'How The Irish Became White' tells the story of how the Irish immigrant went from racially Oppressed to racial Oppressor, an American Story most of us haven't wanted to hear before. Utilizing newspaper chronicles, memoirs, biographies, and official accounts, Noel Ignatiev traces the tattered history of Irish and African-American relations, revealing how the Irish in America used unions, the Catholic Church and the Democratic party to help gain and secure their newly found place in the White Republic. 'How The Irish Became White' opens with the reactions of Irish America to the 1841 appeal made to them by Daniel O'Connell, "The Liberator," to join with anti-slavery forces in the new country. It then reviews the status of Catholics in Ireland...
Whiteness is often detached from the notion of diaspora in the recent flurry of interest in the phen...
While the historiography of English perceptions of the Irish in the later period of the Victorian er...
New York\u27s Irish population in the later nineteenth century has received little scholarly attenti...
One of the hallmarks of British colonial oppression was the establishment of social control over the...
This research addresses the inconsistencies within American immigration and assimilation processes c...
This dissertation analyzes the history of the Pilot, an ethnic newspaper for the Irish Catholic, and...
Shifting the Study of Abolition to the Atlantic World In this well-researched and clearly-writte...
Mixed-race people can be caught in a web of stereotypes – being pathologised as tragically ‘mixed u...
UnrestrictedMany decades after the narrator in the “Cyclops” chapter of James Joyce’s Ulysses lament...
Ph.D. University of Hawaii at Manoa 2011.Includes bibliographical references.This project aims to co...
The Irish have been relentlessly racialized in their diaspora settings, yet little historical work e...
In this project I trace Irish ethnic identity formation in the United States and the creation of the...
This book examines the development of literary constructions of Irish-American identity from the mid...
Nineteenth-century Irish Americans were bound together by a shared ethnic identity that was shaped b...
This book chronicles the life and times of John Mitchel, a radical Irish nationalist who relocated t...
Whiteness is often detached from the notion of diaspora in the recent flurry of interest in the phen...
While the historiography of English perceptions of the Irish in the later period of the Victorian er...
New York\u27s Irish population in the later nineteenth century has received little scholarly attenti...
One of the hallmarks of British colonial oppression was the establishment of social control over the...
This research addresses the inconsistencies within American immigration and assimilation processes c...
This dissertation analyzes the history of the Pilot, an ethnic newspaper for the Irish Catholic, and...
Shifting the Study of Abolition to the Atlantic World In this well-researched and clearly-writte...
Mixed-race people can be caught in a web of stereotypes – being pathologised as tragically ‘mixed u...
UnrestrictedMany decades after the narrator in the “Cyclops” chapter of James Joyce’s Ulysses lament...
Ph.D. University of Hawaii at Manoa 2011.Includes bibliographical references.This project aims to co...
The Irish have been relentlessly racialized in their diaspora settings, yet little historical work e...
In this project I trace Irish ethnic identity formation in the United States and the creation of the...
This book examines the development of literary constructions of Irish-American identity from the mid...
Nineteenth-century Irish Americans were bound together by a shared ethnic identity that was shaped b...
This book chronicles the life and times of John Mitchel, a radical Irish nationalist who relocated t...
Whiteness is often detached from the notion of diaspora in the recent flurry of interest in the phen...
While the historiography of English perceptions of the Irish in the later period of the Victorian er...
New York\u27s Irish population in the later nineteenth century has received little scholarly attenti...