Famine Echoes is a groundbreaking oral account of the Great Irish Potato Famine of 1845–52, telling the stories of its victims for the first time ever in their own words and those of their descendants. ‘When the potato crop failed no other food was available and the people perished by the hundreds of thousands, along the roadside, in the ditches, in the fields from hunger and cold, and what was even worse – the famine fever. The strongest men were reduced to mere skeletons and they could be met daily with the clothes hanging on them like ghosts.’ The Great Irish Famine is the greatest tragedy in Irish history. Over one million people died and nearly two million emigrated as a result. Famine Echoes gives a voice to its victims, offering a unique perspective on the Great Hunger, the defining event of modern Irish history. In Famine Echoes, descendants of Famine survivors recall the community memories of the great hunger in their own words, conveying like never before the heartbreak and horrors their relatives experienced. This remarkable book, a seminal record of the oral transmission of folk memory, is a record of the last living link with the survivors of Ireland’s most devastating historical event. In the 1940s, the Folklore Commission conducted interviews with thousands of elderly people around Ireland who remembered what they themselves had heard from ancestors who had survived the Famine. Cathal Póirtéir has edited a selection of these recollections, arranging the material in an order which follows the rough chronology of the Famine itself. Famine Echoes is published to coincide with the RTÉ Radio series of the same name. Famine Echoes: Table of Contents Folk Memory and the Famine Before the Bad Times Abundance Abused and the Blight Turnips, Blood, Herbs and Fish ‘No Sin and You Starving’ Mouths Stained Green ‘The Fever, God Bless Us’ The Paupers and the Poorhouse Boilers, Stirabout and ‘Yellow Male’ New Lines and ‘Male Roads’ ‘Soupers’, ‘Jumpers’ and ‘Cat Breacs’ The Bottomless Coffin and the Famine Pit Landlords, Grain and Government Agents, Grabbers and Gombeen Men ‘A Terrible Levelling of Houses’ The Coffin Ships and the Going Away Of Curses, Kindness and Miraculous Food Appendix I Appendix II
Famine Echoes gives a unique perspective on the greatest tragedy in Irish history as descendants of Famine survivors recall the community memories of the great hunger.
In the mid-1840s, potato blight ruined the crops of impoverished farmers across Ireland.
James Donnelly’s account looks closely at the political and social consequences of the great Irish potato famine and explores the way that natural disasters and government responses to them can alter the destiny of nations.
Boyce, D. George. “'No Lack of Ghosts': Memory, Commemoration, and the State in Ireland.” In Ian McBride, ed. History and Memory in Modern Ireland. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2001, 254–271. Boyce, D. George ...
Ireland: A New Economic History offers a fresh, comprehensive economic history of Ireland between 1780 and 1939, which is mould-breaking in its methodology and unparalleled in its broad scope and...
This book - based on a wide range of little-used sources - demonstrates how the Famine profoundly affected many aspects of Irish life: the relationship between the churches; the nationalist movement; and the relationship with the monarchy.
Nationalism and Popular Protest in Ireland (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987). Poirteir, Cathal, Famine Echoes (Dublin: Gill & Macmillan, 1995). 'Folk Memory and the Famine', in Cathal Poirteir (ed.), The Great Irish Famine ...
Irish Folk History and Social Memory Guy Beiner ... Robinson, Henry A. Further Memories of Irish Life. ... Famine Echoes. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan, 1995. ———. “Folk Memory and the Famine.” In The Great Irish Famine, edited by Cathal ...
You can find the real-life version at www.dunbrody.com I began the book knowing relatively little about Boston in the ... South Boston: My Home Town by Thomas O'Connor; The Atlas of Boston History, edited by Nancy Seasholes; ...
Ulin in particular extends her decipherment of Endgame's references to the Famine in great detail, noting its echoes with folk memories and with anglo-Irish attitudes toward the starving, to such an extent, indeed, that one would be ...