Ireland and Irish America: Culture, Class, and Transatlantic Migration.
Miller, David W.
Ireland and Irish America: Culture, Class, and Transatlantic
Migration. By Kerby A. Miller (Dublin: Field Day, 2008. xii plus 411
pp.).
Kerby Miller is best known for his monumental Emigrants and Exiles:
Ireland and the Irish Exodus to North America (New York: Oxford
University Press, 1985). Notwithstanding its length (684 pages), that
prize-winning first book did not come close to exhausting the
author's principal sources: a massive array of correspondence and
memoirs of Irish immigrants to America from the seventeenth to the
twentieth century. Not only had he searched nearly every public
repository on both sides of the Atlantic that might contain such
material, but he had also placed notices in local newspapers throughout
Ireland requesting access to emigrant letters in private hands. By the
time he completed the book he had accumulated photocopies of literally
thousands of letters and other manuscripts.
Miller has continued, to the great advantage of students of Ireland
and the Irish diaspora, to exploit his treasure trove in two ways.
First, in collaboration with several other scholars, he has projected a
four-volume selection of the documents, of which the first volume, Irish
Immigrants in the Land of Canaan: Letters and Memoirs from Colonial and
Revolutionary America, 1675-1815 (New York: Oxford University Press,
2003), has been published. Second, he has written numerous essays,
typically based on a memoir, a letter or a series of letters that
reveals the experience of one or more immigrants. The book under review
is a collection of such essays.
The fifteen essays in the collection are divided into three
clusters of five essays each. Two of the clusters deal with (mainly
Catholic) emigration from Ireland and immigration to America,
respectively. This division vividly illustrates why Miller's work
is so widely respected: more thoroughly than anyone else in the field he
has mastered both Irish history and U.S. history. Furthermore, when he
perceives that a particular correspondence may contain components of a
revealing narrative, he relentlessly pursues other sources for every
shred of information on the correspondents. One is tempted to categorize
his method as micro-history but for the fact that he invariably places
his findings into the context of relevant macro-historical literature on
social, political, economic and demographic issues.
The other cluster of essays deals specifically with Irish
Protestants on both sides of the Atlantic. Although the author divides
his essays along sectarian lines, he does not subscribe to the supposed
primordial division of Irish society that used to dominate most
discourse on Irish migration. Within both Protestant and Catholic sides
he sees social class as the major determinant of the lives of his
subjects. At the micro-history level, for example, a Protestant
"middleman" whose living depended on his subletting of farms
to Catholics in the Irish midlands is forced a few years before the
Famine by a new and less patriarchal landlord to find a more modest farm
for himself in a predominantly Protestant area farther north. At the
macro-history level, middle-class, post-Famine Catholic immigrants in
American cities find it necessary to become the political leaders of the
more numerous impoverished Catholic immigrants and "civilize"
them in order to secure their own status. For Miller developments such
as these are far more important than enthusiasm evoked by either orange
or green.
At the end of the book, the author offers a passionate attack on
"revisionism" in Irish history. Readers who do not follow
academic politics in Ireland may be puzzled by this epilogue, for no one
in the past generation has been more effective in the revision of our
understanding of the trans-Atlantic Irish experience than Kerby Miller.
David W. Miller
Carnegie Mellon University