Submission note: A thesis submitted in total fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts to the School of Humanities, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, La Trobe University, Bundoora.This thesis argues for a better understanding of the Irish community in Melbourne and a more nuanced understanding of the settler colonial experience. The thesis examines the colonial experience in Melbourne between the nonperformance of St Patrick’s Day in 1841 and the banning of all processions with the implementation of the Party Processions Act in 1846. St Patrick’s Day celebrations allow us to enter into a world of actions and reactions of the Irish people in Melbourne. The Irish Catholic community was perceived as a separate co...
Using the social sciences, demography and cultural history, this thesis examines the Irish Protestan...
As England’s first colony, Ireland’s experience is of great significance to wider colonial studies. ...
This thesis explores the historical processes of becoming in the everyday social lives of Irish Cath...
This dissertation examines Irish Catholic diasporic communities in the early- to mid-nineteenth cent...
Although a small cohort, often deemed insignificant, the Irish in South Australia developed an exten...
This thesis examines the influences on Irish identity articulation within Melbourne and Chicago dur...
This dissertation examines the role of Roman Catholicism in the process by which Irish Catholics int...
With increasing flows of economic, social, and cultural migration an understanding of the contributi...
With increasing flows of economic, social, and cultural migration an understanding of the contributi...
With increasing flows of economic, social, and cultural migration an understanding of the contributi...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to reveal insights into the relationship between migrant comm...
This study focuses on the civil society which existed in Limerick City between the signing of the Tr...
© 2015 Michael Philip FrancisThis thesis examines the foundation of Newman College within the Univer...
In this thesis I study collections of material culture made in the early colonial period in New Irel...
This thesis explores the ways in which the Irish-Catholic population of Canada was perceived and de...
Using the social sciences, demography and cultural history, this thesis examines the Irish Protestan...
As England’s first colony, Ireland’s experience is of great significance to wider colonial studies. ...
This thesis explores the historical processes of becoming in the everyday social lives of Irish Cath...
This dissertation examines Irish Catholic diasporic communities in the early- to mid-nineteenth cent...
Although a small cohort, often deemed insignificant, the Irish in South Australia developed an exten...
This thesis examines the influences on Irish identity articulation within Melbourne and Chicago dur...
This dissertation examines the role of Roman Catholicism in the process by which Irish Catholics int...
With increasing flows of economic, social, and cultural migration an understanding of the contributi...
With increasing flows of economic, social, and cultural migration an understanding of the contributi...
With increasing flows of economic, social, and cultural migration an understanding of the contributi...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to reveal insights into the relationship between migrant comm...
This study focuses on the civil society which existed in Limerick City between the signing of the Tr...
© 2015 Michael Philip FrancisThis thesis examines the foundation of Newman College within the Univer...
In this thesis I study collections of material culture made in the early colonial period in New Irel...
This thesis explores the ways in which the Irish-Catholic population of Canada was perceived and de...
Using the social sciences, demography and cultural history, this thesis examines the Irish Protestan...
As England’s first colony, Ireland’s experience is of great significance to wider colonial studies. ...
This thesis explores the historical processes of becoming in the everyday social lives of Irish Cath...