This chapter examines representations of power and powerlessness in nineteenth-century literary responses to the Great Famine, arguing that many of these - largely middle-class authors - transcend the values and prejudices of their class in the attempt to engage honestly and imaginatively with the sufferings of Famine victims
Even the most comprehensive famine accounts rely primarily on large-scale demographic and statistica...
How does a creative writer, situated in a geography of disaster, represent a disaster? Which areas o...
The 1840s witnessed widespread hunger and malnutrition at home and mass starvation in Ireland. And y...
This chapter considers Irish writers’ continual reimagining of the Great Famine and the way it has s...
Working class people have continually found themselves in unfortunate conditions that they are unabl...
The principles of political economy that informed the Russell government’s measures to terminate the...
The Science of Starving is a reassessment of the languages and methodologies used, throughout the ni...
The Great Famine (1845--1852) was not only a catastrophic moment in Irish history, it was and remain...
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the colonies controlled by the British, the Dutch, and ot...
This dissertation is an exploration of the discourses of disaster in nineteenth-century England and ...
Focusing on the influence of the Oxford Movement on key British poets of the nineteenth-century, thi...
This is the author's accepted PDF version of an book chapter published in In Julia M. Wright (Ed.), ...
In times of social and political crisis, many novelists succumb to the pressures that politics place...
Late 19th century novels provide graphic descriptions of working and living conditions and their imp...
Even the most comprehensive famine accounts rely primarily on large-scale demographic and statistica...
Even the most comprehensive famine accounts rely primarily on large-scale demographic and statistica...
How does a creative writer, situated in a geography of disaster, represent a disaster? Which areas o...
The 1840s witnessed widespread hunger and malnutrition at home and mass starvation in Ireland. And y...
This chapter considers Irish writers’ continual reimagining of the Great Famine and the way it has s...
Working class people have continually found themselves in unfortunate conditions that they are unabl...
The principles of political economy that informed the Russell government’s measures to terminate the...
The Science of Starving is a reassessment of the languages and methodologies used, throughout the ni...
The Great Famine (1845--1852) was not only a catastrophic moment in Irish history, it was and remain...
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the colonies controlled by the British, the Dutch, and ot...
This dissertation is an exploration of the discourses of disaster in nineteenth-century England and ...
Focusing on the influence of the Oxford Movement on key British poets of the nineteenth-century, thi...
This is the author's accepted PDF version of an book chapter published in In Julia M. Wright (Ed.), ...
In times of social and political crisis, many novelists succumb to the pressures that politics place...
Late 19th century novels provide graphic descriptions of working and living conditions and their imp...
Even the most comprehensive famine accounts rely primarily on large-scale demographic and statistica...
Even the most comprehensive famine accounts rely primarily on large-scale demographic and statistica...
How does a creative writer, situated in a geography of disaster, represent a disaster? Which areas o...
The 1840s witnessed widespread hunger and malnutrition at home and mass starvation in Ireland. And y...