Taking its cue from transcultural memory studies and the notion of travelling memory, this article analyses neo-Victorian famine novels, film and music with regard to these texts’ orientations towards the hungry body. The Great Famine in Ireland caused mass migration and resulted in both geographical and cultural re-orientations across a range of intertextual and intermedial products published in Ireland and in the diaspora, including Joseph O’Connor’s Star of the Sea (2002), which looks back to Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights (1847), and Paul Lynch’s Grace (2017), which obliquely evokes Elizabeth Gaskell’s Mary Barton (1848). It is certainly no surprise that the literature of the Hungry Forties serves as a major reference point for neo-Vi...
International audienceBetween 1800 and 1900, Ireland underwent changes that very few countries have ...
This article offers a reading of Liam O’Flaherty’s Famine, published in 1937. It first considers the...
This research has two main components: first, an exploration of how communities react to socio-natur...
Taking its cue from transcultural memory studies and the notion of travelling memory, this article a...
This chapter considers Irish writers’ continual reimagining of the Great Famine and the way it has s...
The Great Famine (1845--1852) was not only a catastrophic moment in Irish history, it was and remain...
This paper uses a hermeneutically informed analysis to reveal how Irish men’s accounts of acute hung...
This essay explores the legacy of the Irish Famine and the research and writing process behind Cherr...
This Plan B thesis explores the questions: What echoes of the 1845 Potato famine exist in Dracula an...
This is the author's accepted PDF version of an book chapter published in In Julia M. Wright (Ed.), ...
The critical debate surrounding the Great Famine in Irish Literature centers on the notion of a perc...
Contains fulltext : 101965.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)288 p
The Great Irish Famine is the historical-literary place where politics meet sociology, history meets...
The 150th anniversary of Ireland’s Great Famine in the 1990s generated a significant increase in sch...
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 ...
This article offers a reading of Liam O’Flaherty’s Famine, published in 1937. It first considers the...
This research has two main components: first, an exploration of how communities react to socio-natur...
Taking its cue from transcultural memory studies and the notion of travelling memory, this article a...
This chapter considers Irish writers’ continual reimagining of the Great Famine and the way it has s...
The Great Famine (1845--1852) was not only a catastrophic moment in Irish history, it was and remain...
This paper uses a hermeneutically informed analysis to reveal how Irish men’s accounts of acute hung...
This essay explores the legacy of the Irish Famine and the research and writing process behind Cherr...
This Plan B thesis explores the questions: What echoes of the 1845 Potato famine exist in Dracula an...
This is the author's accepted PDF version of an book chapter published in In Julia M. Wright (Ed.), ...
The critical debate surrounding the Great Famine in Irish Literature centers on the notion of a perc...
Contains fulltext : 101965.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)288 p
The Great Irish Famine is the historical-literary place where politics meet sociology, history meets...
The 150th anniversary of Ireland’s Great Famine in the 1990s generated a significant increase in sch...
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 ...
This article offers a reading of Liam O’Flaherty’s Famine, published in 1937. It first considers the...
This research has two main components: first, an exploration of how communities react to socio-natur...