Description

Book Synopsis

Ireland’s Great Famine generated Western Europe’s most devastating social crisis of the nineteenth century, a crisis that created enormous and transformational upheaval. In Travel Narratives of the Irish Famine: Politics, Tourism, and Scandal, 1845-1853, author Catherine Nealy Judd proposes that a new literary genre emerged from the crucible of the Great Famine, that is, the Irish Famine travelogue. In her keenly argued and thoroughly researched book, Judd contends that previous scrutiny of Famine travel narratives has been overly broad, peripheral, or has tended to group Famine travelogues into an undi erentiated whole. Judd invites us to consider Famine-era travel narratives as comprising a unique subgenre within the larger discursive - eld of travel literature. Here Judd argues that the immensity of the Famine exerted great pressure on the form, topics, themes, and goals of Famine-era travelogues, and for this reason, Famine travel narratives deserve detailed and organized consideration, as well as critical recognition of their status as an unprecedented subgenre. Drawing on an extensive array of underutilized sources, Travel Narratives of the Irish Famine adumbrates the Irish Famine travelogue canon.



Table of Contents

Contents: Introduction – Early Famine Travelers, 1845–1846 – «An Acre of Stony Ground»: Orangeism, Wastelands, and Agriculture in Thomas Campbell Foster’s Letters, 1845–1846 –Theresa Cornwallis West’s 1846 Summer Visit: United Irishmen, Young Ireland, and Mazzini’s Risorgimento – Relief Work and Infrastructure, 1847–1848 – Peripatetic Charity in 1847: Pilgrimage, Soup Kitchens, and Skibbereen – Athlone, the Bog of Allen, and Famine Civil Engineering, 1846 to 1847 – Revolution and Compassion Fatigue, 1848–1850 – Revolutionary Ireland, 1848: New York City Tourists and the John Mitchel Trial – Celebrity Tourists, 1848–1849: De Vere and Tennyson – Duffy and Carlyle – Sidney Godolphin Osborne, the Irish Famine, and the Illustrated London News, 1849–1850 – Late Famine Ireland, 1849–1853 – «Obliterated, Never to Return»: Travel Literature in Late and Post Famine Ireland, 1849–1853.

Travel Narratives of the Irish Famine: Politics,

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    A Paperback / softback by Eamon Maher, Catherine Nealy Judd

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      Publisher: Peter Lang International Academic Publishers
      Publication Date: 21/09/2020
      ISBN13: 9781800790841, 978-1800790841
      ISBN10: 1800790848

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Ireland’s Great Famine generated Western Europe’s most devastating social crisis of the nineteenth century, a crisis that created enormous and transformational upheaval. In Travel Narratives of the Irish Famine: Politics, Tourism, and Scandal, 1845-1853, author Catherine Nealy Judd proposes that a new literary genre emerged from the crucible of the Great Famine, that is, the Irish Famine travelogue. In her keenly argued and thoroughly researched book, Judd contends that previous scrutiny of Famine travel narratives has been overly broad, peripheral, or has tended to group Famine travelogues into an undi erentiated whole. Judd invites us to consider Famine-era travel narratives as comprising a unique subgenre within the larger discursive - eld of travel literature. Here Judd argues that the immensity of the Famine exerted great pressure on the form, topics, themes, and goals of Famine-era travelogues, and for this reason, Famine travel narratives deserve detailed and organized consideration, as well as critical recognition of their status as an unprecedented subgenre. Drawing on an extensive array of underutilized sources, Travel Narratives of the Irish Famine adumbrates the Irish Famine travelogue canon.



      Table of Contents

      Contents: Introduction – Early Famine Travelers, 1845–1846 – «An Acre of Stony Ground»: Orangeism, Wastelands, and Agriculture in Thomas Campbell Foster’s Letters, 1845–1846 –Theresa Cornwallis West’s 1846 Summer Visit: United Irishmen, Young Ireland, and Mazzini’s Risorgimento – Relief Work and Infrastructure, 1847–1848 – Peripatetic Charity in 1847: Pilgrimage, Soup Kitchens, and Skibbereen – Athlone, the Bog of Allen, and Famine Civil Engineering, 1846 to 1847 – Revolution and Compassion Fatigue, 1848–1850 – Revolutionary Ireland, 1848: New York City Tourists and the John Mitchel Trial – Celebrity Tourists, 1848–1849: De Vere and Tennyson – Duffy and Carlyle – Sidney Godolphin Osborne, the Irish Famine, and the Illustrated London News, 1849–1850 – Late Famine Ireland, 1849–1853 – «Obliterated, Never to Return»: Travel Literature in Late and Post Famine Ireland, 1849–1853.

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