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1 ARCHIVES AND BIBLIOGRAPHY RELATED TO THE FIELD OF THE GREAT IRISH FAMINE Table of contents ARCHIVES 2 Museums 2 Digital archives 2 Course syllabi 2 Other 2 CONTEMPORARY ACCOUNTS OF THE FAMINE 3 Political treatises 3 Historiography 4 Newspaper articles 4 Parliamentary documents 4 Travel narratives and eye-witness accounts 5 Sermons 5 The Irish Diaspora 5 Poetry 6 SECONDARY SOURCES 8 FAMINE FICTION, 1846-1921 32

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Page 1: ARCHIVES AND BIBLIOGRAPHY RELATED TO THE FIELD OF THE ... · • The Literary Memory of the Great Famine in Irish (Diaspora) Literature, 1846-1921 (MA course, Radboud University Nijmegen)

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ARCHIVES AND BIBLIOGRAPHY RELATED TO THE FIELD OF THE GREAT IRISH FAMINE

Table of contents ARCHIVES 2

Museums 2

Digital archives 2

Course syllabi 2

Other 2

CONTEMPORARY ACCOUNTS OF THE FAMINE 3

Political treatises 3

Historiography 4

Newspaper articles 4

Parliamentary documents 4

Travel narratives and eye-witness accounts 5

Sermons 5

The Irish Diaspora 5

Poetry 6

SECONDARY SOURCES 8

FAMINE FICTION, 1846-1921 32

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ARCHIVES Museums

• Strokestown Park. The Irish National Famine Museum. Co. Roscommon, Ireland.

• Ireland's Great Hunger Museum. Quinnipiac University — Hamden, CT, United States.

Digital archives

• King, Jason. Irish Famine Archive (2015). http://www.faminearchive.nuigalway.ie

Course syllabi

• The Literary Memory of the Great Famine in Irish (Diaspora) Literature, 1846-1921 (MA course, Radboud University Nijmegen)

• 'That Vast Catastrophe': The Great Irish Famine of the 1840s (BA course, Queen's University Belfast)

Other

• Andrew Newby's work on Famine in Finland. Codirector Andrew Newby's important work on Finnish famine memorials has received wide coverage across different media. For further information about the project, see the article on the Academy of Finland website. Images of Finnish famine memorials can be found on the project Instagram account. Newby's work on the Finnish famine or suuret nälkävuodet of the 1860s has also resulted in an exhibition at the National Famine Museum at Strokestown Park, County Roscommon, Ireland. Newby recently gave an interview about the Strokestown exhibition on RosFM, Roscommon's community radio station.

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CONTEMPORARY ACCOUNTS OF THE FAMINE (compiled by Marguérite Corporaal and Ciarán Reilly)

Political treatises

• Adair, Shafto. The Winter of 1846-7 in Antrim; with Remarks on Out-Door Relief and

Colonization (London: James Ridgway, 1847).

• Anon., Remarks on Ireland; as it is, as it ought to be and as it might be …by a

native (London, 1849).

• Alcock, T., The tenure of land in Ireland considered (London, 1848).

• Allison, William Pulteney. Observations on the Famine of 1846-7, in the Highlands of

Scotland and in Ireland. (Edinburgh and London: William Blackwood& Sons, 1847).

• Campell, Alexander, The farmers and cottagers guide (Dublin, 1848).

• Corrigan, D.J. On Famine and Fever as Cause and Effect in Ireland (Dublin: J. Fannin

and co., 1846).

• Doolan, Thomas. Practical Suggestions on the Improvement of the Present Condition

of the Peasantry of Ireland (London: George Barclay, 1847).

• Forbes, Robert Bennett. The Jamestown on her Errand of Mercy (Boston: Eastburn’s

Press, 1847).

• Irish Improvidence Encouraged by English Bounty (London: James Ridgway, 1847).

• Lambert, Joseph, Agricultural suggestions to the proprietors and peasantry of

Ireland (Dublin, 1845).

• Maberly, Mrs. The Present State of Ireland and Its Remedy (London: James Ridgway,

1847).

• Mitchel, John. Jail Journal; or, Five Years in British Prisons (New York: Office of “The

Citizen”, 1854).

• Mitchel, John. The Last Conquest of Ireland (Perhaps). (Dublin: The Irishman Office,

1861).

• McNevin, Richard Charles, The practice of the Incumbered Estates Court in Ireland

from the presentation of the petition of sale, to the distribution of the funds (Dublin,

1854).

• Pim, Jonathan, The conditions and prospects of Ireland and the evils arising from the

present distribution of landed property: With suggestions for a remedy (Dublin, 1848).

• Pim, Jonathan. Observations on the Evils Resulting to Ireland (Dublin: Hodges and

Smith, 1847).

• Trevelyan, Charles. The Irish Crisis (London: Longman, Brown, Green and Longmans,

1848).

• Rawsterne, Lawrence, Esq. The Cause of the Potato Disease: Ascertained by

Proofs (London: Simpkin, Marshall, and Co., 1847).

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• Robinson, W.W. The Dawn of Irelands Prosperity: General Employment; Blight of the

Potato Crop; A Visitation (Dublin: John Robertson, 1847).

• Scrope, G. Poulett. Letters to Lord John Russell, M.P.; on the Further Measures

Required for the Social Amelioration of Ireland (London: James Ridgway, 1847)

Historiography

• Fitzgerald, P.H., The story of the Incumbered Estate Court (London, 1862).

• Mitchel, John. The History of Ireland, From the Treaty of Limerick to the

Present (Glasgow: Cameron and Ferguson, 1859).

• Montgomery, William Ernest. The History of Land Tenure in Ireland (Cambridge:

Cambridge University Press, 1889).

• O’Brien, William P., The Great Famine in Ireland and a Retrospect of the Fifty Years

1845–1895, with a Sketch of the Present Condition and Future Prospects of the

Congested Districts (London: Downey, 1896).

• Sullivan, A.M. New Ireland: Political Sketches and Personal Reminiscences of Thirty

Years of Irish Public Life (Glasgow and London: Cameron and Ferguson, 1877).

Newspaper articles

• “Another Potato Famine: Emigration to New Brunswick Should be Encouraged”, The

Morning Freeman, 19 October 1861.

• “Condition of Ireland: Illustrations of the New Poor Law”. The Illustrated London

News, 15 December 1849.

• “Expulsion of Tenantry”. The Cork Examiner, 20 September 1847.

• The Great Irish Famine of 1845– A Collection of Leading Articles, Letters, and

Parliamentary and other Public Statements, Reprinted from The Times (London: The

Times, 1880),

• “The Irish Famine”. The Cork Reporter, 29 April 1847.

Parliamentary documents

• Correspondence explanatory of measures adopted by H.M. Government for relief of

distress arising from failure of potato crop in Ireland, 1846 [735].

• Abstract return of the number of persons employed on Relief Works in the under

mentioned counties for the four weeks of July 1846.

• Select committee of House of Lords on laws, relating to relief of destitute poor and

operation of medical charities in Ireland [1846] (694).

• Report from the Select Committee of the House of Lords on the laws relating to the

relief of the destitute poor and into the operation of the medical charities in Ireland,

together with the minutes of evidence taken before the said committee, 1846 (694)

(694–ii) (694–iii).

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• Correspondence relating to measures for relief of distress in Ireland (Commissariat

Series), January-March 1847 [796].

• Correspondence relating to measures for relief of distress in Ireland (Board of Works

Series), January-March 1847 [797].

• Papers relating to proceedings for the relief of distress, and the state of Unions and

Workhouses in Ireland. Seventh series, 1847–48 [919] [955] [999].

Travel narratives and eye-witness accounts

• Bennett, William. Narrative of a Recent Journey of Six Weeks in Ireland (London:

Gilpin, 1847).

• Carlyle, Thomas. Reminiscences of my Irish Journey in 1849 (New York: Harper and

Sons, 1882).

• Cheney, Harriet Vaughan. “Sketches on a Journey”, The Literary Garland VII, no. 8

(1849), 376-79.

• Christmas 1846 and the New Year 1847 in Ireland; Letters by a Lady (Durham: G.

Andrews, 1847).

• Dufferin, Lord and G.G. Boyle. Narrative of a Journey from Oxford to Skibbereen, in the

Year of the Famine (Oxford: John Henry Parker, 1847).

• Hall, Spencer T. Life and Death in Ireland as Witnessed in 1849 (Manchester: Parkes,

1850).

• Nicholson, Asenath. Annals of the Famine in Ireland in 1847, 1848 and 1849 (New

York: E. French, 1851).

• Smith, William Henry. A Twelve Months’ Residence in Ireland during the Famine and

the Public Works, 1846 and 1847 (London: Longman, 1848).

• Whyte, Robert. The Ocean’s Plague; or a Voyage to Quebec in an Irish Emigrant

Vessel (Boston: Coolidge and Wiley, 1848).

Sermons

• Ireland and her Famine; A Discourse, Preached in Paradise Street Chapel, Liverpool on

Sunday, January 31, 1847 by James Martineau (London: John Chapman, 1847).

• Robinson, John Travers. A Sermon Preached in St. Leonard’s Chapel, Newton Abbott,

Devonshire (Feignmouth, E. and G.H.Croydon, 1847).

The Irish Diaspora

• Davin, Nicholas Flood. The Irishman in Canada (London: Sampson Low, Marston &

Co., 1877).

• “Deaths on Patridge Island Since July 31, 1847”, New Brunswick Courier, 7 August

1847.

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• Gilmour, Richard, Bishop of Cleveland, “The Irish Famine”. The Harp. A Magazine of

General Literature 2 (1879), 67–9.

• Grosse-Isle Emigrant Station. A Letter Addressed to the Inspectors of Hospitals, Prisons

and Asylums (Quebec: J.T. Brousseau, 1861).

• Hale, Edward E. Letters on Irish Emigration (Boston: Philips, Sampson & Co., 1852).

• Halley, William. Speech Delivered at the Dinner of St. Patrick’s Society, Toronto, on the

17th of March, 1860, in Response to the Sentiment of “The Irish Race at Home and

Abroad”. (Toronto: n. p., 1860).

• Maguire, John Francis. The Irish in America (New York: J. and D. Sadlier, 1868).

• McGee, Thomas D’Arcy. “The Exile’s Meditation”, The Poems of Thomas D’Arcy

McGee, with Corpious Notes. (New York: D. & J. Sadlier, 1869), 105-106.

• “Protestant Violence in Canada”. The Pilot, 3 April 1858.

• Return of Orphan girls sent from workhouses in Ireland as emigrants to Australia

under arrangements set forth in papers in the commissioners annual report, 1848.

• “Sympathy for Famine Suffering”, The New Brunswick Reporter, 12 February 1847.

• “The Social Duties of Irishmen in America”. The American Celt, 23 July 1853.

• “The Famine in Ireland”. The Pilot, 25 January 1862.

• “The Stranger’s Grave”, New Brunswick Courier, 25 September 1847.

Poetry

• Desolation: A Story of the Irish Famine (London: Nisbet & Co., 1869).

• Dufferin, Helen Selina. “The Emigrant Ship”, in Songs, Poems and Verses (Dublin:

Murray, 1894), p. 189.

• Mangan, James Clarence. “The Warning Voice”, in Poems by James Clarence Mangan,

with Biographical Introduction by John Mitchel (New York: P. M. Haverty, 1859), 437-

41.

• Mangan, James Calrence. “A Voice of Encouragement: A New Year’s Lay”, in Poems of

James Clarence Mangan, Many Hitherto Uncollected (Dublin: M.H. Gill, 1922), 100-

103.

• Martineau, Harriet. “The Famine Time”, Household Words VI, no. 138 (1852), 315.

• Rawlins, C.A. The Famine in Ireland; a Poem (London: Joseph Masters, 1847).

• “The Emigrant’s Mother”, The Literary Garland VIII, no. 6 (1850), 274.

• The Farmer of Inniscreen; A Tale of the Irish Famine. In Verse (London: Jarrold and

Sons, 1863).

• The Feast of Famine: An Irish Banquet. With other Poems (London: Chapman and Hall,

1870).

• “The Irish Emigrant’s Lament”. The Pilot, 23 January 1858.

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• Varian, Elizabeth Willoughby. “Proselytizing”, in Poems by ´Finola’ (Belfast: John

Henderson, 1851), 41.

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SECONDARY SOURCES (compiled by Ciarán Reilly and Marguérite Corporaal)

• Adams, William Forbes, Ireland and Irish emigration to the new world from 1815 to

the Famine (Dublin, 1980).

• Andrews, J.H., ‘The French school of Dublin land surveyors’, in Irish Geography, 5:4

(1964–68), pp 275– 92.

• Andrews, J.H., ‘The Longfield maps in the National Library of Ireland: an agenda for

research’ in Irish Geography, 21 (1991), pp 24–34.

• Andrews, J.H., Plantation acres: a historical study of the Irish land surveyor and his

maps (Belfast, 1985).

• Asmundsson, Doris R., ‘Trollope’s first novel: A re-examination’ in Éire-Ireland, 3 (Fall,

1971), pp 83– 91.

• Barlow, J, Bog land studies (London, 1983).

• Barnard, Toby, A new anatomy of Ireland: The Irish Protestants, 1649–1770 (London,

2004).

• Barry, John, ‘The Duke of Devonshire’s Irish estates, 1794–7: reports of Henry

Bowman, agent’ in Analecta Hibernica, 22 (1960), pp 269–327.

• Bartoletti, Susan Campbell. Black Potatoes: The Story of the Great Irish Famine, 1845-

1850 (New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2001).

• Beames, Michael, ‘Rural conflict in pre-famine Ireland: peasant assassinations in

Tipperary, 1837–47’ in Past and Present, 96 (Nov., 1981), pp 75–91.

• Beames, Michael, ‘The Ribbon Societies: Lower-class nationalism in pre-famine

Ireland’ in Past and Present, 97 (Nov., 1982), pp 128–43.

• Beames, Michael, Peasants and power: The Whiteboy movements and their control in

pre-Famine Ireland (Great Britain, 1983).

• Bell, Jonathon and Mervyn Watson (eds), Irish farming: implements and techniques,

1750–1900 (Edinburgh, 1986).

• Bell, Jonathon and Mervyn Watson (eds), A history of Irish farming, 1750–

1950 (Dublin, 2008).

• Bell, Jonathon, People and land: farming in nineteenth century Ireland (Belfast, 1992).

• Bellot, Leland J., ‘Wild hares and red herrings: a case study of estate management in

the eighteenth century English countryside’ in The Huntington Quarterly, 56:1

(Winter, 1993), pp 15–39.

• Bew, Paul, Ireland: The politics of enmity, 1789–2006 (Oxford, 2007).

• Bigelow, Gordon. “Trollope and Ireland”, in Carolyn Dever and Lisa Niles, eds., The

Cambridge Companion to Anthony Trollope (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,

2011), 196-210.

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• Bigelow, Gordon. Fiction, Famine, and the Rise of Economics in Victorian Britain and

Ireland (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003).

• Boyce, Charlotte, ‘Representing the "Hungry Forties" in Image and Verse: The Politics

of Hunger in Early-Victorian Illustrated Periodicals’, Victorian Literature and Culture 40

(2012), 421–49.

• Boyce, D. George, Nineteenth century Ireland: the search for stability (Dublin, 1990).

• Boylan, Thomas A. and Timothy P. Foley, Political Economy and Colonial Ireland: The

Propagation and Ideological Function of Economic Discourse in the Nineteenth

Century (1992; new edn, New York: Routledge, 2005).

• Brady, Ciarán (ed.), Interpreting Irish history: the debate of historical revisionism,

1938–1994 (Dublin, 1994).

• Breen, Grainne C., ‘Landlordism in King’s County in the mid-nineteenth century’ in

Nolan, William and O’Neill, Tim P. (eds), Offaly history & society: interdisciplinary

essays on the history of an Irish county (Dublin, 1998), pp 627–80.

• Breiden, Jacqueline, ‘Tenant applications to Lord Farnham county Cavan, 1832–60’ in

Breifne: Journal of Cumman Seanchais Bhréifne, 9:36 (2000), pp 173–224.

• Brewster, Scott and Virginia Crossman. “Re-writing the Famine: Witnessing in Crisis”,

in Scott Brewster et al., eds., Ireland in Proximity: History, Gender, Space (London:

Routledge, 1999), 42-59.

• Brown, Thomas N., ‘Nationalism and the Irish peasant, 1800–1848’ in The Review of

Politics, 15:4 (Oct., 1953), pp 403– 45.

• Bull, Philip, Land, politics and nationalism: A study of the Irish land question (Dublin,

1996).

• Burke, H., The people and the poor law in nineteenth century Ireland (England, 1987)

• Byrne, Michael, ‘Judge William O’Connor Morris, 1824–1904 Gortnamona, Tullamore’

in Offaly Heritage, 5 (2007–8), pp 117–46.

• Byrne, Michael, ‘Tullamore: the growth process, 1785–1841’ in Nolan, William and

O’Neill, Tim P. (eds), Offaly history and society: interdisciplinary essays on the history

of an Irish county (Dublin, 1998), pp 569–627.

• Byrne, Michael, ‘The development of Tullamore, 1700–1921’ (Unpublished M. Litt.

thesis, University College Dublin, 1979).

• Byrne, Michael, ‘The Magawley’s of Temora and the Banons of Broughall, county

Offaly’ in Offaly Heritage, 6 (2010) pp 128–77.

• Byrne, Michael, Legal Offaly: the county courthouse at Tullamore and the legal

profession in county Offaly from the 1820s to the present (Tullamore, 2008).

• Byrne, Michael, Tullamore Catholic parish: A historical survey (Tullamore, 1987).

• Byrne, Michael, Durrow in history: a celebration of what has gone before (Tullamore,

1994).

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• Callon, D.J. Converting Catholicism: Orestes A. Brownson, Anna H. Dorsey, and Irish

America, 1840- 1896 (St. Louis, MI: Washington University, 2008).

• Campbell, Malcolm, ‘Ireland's Furthest Shores: Irish Immigrant Settlement in

Nineteenth-Century California and Eastern Australia’, The Pacific Historical

Review 71/1 (Feb. 2002), 59–90.

• Carpenter, Andrew, Verse in English from eighteenth century Ireland (Cork, 1998).

• Carr, Peter, The Big Wind (Belfast, 1991).

• Casement, Anne L., ‘The management of landed estates in Ulster in the mid-

nineteenth century with special reference to the career of John Andrews as agent to

the third and fourth marquesses of Londonderry from 1828 to 1863’ (Unpublished

Ph.D thesis, Queens University of Belfast, 2002).

• Chestnutt, Margaret, ‘Landlords and land tenure in Ireland, 1790–1830’ in Éire-

Ireland: A journal of Irish Studies (Eanach, 1994), pp 25–59.

• Chestnutt, Margaret, ‘Studies in the short stories of William Carleton’ in Gothenburg

Studies in English, 34 (1976), pp 102–18.

• Chestnutt, Margaret, Studies in the short stories of William Carleton (Sweden, 1976).

• Christianson, Gale E., ‘Secret societies and agrarian violence in Ireland, 1790–1840’ in

Agricultural History, 46:3 (Jul., 1972), pp 369–84.

• Clare, Revd Wallace (ed.), A Young Irishman’s Diary (1836–1847): The early journal of

John Keegan of Moate (Dublin, 1928).

• Clark, Samuel and Donnelly, James S. Jnr (eds), Irish Peasants: violence and political

unrest, 1780–1914 (Dublin, 1983).

• Clark, Samuel, ‘The importance of agrarian classes: agrarian class structure and

collective action in nineteenth century Ireland’ in The British Journal of Sociology, 29:1

(Mar., 1978), pp 22–40.

• Clark, Samuel, ‘The importance of agrarian classes: agrarian class structure and

collective action in nineteenth century Ireland’ in Drudy, P.J. (ed.), Ireland: land,

politics and people (Cambridge, 1982), pp 11–36.

• Clark, Samuel, ‘The Land War in Ireland’ (Unpublished Ph.D thesis, Department of

Sociology, Harvard University, Massachusetts, 1973).

• Clark, Samuel, Social origins of the Irish land war (Princeton, 1979).

• Clarke, Joe, Christopher Dillon Bellew and his Galway estates, 1763–1826 (Dublin,

2003).

• Clarkson, L.A.; Margaret E. Crawford; Paul S. Ell and Liam Kennedy (eds), Mapping the

great Irish famine: a survey of the famine decades (Dublin, 1999).

• Cleary, Joe and Claire Conolly (eds), The Cambridge Companion to Modern Irish

Culture (Cambridge, 2005).

• Cloghan I.C.A., A history of Cloghan parish (Cloghan, 1988).

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• Clyne, Owen; English, Paudge; Kinihan, Brother Raphael and Kenny, Brendan (eds),

Clara a pictorial record (Tullamore, 1992).

• Connell, Peter, The land and people of county Meath, 1750–1850 (Dublin, 2004).

• Conwell, John Joseph, A Galway landlord during the Great Famine: Ulick John de

Burgh, first marquis of Clanricarde (Dublin, 2003).

• Cooke, T.L., ‘Wayside ancient monument at Drishoge, King’s County’ in The Journal of

the Kilkenny and South-East of Ireland Archaeological Society, 1:2 (1857), pp 380–5.

• Corporaal, Marguérite. Relocated Memories: The Great Famine in Irish and Diaspora

Fiction, 1846-1870 (Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 2017).

• Corporaal, Marguérite “‘Let any one try to picture what it is’: The Dynamics of the

Irish Short Story and the Mediation of Famine Trauma, 1850-1865”, in Elke D’Hoker

and Stephanie Eggermont, eds.,The Irish Short Story: Traditions and Trends (Oxford:

Peter Lang, 2015), 21-43.

• Corporaal, Marguérite and Christopher Cusack. “Rites of Passage: The Coffin Ship as

Site of Immigrants’ Identity Formation in Irish and Irish-American Fiction, 1855-

1885”, Atlantic Studies 8, no.3 (2011), 343-59.

• Corporaal, Marguérite. “Memories of the Great Famine and Ethnic identity in Novels

by Victorian Irish Women Writers”, English Studies 90, no.2 (2009), 1-15.

• Corporaal, Marguérite. “Black Patches and Rotting Weeds: The Great Famine as a

Transcultural Figure of Memory in Irish (Diaspora) Fiction, 1860-1880”, in Jessica

Rapson and Lucy Bond ,eds.,The Transcultural Turn: Interrogating Memory between

and beyond Borders (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2014), 247-66.

• Corporaal, Marguérite. “From Golden Hills to Sycamore Trees: Pastoral Homelands

and Ethnic Identity in Irish Immigrant Fiction, 1860-1875”, Irish Studies Review 18, no.

3 (2010),. 331-46.

• Corporaal, Marguérite. “Remigration in Irish and Irish Diapora Famine Fiction, 1860-

1870”, Breac: A Digital Journal of Irish Studies 1, no. 1.

(2013). http://breac.nd.edu/articles/36996-remigration-in-irish-and-irish-diaspora-

famine-fiction-1860-1870/.

• Corporaal, Marguérite. "Writing of the Irish Famine", Oxford Bibliographies

(2014). http://www.oxfordbibliographies.com/view/document/obo-

9780199846719/obo-9780199846719-

0107.xml?rskey=t0MPwA&result=1&q=corporaal#firstMatch.

• Cousens, S.H., ‘Regional death rates in Ireland during the Great Famine from 1846 to

1851’ in Population Studies, 14:1 (Jul., 1960), pp 55–74.

• Cousens, S.H., ‘The regional pattern of emigration during the Great Irish Famine,

1846–51’ in Transactions and Papers (Institute of British Geographers), 28 (1960), pp

119–34.

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• Cousens, S.H., ‘The Regional variations in mortality during the Irish Great Famine’ in

I.A. Proc. 63 C, 3 (Feb., 1963), pp 127–49.

• Crawford, William H., The management of a major Ulster estate in the late eighteenth

century: The eighth earl of Abercorn and his Irish agents (Dublin, 2001).

• Cronin, Denis A., A Galway gentleman in the age of improvement: Robert French of

Monivea, 1716–79 (Dublin, 1995).

• Cronin, Maura, Agrarian protest in Ireland, 1750–1960 (Dundalk, 2012).

• Crowley, John, Smyth, William J. and Murphy, Mike (eds), Atlas of the Great

Famine (Cork, 2012).

• Crowley, John, William J. Smyth and Mike Murphy, eds. Atlas of the Great Irish

Famine, 1845-52 (Cork: Cork University Press, 2012).

• Crowley, John. “Constructing Famine Memory: The Role of Monuments”, in Niamh

Moore and Yvonne Whelan,eds., Heritage, Memory and the Politics of Identity: New

Perspectives on the Cultural Landscape (Farnham: Ashgate, 2007), 55-69.

• Cullen, Fintan, ‘Marketing national sentiment: lantern slide of evictions in late 19th

century Ireland’ in History Workshop Journal, 54 (2002), pp 162–79.

• Cullen, L.M., ‘Eighteenth century flour milling in Ireland’ in Irish Economic and Social

History Journal, 4 (1977), pp 56–65.

• Curtis, Jr, L. Perry, The Depiction of Eviction in Ireland 1845–1910 (Dublin: University

College Dublin Press, 2011).

• Curtis, L. P., ‘Incumbered wealth: landed indebtedness in post-Famine Ireland’ in

American Historical Review, 85:2 (Apr., 1980), pp 332–67.

• Curtis, L. P., ‘The battering ram and Irish evictions, 1887–90’ in Éire-Ireland: A journal

of Irish Studies, 42 (Spring, 2007), pp 207–28.

• Cusack, Christopher, ‘Famine Memory and Diasporic Identity in US Periodical Fiction,

1891-1918,’ Symbiosis: Journal of Transatlantic Literary and Cultural Relations 19.2

(2015): 153-69.

• Cusack, Christopher and Lindsay Janssen. “Death in the Family: Reimagining the Irish

Family in Famine Fiction, 1871-1912”, in Yvonne O'Keeffe and Claudia Reese, eds.,

New Voices, Inherited Lines: Literary and Cultural Representations of the Irish

Family (Oxford: Peter Lang, 2013), 7-34.

• Cusack, Danny, ‘Breaking the silence: the poets of north Meath and the Great Famine’

in Riocht Na Midhe: Records of the Meath Archaeological and Historical Society, 19

(2008), pp 170–88.

• Daly, Mary E., ‘Historians and the Famine: a beleaguered species?’ in Irish Historical

Studies, 30:120 (Nov., 1997), pp 591–601.

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