This chapter considers Irish writers’ continual reimagining of the Great Famine and the way it has shaped understandings of the past and present. In doing so, it addresses novels and short stories from nineteenth-century writers such as William Carleton, Mary Anne Hoare, and Margaret Brew, who sought to explain or reinterpret the catastrophe while it was still a living memory. The return of the Famine in later historical and neo-Victorian fiction by writers such as Liam O’Flaherty, John Banville, and Joseph O’Connor is considered in light of the association between Famine fiction and present-day crises in the post-independence era. The discussion also extends to the resurgence in literary interest in the Famine in the 1990s and early 2000s,...
This article offers a reading of Liam O’Flaherty’s Famine, published in 1937. It first considers the...
The critical debate surrounding the Great Famine in Irish Literature centers on the notion of a perc...
In the 1841 census three-quarters of houses in Ireland were placed in the lowest two classes, one-ro...
The Great Famine (1845--1852) was not only a catastrophic moment in Irish history, it was and remain...
This is the author's accepted PDF version of an book chapter published in In Julia M. Wright (Ed.), ...
Literature of the Great Irish Famine struggles to contain the disaster within narrative. William Car...
Böhm-Schnitker N. Neo-Victorian Re-Imaginations of the Famine: Negotiating Bare Life through Transna...
Contains fulltext : 101965.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)288 p
Taking its cue from transcultural memory studies and the notion of travelling memory, this article a...
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the colonies controlled by the British, the Dutch, and ot...
Item does not contain fulltextThe 150th anniversary of Ireland’s Great Famine in the 1990s generated...
The Great Irish Famine is the historical-literary place where politics meet sociology, history meets...
This article reviews the historical debate on the colonial causation and dimensions of the Great Iri...
This paper focuses on the life of the Irish author Mary Anne Sadlier (1820-1903) who wrote under the...
The principles of political economy that informed the Russell government’s measures to terminate the...
This article offers a reading of Liam O’Flaherty’s Famine, published in 1937. It first considers the...
The critical debate surrounding the Great Famine in Irish Literature centers on the notion of a perc...
In the 1841 census three-quarters of houses in Ireland were placed in the lowest two classes, one-ro...
The Great Famine (1845--1852) was not only a catastrophic moment in Irish history, it was and remain...
This is the author's accepted PDF version of an book chapter published in In Julia M. Wright (Ed.), ...
Literature of the Great Irish Famine struggles to contain the disaster within narrative. William Car...
Böhm-Schnitker N. Neo-Victorian Re-Imaginations of the Famine: Negotiating Bare Life through Transna...
Contains fulltext : 101965.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)288 p
Taking its cue from transcultural memory studies and the notion of travelling memory, this article a...
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the colonies controlled by the British, the Dutch, and ot...
Item does not contain fulltextThe 150th anniversary of Ireland’s Great Famine in the 1990s generated...
The Great Irish Famine is the historical-literary place where politics meet sociology, history meets...
This article reviews the historical debate on the colonial causation and dimensions of the Great Iri...
This paper focuses on the life of the Irish author Mary Anne Sadlier (1820-1903) who wrote under the...
The principles of political economy that informed the Russell government’s measures to terminate the...
This article offers a reading of Liam O’Flaherty’s Famine, published in 1937. It first considers the...
The critical debate surrounding the Great Famine in Irish Literature centers on the notion of a perc...
In the 1841 census three-quarters of houses in Ireland were placed in the lowest two classes, one-ro...