Colum Kenny | |
Nationality: | Irish |
Occupation: | Journalist, barrister and historian |
Known For: | Emeritus Professor at Dublin City University (DCU), in Dublin, Ireland |
Notable Works: | The Enigma of Arthur Griffith |
Colum Kenny is a journalist, barrister and historian. He is Emeritus Professor at Dublin City University (DCU), in Dublin, Ireland. He was formerly chair of the Masters in Journalism programme at DCU in the School of Communications 1982-2015.[1]
Kenny was a member of the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland 2010-2015 and of the Broadcasting Commission of Ireland/IRTC 1998-2003. A former employee of RTE, he was a founding board member of the E.U. Media Desk in Ireland and is a council member of the Irish Legal History Society.[2] He was a member of the Media Mergers Advisory Group that reported to the Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Employment in 2008.[3] The author of many academic articles on cultural and media matters, he is also a member of the National Union of Journalists and a frequent contributor to media debates and a consultant on communications.
Kenny was awarded the DCU President's Award for Research in the Humanities and Social Sciences, 2004/5.
In 2018 he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Irish Legal History Society.[4]
During the night of 5–6 December 1921, Irish delegates at Downing Street signed an agreement to end the War of Independence and create a new Irish state. This is the story of that fraught deal, and of the events and people behind it. The story is told from original sources and eyewitness accounts, and brings to life the Treaty that sparked a civil war but made modern Ireland. Irish negotiators were under great pressure in London. For nearly two months Arthur Griffith, Michael Collins and three others faced some of the most powerful men in the British Empire, including David Lloyd George and Winston Churchill. Griffith and Collins saw the Treaty as a stepping-stone to greater freedom. Both were dead within a year. Colum Kenny turns a spotlight on the key issues and problems they faced, examining why Éamon de Valera stayed away and what the delegates themselves achieved. Ireland was already partitioned when the talking started. The choice was whether or not to fight on for some kind of republic – or accept Britain’s offer of limited independence.[5]
Did Michael Collins say that in signing the Anglo-Irish Treaty on the 6 December 1921 he was signing his own death warrant? Colum Kenny addressed this question in this book.
“A quotation has been attributed to Michael Collins, and very often repeated, to the effect that when he signed the agreement that night, he signed his own death warrant. This statement cannot be confirmed, as only one biographer, Rex Taylor, has claimed to have seen the letter in which it was reportedly made.”
Colum Kenny went on to say, “Collins did write to his friend Kitty Kiernan on 6 December to say that he had not got to bed until 5 o’clock that morning, adding, ‘I don’t know how things will go now but with God’s help we have brought peace to this land of ours - a peace which will end this old strife of ours forever’”[6]
Books by Colum Kenny include: