‘Flight’ is the perfect metaphor for Frawley’s new-breed globalizing Irish emigrés and immigrés. Like everything about this novel, the epigraph, a dictionary definition, riffs on what flight might mean. The novel thoughtfully, deftly, interlaces a series of flights—to and from Ireland. Ireland has typically been a place of mass export of population, until the advent of the Celtic Tiger, or perhaps a decade or two before it began to rear up, and this novel set around 2004 but moving much further back in time, takes up issues of migration and refugees that became pressing in the prosperous years
In 1860, the Irish nationalist writer John Mitchell avowed that ‘The Almighty, indeed, sent the pota...
A book review of The Irish diaspora: a primer, by Donald Akenson, published in 1993
This publication hooked me from the start with a wonderful, stimulating introduction. The book sets ...
Childhood and Migration in Europe. Portraits of Mobility, Identity and Belonging in Contemporary Ire...
Whereas Polish migration to the UK has for many years now attracted scholarly and literary attention...
Review of the book: Empire\u27s Wake: Postcolonial Irish Writing and the Politics of Modern Literary...
Steve Coulter finds optimism in the latest book by David J Lynch which looks carefully at Ireland’s ...
Review of Mícheál Ó hAodha and Máirtín Ó Catháin eds., New perspectives on the Irish Abroad: The sil...
"Integration in Ireland: The Everyday Lives of African Migrants." Fiona Murphy and Mark Maguire. Man...
Book review of: Transnational nationalism and collective identity among the American Irish / by Howa...
Readers approaching a book entitled Modernism, Empire, World Literature will have their own understa...
In his Allegory of Love ([Oxford, 1936], p. 349), C. S. Lewis wrote that Ireland had corrupted Spens...
The Troubles in Ballybogoin (a pseudonym) is predominantly a study of identity among nationalists in...
Colum McCann’s novel, TransAtlantic, argues, through both structure and content, that Ireland is a o...
Migration is a natural phenomenon that has had a tremendous impact on humanity throughout world hist...
In 1860, the Irish nationalist writer John Mitchell avowed that ‘The Almighty, indeed, sent the pota...
A book review of The Irish diaspora: a primer, by Donald Akenson, published in 1993
This publication hooked me from the start with a wonderful, stimulating introduction. The book sets ...
Childhood and Migration in Europe. Portraits of Mobility, Identity and Belonging in Contemporary Ire...
Whereas Polish migration to the UK has for many years now attracted scholarly and literary attention...
Review of the book: Empire\u27s Wake: Postcolonial Irish Writing and the Politics of Modern Literary...
Steve Coulter finds optimism in the latest book by David J Lynch which looks carefully at Ireland’s ...
Review of Mícheál Ó hAodha and Máirtín Ó Catháin eds., New perspectives on the Irish Abroad: The sil...
"Integration in Ireland: The Everyday Lives of African Migrants." Fiona Murphy and Mark Maguire. Man...
Book review of: Transnational nationalism and collective identity among the American Irish / by Howa...
Readers approaching a book entitled Modernism, Empire, World Literature will have their own understa...
In his Allegory of Love ([Oxford, 1936], p. 349), C. S. Lewis wrote that Ireland had corrupted Spens...
The Troubles in Ballybogoin (a pseudonym) is predominantly a study of identity among nationalists in...
Colum McCann’s novel, TransAtlantic, argues, through both structure and content, that Ireland is a o...
Migration is a natural phenomenon that has had a tremendous impact on humanity throughout world hist...
In 1860, the Irish nationalist writer John Mitchell avowed that ‘The Almighty, indeed, sent the pota...
A book review of The Irish diaspora: a primer, by Donald Akenson, published in 1993
This publication hooked me from the start with a wonderful, stimulating introduction. The book sets ...