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Dublin and the Great Irish Famine [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 240 pages, aukštis x plotis: 246x180 mm
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Sep-2022
  • Leidėjas: University College Dublin Press
  • ISBN-10: 1910820776
  • ISBN-13: 9781910820773
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 240 pages, aukštis x plotis: 246x180 mm
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Sep-2022
  • Leidėjas: University College Dublin Press
  • ISBN-10: 1910820776
  • ISBN-13: 9781910820773
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Dublin did not escape the Great Famine: many of its inhabitants experienced acute poverty and illness, while the capital witnessed an influx of the rural poor seeking refuge and relief. However, Dublin has remained largely neglected in popular and scholarly narratives of the Famine. This collection of essays breaks new ground and reconsiders the Famine and its historiography by locating Dublin city and its inhabitants at the centre of its focus. This volume, containing work by established and emerging scholars, presents some of the most recent research into life in Dublin during this period of unprecedented distress. As such, it constitutes the most detailed analysis to date of the impact of the Great Famine on Dublin and its inhabitants, and is the first monograph wholly devotedto this subject. This pioneering volume offers an interdisciplinary approach and a range of perspectives from its thirteen contributors. Featuring a foreword by Cormac O Grada and including a comprehensive overview of Famine scholarship on Dublin to date, its twelve additional essays cover such diverse topics as business life and industry in the city, the impact of the Famine on Dublin's charity and welfare landscapes, suicide and trauma at this time of acute crisis, experiences of the marginalised within prisons and hospitals, and cultural representations of Famine-era Dublin. It examines both direct and indirect impacts of the Famine on the city, noting promising future areas of research, and arguing for the reinvigoration of urban histories with Famine studies. This volume of essays will appeal to students, scholars and general enthusiasts of 19th-century Irish history, especially those interested in the history of the Great Famine and of Dublin. Generously illustrated, it illuminates an overlooked but essential dimension of Irish history.

Recenzijos

'Much remains to be researched on Dublins Famine-era history, but this finely produced and illustrated volume has done much to raise the veil. - Review by Peter Gray, UCD Today (Spring/Summer 2023); 'It is a welcome intervention, offering compelling evidence of how daily life in the colonial garrison town was affected by the social and economic catastrophe.' - Sara Keating, Sunday Business Post, November 2022.; 'Without question the Famine in the capital was not as devastating as what was experienced in other parts of the island. However, as impoverished people crowded into the city seeking work or relief, Dublin's streets appeared like a gigantic refugee camp.' - Irish Independent, November 2022.

Acknowledgements vii
List of Contributors
ix
List of Illustrations
xi
List of Abbreviations
xiv
Dublin and the Great Irish Famine: Introduction xv
Emily Mark-FitzGerald
Ciardn McCabe
Ciardn Reilly
Dublin and the Great Famine: An Overview xx
Cormac O. Grada
SECTION I BUSINESS LIFE AND INDUSTRY
1 `A Little London, All Alive': Some Experiences of the World of Goods and Commodities in Famine Dublin
3(9)
Ciardn Reilly
2 `Ad Libitum Banking'?: Dublin's Role Within the Famine-Era Irish Banking System
12(12)
Declan Curran
3 Taming the Channel: Technology, Liberalism and the Irish Sea, c. 1845-52
24(15)
Peter Hession
SECTION II CHARITY AND PHILANTHROPY
4 `The Metropolis of the Poor': Charity and Perceptions of Dublin on the Eve of the Great Famine
39(11)
Joe Curran
5 The Impact of the Great Famine on Voluntary Charitable Societies in Dublin City
50(13)
Ciaran McCabe
6 Quakers and the Famine in Dublin
63(12)
Rob Goodbody
SECTION III INSTITUTIONS, HEALTHCARE AND MORTALITY
7 Childbirth and Maternity in Dublin, 1831-56
75(12)
Philomena Gorey
8 `Items in the Sum of that Great Calamity': Suicide in Dublin During the Great Famine
87(11)
Georgina Laragy
9 `That They Might Obtain the Shelter of a Prison': Kilmainham Gaol and the Great Famine
98(23)
Brian Crowley
Dublin and the Great Irish Famine
SECTION IV THE FAMINE IN CULTURAL HISTORY
10 Dublin Fictions and the Economics of Famine Memory
121(12)
Christopher Cusack
11 `A Very Ready Sale': Exhibiting, Viewing and Selling Art in Dublin, 1845-49
133(12)
Kathryn Milligan
12 Epilogue: Famine Memory and the City
145(6)
Emily Mark-FitzGerald
Notes 151(38)
Index 189
Ciaran McCabe is a historian of poverty and welfare in nineteenth-century Ireland and Britain, and author of Begging, Charity and Religion in Pre-Famine Ireland (2018). He teaches in the School of History and Geography, Dublin City University. Ciaran Reilly is a historian of nineteenth- and twentieth century Irish history at the Arts & Humanities Institute, Maynooth University. He is author of The Irish Land Agent: The Case of King's County, 1830-1860 and Strokestown and the Great Famine. Emily Mark-FitzGerald is Associate Professor and Head of the School of Art History and Cultural Policy at University College Dublin, where she specialises in the visual culture of the Irish famine, poverty and migration. Her previous books include Commemorating the Irish Famine: Memory and the Monument (2013) and the co-edited The GreatIrish Famine: Visual and Material Culture (2018).