Neighborliness and Decency, Witchcraft and Famine: Reflections on Community from Irish Folklore
dc.contributor.author | Cashman, Ray | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2025-02-20T16:01:23Z | |
dc.date.available | 2025-02-20T16:01:23Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2021-01-01 | |
dc.description | This record is for a(n) offprint of an article published in The Journal of American Folklore on 2021-01-01. | |
dc.description.abstract | Many examples of Irish folklore reflect and instill enduring conceptions about the workings, vulnerability, and viability of community, which is understood to be a doing, a project in need of continual maintenance. Arguably, there has been no more devastating blow to the vernacular understanding of community as social contract for mutual support than the mid-nineteenth-century Famine in Ireland. If folklore provides models for contemplating and reproducing ideas about how community may be enacted, it also bears witness to the haunting consequences of abandoning community. | |
dc.description.version | offprint | |
dc.identifier.citation | Cashman, Ray. "Neighborliness and Decency, Witchcraft and Famine: Reflections on Community from Irish Folklore." The Journal of American Folklore, vol. 134, no. 531, 2021-01-01. | |
dc.identifier.uri | https://hdl.handle.net/2022/32687 | |
dc.language.iso | en | |
dc.relation.journal | The Journal of American Folklore | |
dc.subject | Community | |
dc.subject | evil eye | |
dc.subject | fairies | |
dc.subject | famines | |
dc.subject | neighborliness | |
dc.subject | space and place | |
dc.subject | reciprocity | |
dc.subject | collective memory | |
dc.subject | witchcraft | |
dc.subject | worldview | |
dc.title | Neighborliness and Decency, Witchcraft and Famine: Reflections on Community from Irish Folklore |
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