The Great Famine (1845--1852) was not only a catastrophic moment in Irish history, it was and remains an important source of textual production, particularly in regard to literature and drama. These cultural products carry a powerful discourse used to communicate various social and political agendas. From the beginning, Irish novelists, poets and dramatists have confronted the question of the Famine's meaning then and now. At each historical moment, they have interrogated the Famine and have employed various discursive strategies to communicate to their readers and audiences.This dissertation makes four primary claims: (a) The historical Irish Famine has remained a source of discursive activity by Irish writers, and so constitutes a phenome...
The Great Irish Famine cleared a minimum of two million Irish individuals from the land by either de...
Maryvonne Boisseau Language and memory. Literature and the Great FamineLangue et mémoire. La Grande ...
In the years from 1845 to 1849, the potato crop in Ireland was afflicted by recurrent disease, effec...
The Great Irish Famine cleared a minimum of two million Irish individuals from the land by either de...
International audienceBetween 1800 and 1900, Ireland underwent changes that very few countries have ...
The Great Irish Famine is the historical-literary place where politics meet sociology, history meets...
The Great Irish Famine is the historical-literary place where politics meet sociology, history mee...
The critical debate surrounding the Great Famine in Irish Literature centers on the notion of a perc...
This chapter considers Irish writers’ continual reimagining of the Great Famine and the way it has s...
Seasonal hunger and "partial famines" were common occurrences in nineteenth-century Ireland, but the...
Seasonal hunger and "partial famines" were common occurrences in nineteenth-century Ireland, but the...
International audienceBetween 1800 and 1900, Ireland underwent changes that very few countries have ...
International audienceBetween 1800 and 1900, Ireland underwent changes that very few countries have ...
International audienceBetween 1800 and 1900, Ireland underwent changes that very few countries have ...
International audienceBetween 1800 and 1900, Ireland underwent changes that very few countries have ...
The Great Irish Famine cleared a minimum of two million Irish individuals from the land by either de...
Maryvonne Boisseau Language and memory. Literature and the Great FamineLangue et mémoire. La Grande ...
In the years from 1845 to 1849, the potato crop in Ireland was afflicted by recurrent disease, effec...
The Great Irish Famine cleared a minimum of two million Irish individuals from the land by either de...
International audienceBetween 1800 and 1900, Ireland underwent changes that very few countries have ...
The Great Irish Famine is the historical-literary place where politics meet sociology, history meets...
The Great Irish Famine is the historical-literary place where politics meet sociology, history mee...
The critical debate surrounding the Great Famine in Irish Literature centers on the notion of a perc...
This chapter considers Irish writers’ continual reimagining of the Great Famine and the way it has s...
Seasonal hunger and "partial famines" were common occurrences in nineteenth-century Ireland, but the...
Seasonal hunger and "partial famines" were common occurrences in nineteenth-century Ireland, but the...
International audienceBetween 1800 and 1900, Ireland underwent changes that very few countries have ...
International audienceBetween 1800 and 1900, Ireland underwent changes that very few countries have ...
International audienceBetween 1800 and 1900, Ireland underwent changes that very few countries have ...
International audienceBetween 1800 and 1900, Ireland underwent changes that very few countries have ...
The Great Irish Famine cleared a minimum of two million Irish individuals from the land by either de...
Maryvonne Boisseau Language and memory. Literature and the Great FamineLangue et mémoire. La Grande ...
In the years from 1845 to 1849, the potato crop in Ireland was afflicted by recurrent disease, effec...