This is the author's post-refereed, pre-print version of an article published by Rodopi, 2011, reproduced with kind permission from Koninklijke Brill.Joseph O’Connor’s Star of the Sea (2002), uses an extended family – the Merridiths, Duanes and Mulveys – crossing class, religious, cultural, ethnic and political divides, to explore the failure of personal, local, national and international networks to save vulnerable individuals during the Great Famine of 1845-52
Böhm-Schnitker N. Neo-Victorian Re-Imaginations of the Famine: Negotiating Bare Life through Transna...
The Great Famine was the single greatest tragedy in Irish history. One million people died of starva...
This paper speaks to several broad questions about the relationship between culture and nature as re...
The paper discusses Joseph O’Connor’s novel as an investigation of a necropolitical event par excell...
The late 1990s and early 2000s were marked by the appearance of a number of ambitious historical nov...
Die Große Hungersnot ist eines der tragischsten Ereignisse in der Geschichte Irlands, das zwischen 1...
Joseph O’Connor’s Star of the Sea (2002) offers a nuanced depiction of the lifelong patterns of resi...
This is the author's accepted PDF version of an book chapter published in In Julia M. Wright (Ed.), ...
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the colonies controlled by the British, the Dutch, and ot...
International audienceBetween 1800 and 1900, Ireland underwent changes that very few countries have ...
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the colonies controlled by the British, the Dutch, and ot...
This article offers a reading of Liam O’Flaherty’s Famine, published in 1937. It first considers the...
It has suited both sides of Ireland's religious and political divide to portray the Great Famine tha...
Star of the Sea is a heartfelt and heart-wrenching story that plunges its readers into the depths of...
Cry of the Famishing focuses on the relationship between the Famine in Ireland and the state of Conn...
Böhm-Schnitker N. Neo-Victorian Re-Imaginations of the Famine: Negotiating Bare Life through Transna...
The Great Famine was the single greatest tragedy in Irish history. One million people died of starva...
This paper speaks to several broad questions about the relationship between culture and nature as re...
The paper discusses Joseph O’Connor’s novel as an investigation of a necropolitical event par excell...
The late 1990s and early 2000s were marked by the appearance of a number of ambitious historical nov...
Die Große Hungersnot ist eines der tragischsten Ereignisse in der Geschichte Irlands, das zwischen 1...
Joseph O’Connor’s Star of the Sea (2002) offers a nuanced depiction of the lifelong patterns of resi...
This is the author's accepted PDF version of an book chapter published in In Julia M. Wright (Ed.), ...
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the colonies controlled by the British, the Dutch, and ot...
International audienceBetween 1800 and 1900, Ireland underwent changes that very few countries have ...
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the colonies controlled by the British, the Dutch, and ot...
This article offers a reading of Liam O’Flaherty’s Famine, published in 1937. It first considers the...
It has suited both sides of Ireland's religious and political divide to portray the Great Famine tha...
Star of the Sea is a heartfelt and heart-wrenching story that plunges its readers into the depths of...
Cry of the Famishing focuses on the relationship between the Famine in Ireland and the state of Conn...
Böhm-Schnitker N. Neo-Victorian Re-Imaginations of the Famine: Negotiating Bare Life through Transna...
The Great Famine was the single greatest tragedy in Irish history. One million people died of starva...
This paper speaks to several broad questions about the relationship between culture and nature as re...