Wherever They Settled, Immigrants From Ireland And Their Descendants Shaped And Reshaped Their Understanding Of Being Irish In Response To Circumstances In Both The Old And New Worlds. In A Land Of Dreams, Patrick Mannion Analyzes And Compares The Evolution Of Irish Identity In Three Communities On The Prow Of Northeastern North America: St John's, Newfoundland, Halifax, Nova Scotia, And Portland, Maine, In The Late-nineteenth And Early-twentieth Centuries. These Three Port Cities, Home To Diverse Irish Populations In Different Stages Of Development And In Different National Contexts, Provide A Fascinating Setting For A Study Of Intergenerational Ethnicity. Mannion Traces How Irishness Could, At Certain Points, Form The Basis Of A Strong, Cohesive Identity Among Catholics Of Irish Descent, While At Other Times It Faded Into The Background. Although There Was A Consistent, Often Romantic Gaze Across The Atlantic To The Old Land, Many Of The Organizations That Helped Mediate Large-scale Public Engagement With The Affairs Of Ireland - Especially Irish Nationalist Associations - Spread From Further West On The North American Mainland. Irish Ethnicity Did Not, Therefore, Develop In Isolation, But Rather As A Result Of A Complex Interplay Of Local, Regional, National, And Transnational Networks. This Volume Shows That Despite A Growing Generational Distance, Ireland Remained A Land Of Dreams For Many Immigrants And Their Descendants. They Were Connected To A Transnational Irish Diaspora Well Into The Twentieth Century.--
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