In “The Fountain,” we revive a tradition dating back to the earliest days of the journal. Edie Shillue spent a year living in Northern Ireland, wandering the streets of Derry and Belfast, the byways of the villages and the country towns, enjoying the “crack,” tossing back more than the odd pint of Guinness — and taking it all in, filling notebook after notebook with her keen observations and acute insights — definitely a different view of the conflict in Northern Ireland, but fastidious to a fault. We hope that the tradition of publishing original works of literature once revived will continue to be revived
Irish newspaper collections are a rich source of information on historical droughts. Following a sea...
AMONG the flurry of reviews and commentaries that followed the publication of volumes I to III of t...
Gastronomy might appear to be an unlikely context for any consideration of William Wilde’s well-know...
This creative nonfiction essay explores the interrelatedness of place—in this case, the island of In...
This volume of essays, which originated in the inaugural Dublin Gastronomy Symposium held in the Dub...
The article reviews two books On the Raft With Fr. Roseliep, by James Liddy and Honeysuckle, Hone...
That summer we lived in an icebox of a house, where nothing worked. The gas stove was stuck in a chi...
Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill once described the act of writing poetry in Irish as an act akin to placing a ba...
From the late 1960s to the 1990s, Northern Ireland experienced turbulence and violence, as Unionist ...
This article joins others in The Irish Journal of American Studies reflecting back on the history of...
Martha C. Carpentier is Professor of English at Seton Hall University in New Jersey, where she teach...
This is the author accepted manuscript.This article argues that insufficient attention has been paid...
Seamus Heaney’s poetry is rich in detail about agricultural and food practices in his native Norther...
The future of the Great Hunger Museum at Quinnipiac University in Hamden --In the 1650s a group of E...
In this issue: Tolland County - Many Irish footprints then & now; Irish roots deep and plentiful in ...
Irish newspaper collections are a rich source of information on historical droughts. Following a sea...
AMONG the flurry of reviews and commentaries that followed the publication of volumes I to III of t...
Gastronomy might appear to be an unlikely context for any consideration of William Wilde’s well-know...
This creative nonfiction essay explores the interrelatedness of place—in this case, the island of In...
This volume of essays, which originated in the inaugural Dublin Gastronomy Symposium held in the Dub...
The article reviews two books On the Raft With Fr. Roseliep, by James Liddy and Honeysuckle, Hone...
That summer we lived in an icebox of a house, where nothing worked. The gas stove was stuck in a chi...
Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill once described the act of writing poetry in Irish as an act akin to placing a ba...
From the late 1960s to the 1990s, Northern Ireland experienced turbulence and violence, as Unionist ...
This article joins others in The Irish Journal of American Studies reflecting back on the history of...
Martha C. Carpentier is Professor of English at Seton Hall University in New Jersey, where she teach...
This is the author accepted manuscript.This article argues that insufficient attention has been paid...
Seamus Heaney’s poetry is rich in detail about agricultural and food practices in his native Norther...
The future of the Great Hunger Museum at Quinnipiac University in Hamden --In the 1650s a group of E...
In this issue: Tolland County - Many Irish footprints then & now; Irish roots deep and plentiful in ...
Irish newspaper collections are a rich source of information on historical droughts. Following a sea...
AMONG the flurry of reviews and commentaries that followed the publication of volumes I to III of t...
Gastronomy might appear to be an unlikely context for any consideration of William Wilde’s well-know...