Neighborliness and Decency, Witchcraft and Famine: Reflections on Community from Irish Folklore

dc.contributor.authorCashman, Ray
dc.date.accessioned2025-02-20T16:01:23Z
dc.date.available2025-02-20T16:01:23Z
dc.date.issued2021-01-01
dc.descriptionThis record is for a(n) offprint of an article published in The Journal of American Folklore on 2021-01-01.
dc.description.abstractMany 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.versionoffprint
dc.identifier.citationCashman, 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.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2022/32687
dc.language.isoen
dc.relation.journalThe Journal of American Folklore
dc.subjectCommunity
dc.subjectevil eye
dc.subjectfairies
dc.subjectfamines
dc.subjectneighborliness
dc.subjectspace and place
dc.subjectreciprocity
dc.subjectcollective memory
dc.subjectwitchcraft
dc.subjectworldview
dc.titleNeighborliness and Decency, Witchcraft and Famine: Reflections on Community from Irish Folklore

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