Manuals of Immorality: Censoring publications in twentieth-century Ireland

Wood Quay Venue, Wednesday 15th April

The scale and ambition of the Irish censorship regime is preserved in a blacklist of over 12,000 publications. From 1930 to 2016, the censorship board banned all manner of printed material. Sex education manuals, pulp fiction, nineteenth-century pornography, celebrity memoirs, and newspapers and magazines appear alongside literature from the greatest twentieth-century writers. This state censorship emerged from the report of the Committee on Evil Literature (1926), which gathered opinions from churchmen of all persuasions, newsagents, charities, trade unions and civil servants. The moral attitudes of the committee’s final report permeated the first Censorship of Publications Act in 1929. Through case studies of banned publications, this lecture will explore how sexuality and reproduction terrified Irish censors who believed banning advice manuals such as Married Love by Marie Stopes would protect children. John McGahern, famously censored in 1965, called the system ‘cruel, inhuman and fascistic’. It was also extraordinarily long-lived – In Dublin Magazine was banned in 1999 and the last book was added to the blacklist in 2016. This lecture will explore how censorship worked, who collaborated and who resisted, and how it profoundly affected human relationships in twentieth-century Ireland.

ISL interpretation will be provided. This talk will be recorded and uploaded to Dublin City Heritage on YouTube.

This talk forms part of the Oak Room Heritage Talk Series, created by Dublin City Council's Heritage Office as an action of the Dublin City Strategic Heritage Plan 2024-2029. It is part-funded by the Heritage Council. Email [email protected] with any queries.


Date:
Wednesday 15th April
Time:
6.00pm
Price:
Free
Address:
The Wood Quay Venue, Fishamble Street, Wood Quay, Dublin 8, Ireland

Google Map of The Wood Quay Venue, Fishamble Street, Wood Quay, Dublin 8, Ireland

You might also like...

What's on

Dublin Bowie Festival

Various Locations

The Dublin Bowie Festival, the biggest arts festival in the world dedicated to David Bowie, returns from February 24th to March 1st 2026, featuring tribute bands, talks, exhibitions, DJs, screenings, and special guests Live Music, Q&A's, Memorabilia & Merch, Movies, Concert/Documentaries, Quiz & more. Check out the full programme details.

What's on

Dublin International Film Festival

Various Locations

For 11 unforgettable days in February, Dublin transforms into a vibrant hub of cinematic excellence. DIFF brings the best of Irish and international cinema to the capital for a celebration of storytelling. We welcome the lovers, the dreamers, and the curious newcomers. From world premieres to intimate screenings, exclusive Q&As to parties and celebrations, DIFF offers a unique journey into the world of film, all set against the backdrop of buzz of the Irish capital. Join us and be part of a contemporary cinema experience that connects communities, ignites ideas, and inspires a lov

What's on

The Annual UNESCO City of Literature Lecture

Pearse Street Library

For this year's Dublin UNESCO City of Literature lecture, Prof. Chris Morash, Seamus Heaney Professor of Irish Writing at Trinity College Dublin, will look at Sean O'Casey, one of Dublin’s most admired playwrights at the height of his fame, and some of the ways in which both the city, and the National Theatre, nurtured his remarkable talent. One hundred years ago, on February 8, 1926, Sean O’Casey’s play about the 1916 Rising, The Plough and the Stars, sparked one of the most controversial and memorable nights in the history of the Abbey Theatre, when there were protests in the theatr