Tourism, Landscape, and the Irish Character: British Travel Writers in Pre-Famine IrelandPicturesque but poor, abject yet sublime in its Gothic melancholy, the Ireland perceived by British visitors during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries did not fit their ideas of progress, propriety, and Protestantism. The rituals of Irish Catholicism, the lamentations of funeral wakes, the Irish language they could not comprehend, even the landscapes were all strange to tourists from England, Wales, and Scotland. Overlooking the acute despair in England’s own industrial cities, these travelers opined in their writings that the poverty, bog lands, and ill-thatched houses of rural Ireland indicated moral failures of the Irish character. |
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Page 89
... Cabins After the Irish language , Hadfield and McVeagh suggest , the Irish cabin was the primary signifier of otherness in Ireland.19 For most tourists , individual peasant cabins were specific sites of poverty . The tenements and ...
... Cabins After the Irish language , Hadfield and McVeagh suggest , the Irish cabin was the primary signifier of otherness in Ireland.19 For most tourists , individual peasant cabins were specific sites of poverty . The tenements and ...
Page 101
... cabins . Since good land was at a premium , the inhabitants built their cabins on the least tillable plots nearest to the road with gable ends to the wind . Each cabin had a gort or garden , their adjoining high walls forming alleys ...
... cabins . Since good land was at a premium , the inhabitants built their cabins on the least tillable plots nearest to the road with gable ends to the wind . Each cabin had a gort or garden , their adjoining high walls forming alleys ...
Page 176
... cabins may have been freely abandoned by emigrants , most of the ruined dwellings dotting the countryside were the result of evictions , the worst of which had been well documented in the British press . When he surveyed the ruined cabins ...
... cabins may have been freely abandoned by emigrants , most of the ruined dwellings dotting the countryside were the result of evictions , the worst of which had been well documented in the British press . When he surveyed the ruined cabins ...
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Tourism, Landscape, and the Irish Character: British Travel Writers in Pre ... William Williams No preview available - 2012 |
Common terms and phrases
aesthetic agricultural Anglo-Irish Anne Plumptre Anon Arthur Young beauty beggars Blake bogs Britain British tourists British travel writers British visitors cabins Caesar Otway Clew Bay Connacht Connemara Cork Croker cultivation culture described Dublin economic Edited eighteenth century encountered England English Famine Gaelic Galway Gráda Hall's Ireland Hiberno-English History ibid Imagination Inglis Irish character Irish peasant Irish poverty Irish Sketch Book Irish Tourist Irish travel italics added italics original James Johnson John Barrow Jonathan Binns Journey Killarney Lakes of Killarney land landlords landscape Leitch Ritchie look Lough moral mountains numbers Ó Gráda Paddy Paddy's painting peasantry picturesque poor potato Pre-Famine Protestant ragged Richard Colt Hoare road romantic ruins rundale Samuel Carter Hall scene scenery social society South of Ireland Sportsman in Ireland sublime suggests Thackeray Thomas Reid tion Tour in Ireland Tourism in Ireland tourist's gaze travel accounts Ulster villages West of Ireland wild William William Makepeace Thackeray