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Birmingham
Irish: Making Our Mark is a fascinating and unique study. Fascinating
because it shows not only how and why the Irish community in Birmingham
developed but also how Irish men and women have continued ti enrich the
social, cultural, commercial and political life of Birminghams second
city. Unique because, as well as presenting the varied experience of the
Irish in Birmingham as others saw them, it also shows how they saw themselves,
in their own words. In so doing - by exploring the human and personal
ingredients of social history - this valuable local study sheds much light
on the sheer variety and diversity of the Irish experience in urban Britain
and, indeed on some of the complexities surrounding Irish
and British identities in a multi-cultural society.
Professor Roger Swift, Director, Centre for Victorian Studies, Chester
College.
Carl Chinn believes passionately that history belongs to everyone and
that everyone has made their mark on history. Well-known for his writings,
both on urban working-class life in England and on Birminghams peoples,
this book tells the story of Irish Brummies from the 1820s to the 1990s.
Married to Kay, from Dublin, and having grown up with many first and second
generation Irish friends, Carl asserts that the Birmingham Irish have
played an essential role in the social, cultural, economic and political
life of the city. Birmingham would not be the city it is today without
the vital contribution of the Irish. |