Writing Irish nurses in Britain

The demand and supply of migrant labour has always been central to understanding the mutually dependent if uneasy centuries-old economic and political relationship between Ireland and Britain. Whilst Irish migrants have been represented in a wide range of occupations in Britain, they have been dispr...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor Principal: Murray, Tony
Outros autores: Pierse, Michael
Formato: Book Section
Idioma:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2017
Subjects:
Acceso en liña:https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/6182/1/Writing%20Irish%20Nurses%20in%20Britain%20PDF%20copy.pdf
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author Murray, Tony
author2 Pierse, Michael
author_facet Pierse, Michael
Murray, Tony
author_sort Murray, Tony
collection LMU
description The demand and supply of migrant labour has always been central to understanding the mutually dependent if uneasy centuries-old economic and political relationship between Ireland and Britain. Whilst Irish migrants have been represented in a wide range of occupations in Britain, they have been disproportionately clustered in unskilled and semi-skilled sectors of the workforce. In the mid-twentieth century, Irish workers were particularly prominent in two sectors of the British economy: construction and health. After independence, the sense of national pride envisaged by Éamon de Valera as ‘joyous with the sounds of industry’, rather than being realized in the fields and mountains of Ireland, had, as a result of continuing emigration, to be found on the building sites and hospital wards of its neighbouring island. If, as Luke Gibbons points out, ‘understanding a community or a culture […] means taking seriously their ways of structuring experience, their popular narratives, the distinctive manner in which they frame the social and political realities which affect their lives’, then literature clearly has a key role to play. With this principle in mind, this chapter will analyse the experiences of Irish nurses and navvies in London and the south east of England from the late 1930s to the mid-1950s by closely examining a range of fictional and autobiographical texts such as: The Diary of an Exile (1964) by Donall Mac Amhlaigh; Florrie’s Girls (1989) by Maeve Kelly; I Am Alone (1949) by Walter Macken; Sixty Years a Nurse (2015) by Mary Hazard; With Breast Expanded (1964); A Very Private Diary: A Nurse in Wartime (2014) by Mary Morris. By doing so, the chapter will shed light on the lives and recollections of working Irish men and women who, although a familiar sight in Britain, remained a hidden and somewhat mysterious sub-sector of the country’s workforce.
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spelling oai:repository.londonmet.ac.uk:61822020-11-20T09:26:15Z https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/6182/ Writing Irish nurses in Britain Murray, Tony 820 English & Old English literatures The demand and supply of migrant labour has always been central to understanding the mutually dependent if uneasy centuries-old economic and political relationship between Ireland and Britain. Whilst Irish migrants have been represented in a wide range of occupations in Britain, they have been disproportionately clustered in unskilled and semi-skilled sectors of the workforce. In the mid-twentieth century, Irish workers were particularly prominent in two sectors of the British economy: construction and health. After independence, the sense of national pride envisaged by Éamon de Valera as ‘joyous with the sounds of industry’, rather than being realized in the fields and mountains of Ireland, had, as a result of continuing emigration, to be found on the building sites and hospital wards of its neighbouring island. If, as Luke Gibbons points out, ‘understanding a community or a culture […] means taking seriously their ways of structuring experience, their popular narratives, the distinctive manner in which they frame the social and political realities which affect their lives’, then literature clearly has a key role to play. With this principle in mind, this chapter will analyse the experiences of Irish nurses and navvies in London and the south east of England from the late 1930s to the mid-1950s by closely examining a range of fictional and autobiographical texts such as: The Diary of an Exile (1964) by Donall Mac Amhlaigh; Florrie’s Girls (1989) by Maeve Kelly; I Am Alone (1949) by Walter Macken; Sixty Years a Nurse (2015) by Mary Hazard; With Breast Expanded (1964); A Very Private Diary: A Nurse in Wartime (2014) by Mary Morris. By doing so, the chapter will shed light on the lives and recollections of working Irish men and women who, although a familiar sight in Britain, remained a hidden and somewhat mysterious sub-sector of the country’s workforce. Cambridge University Press Pierse, Michael 2017-11 Book Section PeerReviewed text en https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/6182/1/Writing%20Irish%20Nurses%20in%20Britain%20PDF%20copy.pdf Murray, Tony (2017) Writing Irish nurses in Britain. In: A History of Irish Working-Class Writing. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 195-208. ISBN 9781316570425 https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316570425.012 10.1017/9781316570425.012 10.1017/9781316570425.012
spellingShingle 820 English & Old English literatures
Murray, Tony
Writing Irish nurses in Britain
title Writing Irish nurses in Britain
title_full Writing Irish nurses in Britain
title_fullStr Writing Irish nurses in Britain
title_full_unstemmed Writing Irish nurses in Britain
title_short Writing Irish nurses in Britain
title_sort writing irish nurses in britain
topic 820 English & Old English literatures
url https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/6182/1/Writing%20Irish%20Nurses%20in%20Britain%20PDF%20copy.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT murraytony writingirishnursesinbritain