The contribution of family, kin and community relations to sustaining a rural way of life was the primary focus of Arensberg and Kimball's anthropological study of Irish families in the 1930s, published as Family and Community in Ireland (1940, 1968, 2001). It is a detailed ethnographic study of the familial, communal, and economic relationships of the small farmer class of rural Clare in the west of Ireland. Through the frame of a collaborative community research project with an artist, sociologist and the descendents of the families written about, in this article we explore the consequences of the 1930s anthropological study for community identity and how a research project based on Kimball¿s 1930s field diary provided an oppor...
In this article, the author proposed the hypothesis that while the Irish family system moved from a ...
In Ballybogoin, Northern Ireland historical narratives frame contemporary events and influence their...
In public and personal archives scattered throughout the United States lie the professional correspo...
In this article, the authors explore the consequences of an American 1930s classic anthropological s...
The aim of this study is to treat some perspectives of the family and the community in Ireland in th...
This qualitative analysis sets out to explore family narratives in an Irish context. The study explo...
Family and community in Ireland, first published in 1940 by Conrad Maynadier Arensberg and Solon Too...
This paper analyses the interactions amongst family, household and extended kin through an examinat...
First this paper provides a stream of studies of the family and community in Ireland. A pioneer work...
This article attempts a tentative explanation of structural differences and similarities among conte...
Being ‗migrant‘ in Ireland is often presented in the popular media and academic studies as being som...
In his recent monumental study of twentieth-century Ireland, Diarmaid Ferriter has emphasised pervas...
We consider a methodological opportunity when revisiting classical anthropological studies, namely ...
At the beginning of the 20th century, Irish social structure was dominated by a class of small landh...
The Family Rhythms project examined the Irish experience of family life over an extended period of t...
In this article, the author proposed the hypothesis that while the Irish family system moved from a ...
In Ballybogoin, Northern Ireland historical narratives frame contemporary events and influence their...
In public and personal archives scattered throughout the United States lie the professional correspo...
In this article, the authors explore the consequences of an American 1930s classic anthropological s...
The aim of this study is to treat some perspectives of the family and the community in Ireland in th...
This qualitative analysis sets out to explore family narratives in an Irish context. The study explo...
Family and community in Ireland, first published in 1940 by Conrad Maynadier Arensberg and Solon Too...
This paper analyses the interactions amongst family, household and extended kin through an examinat...
First this paper provides a stream of studies of the family and community in Ireland. A pioneer work...
This article attempts a tentative explanation of structural differences and similarities among conte...
Being ‗migrant‘ in Ireland is often presented in the popular media and academic studies as being som...
In his recent monumental study of twentieth-century Ireland, Diarmaid Ferriter has emphasised pervas...
We consider a methodological opportunity when revisiting classical anthropological studies, namely ...
At the beginning of the 20th century, Irish social structure was dominated by a class of small landh...
The Family Rhythms project examined the Irish experience of family life over an extended period of t...
In this article, the author proposed the hypothesis that while the Irish family system moved from a ...
In Ballybogoin, Northern Ireland historical narratives frame contemporary events and influence their...
In public and personal archives scattered throughout the United States lie the professional correspo...