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The Graves are Walking John Kelly

The Graves are Walking By John Kelly

The Graves are Walking by John Kelly


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Summary

Well-meaning civil servants were eager to modernise Irish agriculture and to improve the Irish moral character, which was utterly lacking in the virtues of the new age of triumphant capitalism.

The Graves are Walking Summary

The Graves are Walking by John Kelly

The Irish famine that began in 1845 was one of the nineteenth century's greatest disasters. By its end, the island's population of eight million had shrunk by a third through starvation, disease and emigration. This is a brilliant, compassionate retelling of that awful story for a new generation - the first account for the general reader for many years and a triumphant example of narrative non-fiction at its best.

The immediate cause of the famine was a bacterial infection of the potato crop on which too many the Irish poor depended. What turned a natural disaster into a human disaster was the determination of senior British officials to use relief policy as an instrument of nation-building in their oldest and most recalcitrant colony. Well-meaning civil servants were eager to modernise Irish agriculture and to improve the Irish moral character, which was utterly lacking in the virtues of the new age of triumphant capitalism. The result was a relief programme more concerned with fostering change than of saving lives.

This is history that resonates powerfully with our own times.

About John Kelly

John Kelly is the author of The Great Mortality, an acclaimed history of the Black Death. He lives in New York.

Additional information

NGR9780571284429
9780571284429
0571284426
The Graves are Walking by John Kelly
New
Paperback
Faber & Faber
20130905
416
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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