Is your passion to study Ireland and the Irish people? You can do just that in the heart of New York City’s Greenwich Village. Glucksman Ireland House, a landmark townhouse on Fifth Avenue, is home to New York University’s Center for Irish and Irish American Studies.  Here you'll have an exceptional opportunity to learn what makes the Irish such a distinctive people and, under the direction of its distinguished faculty, make connections with a vibrant community of students, scholars, and intellectuals.
 
The MA Program in Irish and Irish-American Studies at the prestigious Graduate School of Arts and Science at NYU is based at Glucksman Ireland House, a gracious nineteenth century building steps from Washington Square Park.  It attracts both recent graduates, as well as professionals and retirees returning to school to deepen a lifelong interest in Irish history, politics, literature, culture, language, and society.  Full or part-time enrollment and financial aid are available. 
 
Teaching is at the heart of any graduate program. The Ireland House faculty is led by Joe Lee, Glucksman Professor of Irish Studies and Professor of History, former member of the Irish Senate, and prolific author and commentator on Irish public affairs.  With fellow historians Thomas Truxes, Marion Casey, Linda Dowling Almeida, Miriam Nyhan and Nicholas Wolf, the graduate program at Glucksman Ireland House covers nearly six centuries on both sides of the Atlantic, with particular attention to colonialism, emigration, and enduring links between New York City and Ireland.  Irish literature scholars John Waters, Greg Londe, and Abby Bender bring insight and inspiration to the teaching of one of the world’s great literary traditions, from Jonathan Swift to Seamus Heaney and beyond.  Courses in Irish culture studies are taught by Global Distinguished Professor of Music Mick Moloney; by the faculty’s latest recruit, world-renowned dancer and choreographer Jean Butler; and by award-winning Irish-language teacher and native Irish speaker Padraig O’Cearuill.
 
No understanding of Ireland's history or its people is complete without fully recognizing the contributions the Irish have made outside of Ireland, in the Irish diaspora. New York has extraordinary and diverse research collections for Irish studies including that of the New York Public Library and the Archives of Irish America at NYU's Bobst Library, where we preserve a host of rich collections, including NYU Professor Mick Moloney’s unique collection of Irish music and popular culture, and our Archives of Irish America Oral History collection.
 
New York is as familiar a home for Irish writers as Dublin itself. Glucksman Ireland House hosts an impressive cast of Irish authors in public readings. Seamus Heaney, Edna O’Brien, Joseph O’Connor, and Colm Toibin have all met with Irish Studies students. President Michael D. Higgins recently delivered a major address on Irish migration here, in recognition of the example Ireland House faculty had set in producing a truly interdisciplinary approach to the Irish experience. Ireland House is where Liam Clancy gave his last New York concert, and where Irish New Yorkers including Pete Hamill, Alice McDermott, Colum McCann and Peter Quinn come home to launch their books.
 
You can visit Ireland House to attend a sample class.  Also, two upcoming events will highlight scholarships created by philanthropic Irish Americans. Join us on Friday, January 25th, from 5:30 until 7pm for an open house where faculty will answer your questions before the first Blarney Star traditional Irish music concert of the Spring semester. Or visit us on Saturday morning, February 8th, from 10:00 until 11:30 am for a faculty lecture on recent research in Irish historical and literary studies, as part of The Ambassadorship of Literature: On Poetry and Diplomacy, a conference forum on poet-diplomats, of which Ireland has had an outsized share.
 
Take the next step in your Irish journey of discovery from the heart of New York City.  Join recent graduates from a wide range of universities, Vice Presidents of major publishing houses, sales managers of large corporations, actors, bankers, and media executives who have joined the MA in Irish and Irish-American Studies. One exemplary graduate is an empty-nest mother of two whose return to university after 30 years sparked a passion inspiring a brilliant thesis, winning her a fully funded PhD fellowship. NYU’s Irish Studies Program is part of a dynamic school in the most dynamic city in the most dynamic country in the world. So there's no surprise that opportunity follows the Irish trail in New York City, as it has for so long, as it will in the future.

Learn more on their website at irelandhouse.fas.nyu.edu/page/graduate.