书评:《爱尔兰的教会与定居》

IF 0.2 Q2 HISTORY Irish Economic and Social History Pub Date : 2020-12-01 DOI:10.1177/0332489320969995h
Elizabeth Boyle
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引用次数: 0

摘要

儿童骨骼的牙齿既有细微又明显的疾病、营养不良和创伤痕迹,它们的埋葬方式暴露了它们在死亡时是如何得到照顾的”(第86页)。加拿大的饥荒孤儿是本书三篇文章的焦点。Mark G.McGowan的文章挑战了法裔加拿大家庭收养这些孩子并欢迎他们回家的玫瑰色观点。一项针对抵达魁北克市的619名饥荒孤儿的研究表明,在北美,许多“儿童基本上是在为他们所在的家庭提供半契约服务”,并希望“尽快离开他们的安置地,以确保独立或与其他地方的大家庭成员团聚”(第96-7页)。杰森·金的一篇文章展示了“离散家庭在移民危机中遭受的巨大痛苦”(第136页)。金追溯了饥荒孤儿罗伯特·沃尔什为寻找他的妹妹所做的努力,当他们全家穿越大西洋移民时,妹妹被留在了爱尔兰。沃尔什在七岁时成为孤儿,他的父母和弟弟死于魁北克省格罗斯岛的发热棚。他被一个充满爱心的法裔加拿大家庭收留,作为一个饥荒孤儿,他接受了良好的教育,成为了一名牧师。1871-2年,他前往爱尔兰,希望能实现寻找失散多年的妹妹的梦想。由于缺乏关于其家族起源的准确信息,他在爱尔兰的错误地区进行了搜索,没有发现她的踪迹。心烦意乱的他回到加拿大,在33岁时去世,他作为一名移民儿童“死于斑疹伤寒并发症,尚未完全康复”(第133页)。Koral LaVorgna的文章探讨了新不伦瑞克省圣约翰市短暂的移民孤儿院,该院是为应对19世纪40年代末抵达的爱尔兰移民中大量无父母子女而设立的。该收容所从1847年到1849年运作了两年,旨在“将贫困和孤儿从无所事事的危险中解救出来”并对他们进行教育(第153页)。饥荒引发的危机平息后,收容所关闭,剩下的23名儿童被转移到救济院。正如这些例子所示,这本散文集提供了一个启发性的、往往令人痛心的介绍,介绍了儿童经历大饥饿的方式,以及这些经历是如何被记住的。
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Book review: Church and Settlement in Ireland
teeth of the child skeletons exhibit both subtle and substantial marks of disease, malnutrition and trauma, and the manner in which they were buried has exposed how they were cared for in death’ (p. 86). Famine orphans in Canada are the focus of three essays in the book. Mark G. McGowan’s essay challenges the rose-tinted view of French-Canadian families adopting these children and welcoming them into their homes. A study of 619 Famine orphans who arrived at Quebec City suggests that many ‘children were essentially in a semiindentured service to the families in which they were placed’ and wanted to leave ‘their placements as soon as possible in order to secure independence or reunite with extended family members elsewhere’ in North America (pp. 96–7). An essay by Jason King demonstrates ‘the magnitude of distress that separated families suffer during migration crises’ (p. 136). King traces the efforts made by Famine orphan Robert Walsh to find his baby sister who had been left behind in Ireland when their family migrated across the Atlantic. Walsh became an orphan at the age of seven after his parents and younger brother died in the fever sheds of Grosse Île, Quebec. He was taken in by a caring French-Canadian family, and, unusually for a Famine orphan, he received a good education and became a priest. He travelled to Ireland in 1871–2 in hopes of fulfilling his dream of finding his long-lost sister. Lacking accurate information about his family’s origins, he searched in the wrong part of Ireland and found no trace of her. Distraught, he returned to Canada and died at the age of 33, having ‘succumbed to complications of typhus from which he had not fully recovered’ as a migrant child (p. 133). Koral LaVorgna’s essay examines the short-lived Emigrant Orphan Asylum in Saint John, New Brunswick, which was established in response to the high number of parentless children among Irish immigrants arriving in the late 1840s. The asylum, which operated for two years from 1847 to 1849, sought ‘to rescue destitute and orphaned children from the dangers of idleness’ and educate them (p. 153). The asylum closed once the Famine-driven crisis subsided, with the remaining twenty-three children transferred to the almshouse. As these examples show, this essay collection provides an illuminating and often harrowing introduction to the ways in which children experienced the Great Hunger and how these experiences have been remembered.
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