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April 4, 2017
Fund for Irish Studies at Princeton University presents
“An Irish solution? Contraception, the Catholic Church and Irish Society 1960-1983”
Scholar of modern Irish history lectures at Princeton University
Photo caption: Mary Daly, Professor of Modern Irish History at University College Dublin Photo credit: Courtesy of University College Dublin What: A lecture on “An Irish solution? Contraception, the Catholic Church and Irish Society 1960-1983" presented by Princeton University’s Fund for Irish Studies Who: Mary Daly, Professor of Modern Irish History at University College Dublin When: Friday, April 14 at 4:30 p.m. Where: James M. Stewart ’32 Theater at 185 Nassau Street, Princeton Free and open to the public
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(Princeton, NJ) Mary Daly, Professor of Modern Irish History at University College Dublin, will
present a lecture on “An Irish solution? Contraception, the Catholic Church and Irish Society
1960-1983" as part of the 2016-2017 Fund for Irish Studies series at Princeton University on
Friday, April 14 at 4:30 p.m. at the Lewis Center for the Arts’ James M. Stewart ’32 Theater,
185 Nassau Street. This event is free and open to the public.
Drawn from her extensive research, Daly’s lecture will explore Irish family planning and the role
of the Catholic Church, focusing on legal and social developments including the impact of Roe
v. Wade on Irish debates.
Mary Daly was elected as the first female President of the Royal Irish Academy in its 229-year
history in 2014. She is one of Ireland’s most prominent senior historians and is a member of the
government’s Expert Advisory Group on Commemorations. She is emeritus professor of history
at University College Dublin (UCD) and served for seven years as Principal of UCD College of
Arts and Celtic Studies; she has also held visiting positions at Harvard University and Boston
College. She has served on Ireland’s National Archives Advisory Council, the Irish Manuscripts
Commission, and the Higher Education Authority. In 2015 she was appointed as a member of
the Commission of Inquiry into Mother and Baby Homes. Daly was involved in the
commemoration of the sesquicentenary of the great famine 1995-97, and with Dr. Margaret
O’Callaghan she directed a research project on the Golden Jubilee of the 1916 Rising, resulting
in the publication of a major edited work: 1916 in 1966: Commemorating the Easter Rising
(2007). Over the course of her career, Daly has researched widely and published prolifically,
notably: Dublin, the Deposed Capital: A Social and Economic History, 1860-1914 (1984);
Women and Work in Ireland (1997); The Slow Failure: Population Decline and Independent
Ireland, 1920-1973 (2006); with Theo Hoppen, Gladstone: Ireland and Beyond (2011) and most
recently Sixties Ireland: Reshaping the Economy, State and Society, 1957 – 1973 (2016). With
Eugenio Biagini she is co-editor of The Cambridge History of Modern Ireland, which will be
published in May 2017. She is a graduate of UCD and Oxford University and a member of the
Acadaemia Europaea.
The Fund for Irish Studies, chaired by Princeton professor Clair Wills, affords all Princeton
students, and the community at large, a wider and deeper sense of the languages, literatures,
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drama, visual arts, history, politics, and economics not only of Ireland but of “Ireland in the
world.” The series is co-produced by the Lewis Center for the Arts.
Information on Fund for Irish Studies series events can be found at fis.princeton.edu. The 2016-
17 series, which has welcomed actor Lisa Dwan, musicians Brian Ó hAirt, Len Graham and Iarla
Ó Lionáird, composer Donnacha Dennehy, and held a recent symposium on Irish lyric and song,
will conclude with a reading by Kevin Barry from his novel Beatlebone on April 28.
To learn more about the over 100 performances, exhibitions, readings, screenings, concerts and
lectures presented each year by the Lewis Center for the Arts, most of them free, visit
arts.princeton.edu.
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