Irish Memories

Irish Memories
Author: Martin Ross
Publisher: DigiCat
Total Pages: 284
Release: 2022-06-13
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

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"Irish Memories" is a compilation of excerpts and descriptions of Irish life during the early 1900s. Written by Edith Somerville and Violet Florence Martin but published under the name Martin Ross, these two women managed to create a literary text that immerses its readers in the rich and magical culture of Ireland. Recounting the life and times of citizens during the ups and downs of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, modern readers will find themselves engrossed and unable to put the book down until it's finished.

Irish Memories

Irish Memories
Author: Edith Œnone Somerville
Publisher:
Total Pages: 400
Release: 1917
Genre: Authors, English
ISBN:

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Irish Memories

Irish Memories
Author: Richard Barry O'Brien
Publisher:
Total Pages: 266
Release: 1904
Genre: Ireland
ISBN:

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Irish Memories

Irish Memories
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 390
Release: 1917
Genre:
ISBN:

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Feed the Children First

Feed the Children First
Author: Mary E. Lyons
Publisher: Atheneum Books for Young Readers
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012-09-06
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9781442482920

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The great Irish potato famine -- the Great Hunger -- was one of the worst disasters of the nineteenth century. Within seven years of the onset of a fungus that wiped out Ireland's staple potato crop, more than a quarter of the country's eight million people had either starved to death, died of disease, or emigrated to other lands. Photographs have documented the horrors of other cataclysmic times in history -- slavery and the Holocaust -- but there are no known photographs whatsoever of the Great Hunger. In Feed the Children First, Mary E. Lyons combines first-person accounts of those who remembered the Great Hunger with artwork that evokes the times and places and voices themselves. The result is a close-up look at incredible suffering, but also a celebration of joy the Irish took in stories and music and helping one another -- all factors that helped them endure.

Irish Days, Indian Memories

Irish Days, Indian Memories
Author: Conor Mulvagh
Publisher: Irish Academic Press
Total Pages: 160
Release: 2016-01-25
Genre: History
ISBN: 1911024205

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Irish Days, Indian Memories offers a unique insight into an unexpectedly momentous facet of Dublin’s political and student life from 1913 to the end of the turbulent year that was 1916. V.V. Giri, fourth President of India (1969-74), who would later say of himself ‘when I am not an Indian, I am an Irishman’, and a group of twelve Indian law students at King’s Inns and University College Dublin, witnessed and participated in the events of these dramatic years. Drawn from diaries, letters, military and university records, their memories of the Dublin Lockout, the Irish Volunteers, the Easter Rising, student integration and subversion provide a fascinating perspective on life inside and outside the university. This intersection with Ireland’s wartime and insurrectionary experience inspired V.V. Giri’s work for the Indian independence movement and had a profound effect on his fellow students. Through the eyes of Giri, his countrymen, and Conor Mulvagh’s expert research, a vivid and neglected narrative on 1916 is finally uncovered.

The Politics of Irish Memory

The Politics of Irish Memory
Author: E. Pine
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2010-11-17
Genre: History
ISBN: 0230295312

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Irish culture is obsessed with the past, and this book asks why and how. In an innovative reading of Irish culture since 1980, Emilie Pine provides a new analysis of theatre, film, television, memoir and art, and interrogates the anti-nostalgia that characterizes so much of contemporary Irish culture.

Dancing at the Crossroads

Dancing at the Crossroads
Author: Helena Wulff
Publisher: Berghahn Books
Total Pages: 194
Release: 2008-10
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9781845455903

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Dancing at the crossroads used to be young people ́s opportunity to meet and enjoy themselves on mild summer evenings in the countryside in Ireland - until this practice was banned by law, the Public Dance Halls Act in 1935. Now a key metaphor in Irish cultural and political life, ́dancing at the crossroads ́ also crystallizes the argument of this book: Irish dance, from Riverdance (the commercial show) and competitive dancing to dance theatre, conveys that Ireland is to be found in a crossroads situation with a firm base in a distinctly Irish tradition which is also becoming a prominent part of European modernity. Helena Wulff is Associate Professor of Social Anthropology at Stockholm University. Publications include Twenty Girls (Almqvist & Wiksell International, 1988), Ballet across Borders (Berg, 1998), Youth Cultures (co-edited with Vered Amit-Talai, Routledge, 1995), New Technologies at Work (co-edited with Christina Garsten, Berg, 2003). Her research focusses on dance, visual culture, and Ireland.

Blasket Memories

Blasket Memories
Author: Pádraig Tyers
Publisher: Mercier Press Ltd
Total Pages: 196
Release: 1998
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

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An account of life on the Blasket Island and on the island's eventual demise.

The Memory Marketplace

The Memory Marketplace
Author: Emilie Pine
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Total Pages: 262
Release: 2020-06-30
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0253049512

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What happens when cultural memory becomes a commodity? Who owns the memory? In The Memory Marketplace, Emilie Pine explores how memory is performed both in Ireland and abroad by considering the significant body of contemporary Irish theatre that contends with its own culture and history. Analyzing examples from this realm of theatre, Pine focuses on the idea of witnesses, both as performers on stage and as members of the audience. Whose memories are observed in these transactions, and how and why do performances prioritize some memories over others? What does it mean to create, rehearse, perform, and purchase the theatricalization of memory? The Memory Marketplace shows this transaction to be particularly fraught in the theatricalization of traumatic moments of cultural upheaval, such as the child sexual abuse scandal in Ireland. In these performances, the role of empathy becomes key within the marketplace dynamic, and Pine argues that this empathy shapes the kinds of witnesses created. The complexities and nuances of this exchange—subject and witness, spectator and performer, consumer and commodified—provide a deeper understanding of the crucial role theatre plays in shaping public understanding of trauma, memory, and history.