Anthropologists George and Sharon Gmelch have been studying the quasi-nomadic people known as Travellers since their fieldwork in the early 1970s, when they lived among Travellers and went on the road in their own horse-drawn wagon. In 2011 they returned to seek out families they had known decades before―shadowed by a film crew and taking with them hundreds of old photographs showing the Travellers\u27 former way of life. Many of these images are included in this book, alongside more recent photos and compelling personal narratives that reveal how Traveller lives have changed now that they have left nomadism behind.https://repository.usfca.edu/read_books/1059/thumbnail.jp
This thesis examines the role of Travelling women and their responses to and influences on social ch...
International audienceThis book illustrates fragments of the lives of past and present “nomadic” peo...
The Irish Travellers, a native, traditionally migratory group, were recently accorded formal recogni...
The Travellers, a nomadic group of people indigenous to Ireland, have long been marginalized in Iris...
Ye People: A Photographic Account of Irish Travellers in Transition Tradition is what links one gen...
Travellers, a traditionally nomadic people indigenous to Ireland, have suffered marginalization and ...
Abstract: Until the late 1950s, Irish Travellers lived primarily in rural areas and travelled within...
Irish Travellers, a group of migrant people distinct from the settled Irish society, have been prese...
In recent years, Irish Travellers have been the subject of government efforts at settlement. Many ha...
Based on a series of semi-structured interviews with women travellers in the South of England, the p...
The research captured in this publication builds on Wenham-Clarke’s photographic project The Westway...
The author identifies as Aboriginal-Irish, my Aboriginal ancestors are the Gai-mariagal and the Wira...
International audienceThe present paper focuses on Oein DeBhairduin’s collection of stories Why the ...
Irish Travellers are an indigenous minority who, according to historical evidence, have been part of...
Includes abstract.The concept of the traveller has changed considerably in Irish society over the la...
This thesis examines the role of Travelling women and their responses to and influences on social ch...
International audienceThis book illustrates fragments of the lives of past and present “nomadic” peo...
The Irish Travellers, a native, traditionally migratory group, were recently accorded formal recogni...
The Travellers, a nomadic group of people indigenous to Ireland, have long been marginalized in Iris...
Ye People: A Photographic Account of Irish Travellers in Transition Tradition is what links one gen...
Travellers, a traditionally nomadic people indigenous to Ireland, have suffered marginalization and ...
Abstract: Until the late 1950s, Irish Travellers lived primarily in rural areas and travelled within...
Irish Travellers, a group of migrant people distinct from the settled Irish society, have been prese...
In recent years, Irish Travellers have been the subject of government efforts at settlement. Many ha...
Based on a series of semi-structured interviews with women travellers in the South of England, the p...
The research captured in this publication builds on Wenham-Clarke’s photographic project The Westway...
The author identifies as Aboriginal-Irish, my Aboriginal ancestors are the Gai-mariagal and the Wira...
International audienceThe present paper focuses on Oein DeBhairduin’s collection of stories Why the ...
Irish Travellers are an indigenous minority who, according to historical evidence, have been part of...
Includes abstract.The concept of the traveller has changed considerably in Irish society over the la...
This thesis examines the role of Travelling women and their responses to and influences on social ch...
International audienceThis book illustrates fragments of the lives of past and present “nomadic” peo...
The Irish Travellers, a native, traditionally migratory group, were recently accorded formal recogni...