Dermot
A.
Quinn,
D. Phil.
Professor
of
History
College
of Arts
and
Sciences
A member
of the
Seton
Hall
community
since
1990,
Dermot
Quinn is
a
professor
in the
department
of
history
and a
member
of the
Board of
Advisers
of the
G.K.
Chesterton
Institute
for
Faith
and
Culture.
He also
teaches
in Seton
Hall's
Honors
Program.
Educated
at
Trinity
College,
Dublin,
from
which he
graduated
with
first
class
honors
in
history
in 1981,
and at
New
College,
Oxford,
where he
was
awarded
a
doctorate
in 1986,
he has
authored
three
books
and many
articles
and
reviews
in the
field of
British
and
Irish
history.
His
first
book,
Patronage
and
Piety:
English
Roman
Catholics
and
Politics,
1850-1900,
was
published
by
Stanford
University
Press in
1993.
Understanding
Northern
Ireland
(Baseline
Books)
appeared
the same
year.
His
latest
work,
The
Irish in
New
Jersey:
400
Years of
American
Life
(Rutgers
University
Press,
2004)
was
awarded
the New
Jersey
Studies
Academic
Alliance
scholarly
book
prize in
2005.
In
addition,
he has
written
extensively
on
Catholic
social
teaching,
especially
as
exemplified
in the
thought
of G.K.
Chesterton,
and on
the
Catholic
philosophy
of
history,
particularly
in the
work of
the
English
historian,
Christopher
Dawson.
He is
associate
editor
of
The
Chesterton
Review
and will
assume
the
editorship
upon the
retirement
of
Father
Ian
Boyd. A
regular
participant
in
international
conferences,
he has
spoken
in
England,
Ireland,
Croatia,
Lithuania,
Argentina
and,
most
recently,
Brazil.
His
latest
article,
“In
Search
of
Polish
Anti-Semitism,”
received
wide
attention
in
Poland
where it
was the
subject
of a
nationally
televised
debate.
He has
broadcast
on the
BBC,
C-Span,
and
Irish
radio.
His
latest
project
is the
sesquicentennial
history
of Seton
Hall
University.
Dermot
Quinn
lives in
South
Orange
where he
is a
familiar
and
well-regarded
figure.
He is a
sought-after
speaker
on a
wide
variety
of
academic
and
cultural
topics.
As often
as he
can, he
spends
time in
Ireland
for
visits
with
family
and
friends,
as well
as for
research
and
reflection
on the
history
of his
native
country.