Racism In The Irish ExperienceIreland’s unique position as the only state in the European Union to have been colonised, coupled with the ambivalent experiences of Irish people within the British Empire, means that issues of ‘race’ in Ireland are overlaid by complex social and historical forces. This book is a unique analysis of the racialisation of Irish identities. The author examines key phases in the historical development of an Irish 'racial' consciousness, including 16th century colonisation and 19th century immigration to America and Great Britain. He then examines the legacy of this relationship, both in terms of the new migration into Ireland and relations with indigenous minorities -- travellers and Irish Jews. Garner explores the problematic links between nationalist ideologies and racism. He assesses the economic, social and political factors framing the experience of minorities in contemporary Ireland, and places these in a broader European context. |
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Page 112
... element of Moore's appeal , and that she was con- structed as Irish because of that group's model minority status in the 1920s vis - à - vis more ' threatening ' Southern and Eastern Europeans . Interestingly , the promotional ...
... element of Moore's appeal , and that she was con- structed as Irish because of that group's model minority status in the 1920s vis - à - vis more ' threatening ' Southern and Eastern Europeans . Interestingly , the promotional ...
Page 207
... element of ' fictive ethnicity ' is ' race ' , which provides a marker of closure : and ' race ' is family on a larger scale . From this angle , the Irish case generates some interesting points . The Gaelic League , which promoted the ...
... element of ' fictive ethnicity ' is ' race ' , which provides a marker of closure : and ' race ' is family on a larger scale . From this angle , the Irish case generates some interesting points . The Gaelic League , which promoted the ...
Page 259
... element in history is ultimately the production and repro- duction in real life . More than this neither Marx nor myself have ever asserted . If therefore somebody twists this into the statement that the economic element is the only ...
... element in history is ultimately the production and repro- duction in real life . More than this neither Marx nor myself have ever asserted . If therefore somebody twists this into the statement that the economic element is the only ...
Contents
Table | 2 |
Suggested Specific Characteristics of Irish Racism | 28 |
Indicators of Potential Labour Supply | 37 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Africans Anglo-Saxon anti-Irish anti-Irish racism anti-racism anti-racist anti-Semitism anti-Traveller racism areas argues argument asylum asylum-seekers attitudes Britain British Catholic Celtic Celtic Tiger Celts cent Chapter citizenship civilisation colonial constructed context Cork cultural debate difference discourse dominant Dublin economic element emerges emigration Empire employment English ethnic Eurobarometer European example experience focus focussed forms Gaelic Gaelic games Gardai groups historical Home Rule hostility ideas identity ideological income involved Irish Americans Irish diaspora Irish immigrants Irish nation Irish nationalists Irish race Irish racism Irish-born issue Jews labour market Lentin Mac Laughlin McVeigh metanarrative migrants minorities Moreover Native Americans nineteenth century organisation particular period political polls population position Protestant question race racial racialised referred refugees relation relationship relatively response Rolston and Shannon sector slaves social social partnership society specific status surveys tion Travellers University Press workers