TY - JOUR AU - Jeffries, Chloe AB - Book Re vie ws 751 control of the body from IRB conspirators. The outbreak of war, and the IPP’s declaration to fight on the side of Britain, detonated the polite fiction of unity within the Volunteers. McCluskey maps the development of the anti-IPP Volunteers in Tyrone after the outbreak of war, noting that parts of rural East Tyrone effectively became ‘no go’ areas for the Party, enforced by republican- led battalions (p. 237). Yet substantial parts of Tyrone remained impenetrable to the Sinn Féin advance because of the embedded Hibernian network. In this, Tyrone is an unrepresentative nationalist county in the broader Irish context; but this is what gives McCluskey’s book such flavour. The AOH, in common with their Ribbonmen ancestors, have remained something of a lacuna within Irish historiography, and the insights, complexities and oddities that McCluskey throws up from the Tyrone traditions of Hibernianism are immensely welcome. The book suffers, however, from several flaws. McCluskey is eager to inject aspects of Gramscian theory into his interpretations of Tyrone political culture, but the results largely bookend his study rather than permeate it. The introduction and conclusion outline Gramsci’s theory of hegemony and ideology, and how the contest between Fenians TI - Enacting Brittany: Tourism and Culture in Provincial France, 1871–1939, by Patrick Young JF - The English Historical Review DO - 10.1093/ehr/ceu087 DA - 2014-06-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/oxford-university-press/enacting-brittany-tourism-and-culture-in-provincial-france-1871-1939-cphbiHkAd5 SP - 751 EP - 753 VL - 129 IS - 538 DP - DeepDyve ER -