The Maamtrasna Murders: Language, Law and Injustice
Where: Glucksman Ireland House NYU
1 Washington Mews
212-998-3950 Price: Free
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In 1882, the brutal murders of the Joyce family in Maamtrasna, western Ireland, were succeeded by a series of legal trials and executions, made especially infamous by the wrongful conviction and execution of Irish-speaker Myles Joyce. These events are the subject of a recent book by Professor Margaret Kelleher, Fulbright Visiting Scholar at New York University: The Maamtrasna Murders: Language, Life and Death in Nineteenth-Century Ireland (published by UCD Press).
This symposium, marking the book’s publication in the United States by University of Chicago Press, will examine the events of 1882 and their implications for issues of language and justice today. Contributors to the symposium are: Ms Carolyn Conaboy, great-granddaughter of Myles Joyce; Professor Margaret Kelleher, University College Dublin; Professor Maureen Murphy, Hofstra University; Professor James Shapiro, Columbia University; author Colm Tóibin, Irene and Sidney B. Silverman Professor of the Humanities, Columbia University, and Dr. Nicholas Wolf, New York University; chair Professor Kevin Kenny, Glucksman Irish House.
Professor Margaret Kelleher is Chair of Anglo-Irish Literature and Drama at University College Dublin, and was appointed to this Chair in 2012. Previously she was the founding director of An Foras Feasa: Maynooth University’s Humanities Institute.
Her books include the two volume Cambridge History of Irish Literature (2006), The Feminization of Famine (published by Duke UP and Cork UP, 1997), Gender Perspectives in Nineteenth-Century Ireland (1997), Nineteenth-Century Ireland (2005) and Ireland and Quebec: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on History, Culture and Society (2016). She has published widely in the areas of Irish women’s writings, nineteenth-century Irish literary studies, famine studies, and digital humanities; recent articles include contributions to the Oxford Handbook of Irish History and the Oxford History of the Book as well as articles in the Digital Humanities Quarterly, Irish Review and Atlas of the Irish Revolution.
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