"Irish people" Essays and Research Papers

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    Irish Stereotypes

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    Irish Stereotypes The Irish people have been on the receiving end of many racial stereotypes. When they migrated to America because of lack of jobs‚ poor living conditions‚ and many other reasons they were treated as the lowest member of the social class. They were given jobs that were thought to be too unsafe for blacks to carry out because the loss of a slave was an out of pocket expense (Kinsella‚ 2002). But The Irish were not only discriminated against in America‚ but in their own country

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    20th century the Irish fully assimilated into American culture and enjoyed equal treatment from their Protestant counterparts. Many consider the presidential election of 1928 a turning point in the acceptance of Irish in the United States. That year‚ Al Smith became the first Irish Catholic to win the democratic nomination for president. Likewise‚ many see the election of 1961 as a triumph for Irish assimilation in America. This election saw John F. Kennedy become the first Irish Catholic to be president

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    Irish‚ Italian‚ polish‚ Spanish‚ Native American just to name a few of the nationalities that make up America today. The Irish had a dominant role in this factor with their migration to America. The life of immigrants and their challenges and accomplishments differ from story to story. Many of us come from one of these backgrounds and/or heard a story in our family past that was tale of life as an immigrant. The cultural traits of the Irish that served them well in their new country was? The Irish

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    Scottish-Irish immigrants came to America broke but were culturally competent with literacy unlike many of the poor Irish Catholic immigrants that arrived in America due to the potato famine in Ireland. The change over time for the Scots-Irish immigrants began with a culturally diverse and economically inferior populous during the eighteen century facing social and religious stigmas connected to Protestantism which differed from most other Irish immigrants. However‚ once the Scots-Irish integrated

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    influenced emigration. New immigrants and industrial growth transformed American society. The Irish “began at the lowest levels of the American workforce. Men dug canals; laid railroad track; mined coal‚ copper‚ gold‚ and silver; cleaned stables; drove horses; and laid building

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    Irish Dance

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    Ireland as did the later quadrilles (sets). In Irish dance history specifically: haye‚ rinnce fada and rinnce mór are the three names used to referring to the action in old literature. The first reference to dance in the Irish language is 1588. Rinnce appears first in 1609 amd ‘damhsa’ ten years later. HB15 It is not until the 17thC that we have any real documention referring to dance - not just confined to Ireland - worldwide. Citm: The common people in Ireland may have been dancing more free-form

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    Irish Literature

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    Irish literature Early and medieval literature The earliest Irish literature consisted of original lyric poetry and versions of ancient prose tales. The earliest poetry‚ composed in the 6th century‚ illustrates a vivid religious faith or describe the world of nature‚ and was sometimes written in the margins of illuminated manuscripts. Unusually among European epic cycles‚ the Irish sagas (such as Táin Bó Cúailnge) were written in prose‚ with verse interpolations expressing heightened emotion

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    The Story of Irish Immigrants Leaving the home you have always known is not easy. But coming into a completely new culture and lifestyle is even harder. That is exactly what the Irish immigrants experienced when they came to America. Imagine the only life you knew was farming potatoes and paying your landlord‚ then you decide to go to America for a better life. However‚ once you get there you are ridiculed and scorned for being Irish and don’t have any friends or relatives to help you make a fresh

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    Irish Immigrants in Boston

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    The life of Irish immigrants in Boston was one of poverty and discrimination. The religiously centered culture of the Irish has along with their importance on family has allowed the Irish to prosper and persevere through times of injustice. Boston ’s Irish immigrant population amounted to a tenth of its population. Many after arriving could not find suitable jobs and ended up living where earlier generations had resided. This attributed to the "invisibility" of the Irish. Much of the very early

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    Why people were leaving Ireland and why they went to America? The reason for Irish t leave their home to America is to run away from political and religious persecution. Extreme poverty caused by natural calamity of the Irish potato starvation forced people to leave from Ireland to seek a new life in the United Stated. Voluntary Irish Immigration to America began with a small trickle of immigrants in the 1700’s. The largest proportion of the early Irish Immigration to America in the 1700’s consisted

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