waterford-native) Professor Louise Richardson, to declare that ‘hiding your history is not the route to enlightenment.

The result of the standoff is that the University has commissioned a report on the issue that will be completed in early in 2021. Until then, at least, Rhodes will stand. 

The oldest universities are naturally most exposed on this issue. Glasgow and Cambridge have both commissioned exemplary reports and Glasgow has even committed to paying reparations following the outstanding activism of report author and historian Dr Stephen Mullan.

The statue of Colston is already in the water in Bristol, and it seems that Rhodes is on his way to a similar fate.

But what have Irish universities done? What should they do? In Ireland, the closest we have come to a Rhodes-style controversy was a relatively polite conversation about the removal of a pair of mass-produced statues outside the Shelbourne Hotel. It seems somehow meagre, and beside the point. 

Where does Trinity stand?

Here at Trinity College Dublin, we have started a productive conversation among staff and students about how to best confront our own historic ties to imperialism. That conversation has begun, perhaps obviously, with the figureheads that might attract the attention of anti-imperial protest.

In the case of Trinity, that person is likeliest to be Bishop of Cloyne, George Berkeley – a stellar philosopher and one of the most prominent scholars ever produced by the University.

We named our signature brutalist 1960s library after Berkeley, who also gives his name to the citadel of liberal west coast thought in San Francisco, the University of California, Berkeley.

But he was also a slave-owner, who bought and later sold four lives. He renamed these enslaved people Philip, Anthony, Agnes, and Edward, and later sold them, donating the profits to Yale.

Just as troubling, Berkeley adopted a philosophical position arguing that baptism was compatible with continued slavery, helping to deny many victims a potential route out of enslavement and perhaps convincing others of the validity of his position.

Trinity College Dublin prefers, generally, to speak about more robustly anti-imperial campaigners, politicians, and statesmen, and happily, there are many such figures. This is the history we want to hear, and to advance it the College often turns to perhaps the most prominent Trinity figure of the late eighteenth century, Edmund Burke.

Burke’s consistent position was anti-slavery, and he was an important public voice against the unfettered and corrupt expansion of empire at the margins, though he was somewhat selective about which evils he exposed.

Trinity voices were also prominent in the anti-Apartheid movement in the second half of the twentieth century, co-founded by the exiled Kader Asmal, from the Department of Law. 

It is easy for us to try and balance each Berkeley with a Burke, and to point to abolitionists and anti-apartheid activists. But that is a sort of sophistry. Trinity has produced many more ideas and graduates in the service of empire than it has people who have publicly criticised it. 

Deconstructing the past

A 12 June article in the Irish Times pointed to grants made by the Irish parliament to Trinity in the 17th century, noting that this money was imperial in origin in that it was based on revenues from the tobacco trade. This seems to me a somewhat secondary or even tertiary example to have chosen.

Trinity has numerous more direct associations with empire. It was, of course, a beneficiary of the colonisation of Ireland, amassing endowments, parliamentary grants and more than 180,000 acres of land confiscated from Irish people.

The curriculum of the College was progressively geared towards the needs of empire from the eighteenth century onwards, with professors of Sanskrit and other exotic languages helping to teach and acculturate future colonial graduates of all Irish backgrounds. 

The College collections and archives tell the same story. By the late 19th century, Trinity was recognisably an imperial university like Glasgow or Oxford. Its zoological, botanical, and anatomical holdings were amassed by roving Victorian academics whose collecting habits at the margins of empire (and morality) have bequeathed to future generations of Trinity students a large repository of animal and human remains.

Research projects in phrenology, anthropometrics, and other proto-eugenic practices were carried out enthusiastically at Trinity.

Our library contains Syriac, Sumeriac, Ethiopic, and Persian materials. Trinity’s legacies are therefore an outcome of a time when Irish people were deeply invested in the imperial project,  in much the same way that the ethnographic collections were built in the National Museum of Ireland or the holdings of the Royal Irish Academy. 

It is not difficult to discern a coyness about empire in Irish institutions like Trinity, or the former Queens Colleges at Cork and Galway, or indeed University College Dublin, each of which has produced generations of imperial graduates from all religious backgrounds. Irish universities have some work to do in confronting their imperial legacies and are some way behind global movements for doing so.

This is an important task, not just for the sake of transparency but because we must respond to the questions we are hearing from our students, who are increasingly animated by controversies such as #RhodesMustFall and the energy generated by Black Lives Matter.

The demographics of our student intake has altered significantly in the past decade and our classrooms now include many more students of dual, multi or biracial heritage. These students have probing questions about the links between Irish institutions and empire, and we have a responsibility to answer these questions. 

The Trinity Long Room Hub Arts and Humanities Research Institute will host a Global Irish Network webinar on the topic of Irish Universities and Imperial Legacies this evening at 7 pm. Register here.

Ciaran O’Neill is Ussher Assistant Professor in Nineteenth-Century History at Trinity College Dublin and Deputy Director of Trinity Long Room Hub. He is editor, with Finola O’Kane-Crimmins, of the forthcoming book Ireland, Slavery and the Caribbean; Interdisciplinary Perspectives (MUP, 2021). 

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54 Comments
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    Mute Piero Tintori
    Favourite Piero Tintori
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    Dec 26th 2013, 12:18 PM

    To be fair, Enterprise Ireland also deserve a lot of credit helping Irish companies grow internationally

    208
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    Mute knowyourplace
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    Dec 26th 2013, 12:34 PM

    Credit where credit is due

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    Mute robby rottenest
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    Dec 26th 2013, 1:10 PM

    CREDIT. Credit got us into this shit!

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    Mute patrick
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    Dec 26th 2013, 12:30 PM

    We have a corporate tax rate lass than half the European average, surely it can’t be so hard to attract foreign direct investment.

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    Mute Larry L'Oiseau
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    Dec 26th 2013, 3:29 PM

    Large commercial decisions are not made on only one criterion. We have a supportive open economy, relatively we are low on corruption and bribery, we speak English, are well-educated, and have yankee sympathies.
    That also helps…

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    Mute Brid Ryan
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    Dec 26th 2013, 6:16 PM

    Another example of an overly simplistic view of our Corporation tax System. Have a look ..,. http://www.ronanlyons.com/2011/05/17/just-say-non-the-facts-on-corporate-tax-rates-in-europe/

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    Mute Gerry Ryan deG
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    Dec 26th 2013, 12:27 PM

    to be reaaly fair, the taxpayer who funds both of them deserves a lot of credit also, most of whom derive little benefit

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    Mute O'Reilly
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    Dec 26th 2013, 1:10 PM

    Eh, jobs?

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    Mute Gerry Ryan deG
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    Dec 26th 2013, 3:35 PM

    jobs for a small number of citizens at a big cost to other taxpayers but the real scandal is the tax that the companies dont pay, its a neat trick but ask the people who have been dumped when the taxpayer funded Grants run out

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    Mute Kevin Dobson
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    Dec 26th 2013, 10:36 PM

    Gerry. You are a cretin. For every job the State saves on Social Welfare and earns income taxes etc. That doesn’t even include the plethora of indigenous companies that feed off IDA companies. The positive ratio of investment to return with the IDA has been definitively proven. Would you ever educate yourself about the subject you’re pontificating about before commenting. My eyes are sore after reading your rubbish.

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    Mute Tom Keating
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    Dec 26th 2013, 8:30 PM

    Fair play and well done IDA for a job well done. Keep up the good work!

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    Mute maurice
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    Dec 26th 2013, 9:46 PM

    I’m happy the Guardian mentioned the terrific work of the IDA – which is good PR for Ireland. But as for Jedward (2 grown up men acting like 11-year-old girls) – not so good.

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    Mute Seosamh Collier
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    Dec 26th 2013, 10:06 PM

    Ah here now, 11 year old girls aren’t as bad as those clown to be fair.

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    Mute patrick
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    Dec 26th 2013, 12:48 PM

    As Roy would say, its like praising the postman for delivering letters.!

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    Mute Barry O Mahoney
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    Dec 26th 2013, 5:09 PM

    Roy who?

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    Mute Mitch Connor
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    Dec 26th 2013, 12:35 PM

    The Grauniad rails against tax dodging corpos, yet its editorial praises same to the hilt.

    Hypocrites.

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    Mute Buckwheat MacMillan
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    Dec 26th 2013, 5:13 PM

    The Grauniad? Is that a character from lord of the rings?

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    Mute Ian Mac Eochagáin
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    Dec 27th 2013, 9:56 AM

    It’s a reference to how the newspaper used to be full of typos.

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    Mute margaret
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    Dec 26th 2013, 2:22 PM

    Tried to get a job with the IDA years ago. Having no connections at all made that impossible in the Ireland of the 80′S. I wonder have things changed. Doubt it.

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    Mute Paul Carey
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    Dec 26th 2013, 2:53 PM

    Maybe you didn’t have the necessary skills or experience????

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    Mute margaret
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    Dec 26th 2013, 3:06 PM

    Job advertised was for Assistant Executive, Trainee, a third level qualification (non specified) required. Quite general. Always wondered what the background of the people who landed those very coveted jobs back in the recession hit 80′s was.

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    Mute cooperguy
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    Dec 26th 2013, 5:14 PM

    Ha I’m sure plenty of people didn’t get the job. That’s what happens when more than one person applies for a job. No need to play the victim

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    Mute joe
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    Dec 26th 2013, 12:27 PM

    When i went to school it was the industrial development authority. Why the name change?

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    Mute Larry L'Oiseau
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    Dec 26th 2013, 3:30 PM

    Things change Joe….

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    Mute Stephen McMahon
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    Dec 26th 2013, 9:30 PM

    I feel your pain Joe, its just not fair….

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    Mute Dermot Mc Loughlin
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    Dec 26th 2013, 4:34 PM

    Thanks IDA for not providing one job or offering one penny of investment in Cavan in 40 years.

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    Mute David Burke
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    Dec 26th 2013, 7:11 PM

    Can’t blame the IDA that multi-nationals don’t want to go to Cavan. Is there anything that Cavan is better for than any other county?

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    Mute Reg
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    Dec 26th 2013, 8:07 PM

    But you had the financial wizzardry of Sean Quinn……just been watching Harry Potter!

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    Mute David Giles
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    Dec 27th 2013, 8:36 AM

    This article is highly complimentary to the IDA. The Guardian, being a left-wing newspaper, likes the opportunity to praise the work of a successful government agency like the IDA. The IDA competes successfully against similar British agencies who are trying to attract exactly the same sort of jobs from many of the same investors. Ireland’s low corporation tax system and more effective educational system gives the IDA an edge over the British agencies. The IDA has done a good job over the years but faces stiff competition from many other countries, particularly countries outside the EU where wages, energy costs and income tax and social security contributions are lower. But Ireland has the advantage of being an English speaking country within the EU, the world’s most important single Market. Much has been achieved but much more remains to be done.

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