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My struggle for life / Joseph Keating ; with an introduction by Paul O'Leary

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Classics of Irish historyPublisher: Dublin : University College Dublin Press, 2005Description: xxx, xv, 308 pages ; 19 cmISBN:
  • 9781904558446 pbk
  • 9781904558446 pbk
Subject(s): Scope and content: This eloquent memoir provides an unrivalled insight into the life of a child reared in a working-class Irish Catholic community in late nineteenth-century Britain. No other author succeeds in depicting so vividly the texture of a life delimited by manual work, home and community ties as experienced by Irish migrants of the period. At the same time, it charts the tortuous route by which a young man struggled to free himself from a life of manual labour by using his literary talents to become a journalist and a popular novelist. Published in 1916, it reflects the world and assumptions of an émigré community between the failure of the Fenian movement and the Easter Rising, and it includes a telling vignette of the aged Fenian O'Donovan Rossa. An insightful picture of the world of those Home Rule supporters who lived outside Ireland emerges from this book
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
General General ATU Dublin Road General Shelves 941.0049162 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available J148938

Originally published: London : Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co., 1916

Includes bibliographical references and index

This eloquent memoir provides an unrivalled insight into the life of a child reared in a working-class Irish Catholic community in late nineteenth-century Britain. No other author succeeds in depicting so vividly the texture of a life delimited by manual work, home and community ties as experienced by Irish migrants of the period. At the same time, it charts the tortuous route by which a young man struggled to free himself from a life of manual labour by using his literary talents to become a journalist and a popular novelist. Published in 1916, it reflects the world and assumptions of an émigré community between the failure of the Fenian movement and the Easter Rising, and it includes a telling vignette of the aged Fenian O'Donovan Rossa. An insightful picture of the world of those Home Rule supporters who lived outside Ireland emerges from this book

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