MIRR - Mary Immaculate Research Repository

    • Login
    View Item 
    •   Home
    • FACULTY OF ARTS
    • Department of History
    • History (Peer-reviewed publications)
    • View Item
    •   Home
    • FACULTY OF ARTS
    • Department of History
    • History (Peer-reviewed publications)
    • View Item
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

    Browse

    All of MIRRCommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjects

    My Account

    LoginRegister

    Resources

    How to submitCopyrightFAQs

    A review of 'Dublin Slums, 1800-1925: A Study in Urban Geography by Jacinta Prunty' (Pre-published version)

    Citation

    Cronin, M. (1999) 'A review of "Dublin Slums, 1800-1925: A Study in Urban Geography by Jacinta Prunty".' Irish Historical Studies 31(123), pp. 441-442. ISSN: 00211214.
    Thumbnail
    View/Open
    Review (13.99Kb)
    Date
    1999
    Author
    Cronin, Maura
    Peer Reviewed
    Yes
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Cronin, M. (1999) 'A review of "Dublin Slums, 1800-1925: A Study in Urban Geography by Jacinta Prunty".' Irish Historical Studies 31(123), pp. 441-442. ISSN: 00211214.
    Abstract
    This study of the development of the Dublin slums over a period of a century and a quarter investigates the interrelated themes of public health, housing and poverty, as well as the reaction thereto by central and local government, religious denominations and private charities. The study involves in-depth analysis of several issues: early nineteenth-century mortality trends and their impact on contemporary opinion; attempted sanitary improvements from the early nineteenth century onwards; faltering steps into the provision of public authority housing after the enabling legislation of the late 1870s; slum 'clearance' and its social and environ- mental effects; the role of denominational competition in the progressive amelioration of the lot of slum-dwellers; social analysis of both the practitioners and the recipients of private charity; and changing attitudes to the slum question on the part of both central and local government. Considerable attention is paid to the process whereby, on the heels of de-industrialisation from the late seventeenth century onwards, the prosperous classes moved to the growing suburbs, leaving whole reaches of Dublin city to decay into tenement zones. The city's poor and those fleeing rural deprivation moved into in-fill housing in the back gardens and stable lanes attached to former grandee houses or into one-room accommodation in rapidly demoted genteel streets like the appropriately named Fade Street. The in- exorable progress of such conditions through the city over the course of the nineteenth century resulted in 25,000 individuals - 35 per cent of the city's population - living in slum conditions by the eve of the First World War.
    Keywords
    Review
    Dublin
    Slums
    1800
    1925
    Study
    Urban geography
    Jacinta Prunty
    Prunty
    Language (ISO 639-3)
    eng
    Publisher
    Cambridge University Press
    License URI
    https://www.jstor.org/stable/30007156
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10395/2493
    ISSN
    00211214
    Collections
    • History (Peer-reviewed publications)

    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
    Contact Us | Send Feedback
     

     


    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
    Contact Us | Send Feedback