This thesis is an exploration of Irish literary emigration to London in the nineteenth century, with particular reference to the 1880s and 1890s. These two decades witnessed a conflict between two generations of Irish emigrant writers and it is this conflict which forms the basis of the thesis. On the one hand were those emigrants - T.P. O'Connor, Justin McCarthy and R. Barry O'Brien - who typified the Irish literary defection to London in the nineteenth century, moving to England for a mixture of political, social, economic and cultural reasons. They were nationalists, but, like most Irish literary emigrants before them, they integrated themselves with British political and cultural life, developing a 'mixed' political-cultural identity in...
This thesis examines the Irish language in London, Philadelphia and San Francisco in the late nine...
peer-reviewedThis thesis examines twentieth-century memoirs and autobiographies from Irish migrants ...
This project contributes an analysis of the representation of Irish identity in the novel post-Catho...
This thesis is an exploration of Irish literary emigration to London in the nineteenth century, with...
Emigration from Ireland during and after the Famine of 1845-50 was unparalleled in the nineteenth ce...
This project assesses the extent and significance of Irish contributions to the British periodical p...
This thesis reviews a great number of novels by Anglo-Irish women novelists that - with few exceptio...
Although Irish writers were foundational to English-language modernism, Irish Modernism is a new fie...
This thesis focuses on the novels written and published by expatriate Irish women resident in Britai...
This thesis analyses the cultural, social and political discourse in a range of Irish periodicals pu...
In recent years, there has been a growing inclination to re-examine the way that Irish exiles was pe...
This research project was designed to investigate the nature, development and impact of the Dublin n...
This research project was designed to investigate the nature, development and impact of the Dublin n...
My diploma thesis is mainly concentrating on analyses of relationships between English (British) and...
John Patrick MontanoThe end of the nineteenth century witnessed a revival of language, history, lite...
This thesis examines the Irish language in London, Philadelphia and San Francisco in the late nine...
peer-reviewedThis thesis examines twentieth-century memoirs and autobiographies from Irish migrants ...
This project contributes an analysis of the representation of Irish identity in the novel post-Catho...
This thesis is an exploration of Irish literary emigration to London in the nineteenth century, with...
Emigration from Ireland during and after the Famine of 1845-50 was unparalleled in the nineteenth ce...
This project assesses the extent and significance of Irish contributions to the British periodical p...
This thesis reviews a great number of novels by Anglo-Irish women novelists that - with few exceptio...
Although Irish writers were foundational to English-language modernism, Irish Modernism is a new fie...
This thesis focuses on the novels written and published by expatriate Irish women resident in Britai...
This thesis analyses the cultural, social and political discourse in a range of Irish periodicals pu...
In recent years, there has been a growing inclination to re-examine the way that Irish exiles was pe...
This research project was designed to investigate the nature, development and impact of the Dublin n...
This research project was designed to investigate the nature, development and impact of the Dublin n...
My diploma thesis is mainly concentrating on analyses of relationships between English (British) and...
John Patrick MontanoThe end of the nineteenth century witnessed a revival of language, history, lite...
This thesis examines the Irish language in London, Philadelphia and San Francisco in the late nine...
peer-reviewedThis thesis examines twentieth-century memoirs and autobiographies from Irish migrants ...
This project contributes an analysis of the representation of Irish identity in the novel post-Catho...