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Rot: A History of the Irish Famine

(Hardback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

Rot: A History of the Irish Famine

Contributors:

By (Author) Padraic X. Scanlan

ISBN:

9781472146878

Publisher:

Little, Brown Book Group

Imprint:

Robinson

Publication Date:

10th June 2025

UK Publication Date:

13th March 2025

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Dewey:

941.7081

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

352

Dimensions:

Width 158mm, Height 236mm, Spine 32mm

Weight:

551g

Description

In the nineteenth century, as Britain became the world's most powerful industrial empire, Ireland starved. The Great Famine fractured long-held assumptions about political economy and 'civilisation', threatening disorder in Britain itself. Ireland was a laboratory for empire, shaping British ideas about colonisation, population, ecology and work.

Scanlan reinterprets the history of this time and the result is a revelatory account of the Irish Great Famine (1845-1851). In the first half of the nineteenth century, nowhere in Europe - or the world - did the working poor depend as completely on potatoes as in Ireland. To many British observers, potatoes were evidence of a lack of modernity and 'civilization' among the Irish. Ireland before the Famine, however, more closely resembled capitalism's future than its past. Irish labourers were paid some of the lowest wages in the British empire, and relied on the abundance of the potato to survive. Scanlan expertly shows how the staggering inequality, pervasive debt, outrageous rent-gouging, precarious employment, and vulnerability to changes in commodity prices that torment so many in the twenty-first century were rehearsed in the Irish countryside before the potatoes failed.

Reviews

Praise for the author's Slave Empire: Engrossing and powerful . . . rich and thought-provoking. -- Fara Dabhoiwala * Guardian *
Praise for the author's Slave Empire: Path-breaking . . . a major rewriting of history. -- Mihir Bose * Irish Times *
Slave Empire is lucid, elegant and forensic. It deals with appalling horrors in cool and convincing prose. * The Economist *
Praise for the author's Slave Empire: A sweeping and devastating history of how slavery made modern Britain, and destroyed so much else . . . a shattering rebuke to the amnesia and myopia which still structure British history. -- Nicholas Guyatt, author of Bind Us Apart: How Enlightened Americans Invented Racial Segregation
Praise for the author's Slave Empire: Scanlan shows that the liberal empire of the nineteenth century was the outcome of the long encounter of antislavery and economic expansion founded on enslaved or unfree labour. Antislavery was itself the excuse for empire. -- Emma Rothschild, Jeremy and Jane Knowles Professor of History, Harvard University
Praise for the author's Slave Empire: Fresh and fascinating, a stunning narrative that shows how an empire built on slavery became an empire sustained and expanded by antislavery . . . deftly combines rich storytelling with vivid details and deep scholarship. -- Bronwen Everill, author of Not Made By Slaves: Ethical Capitalism in the Age of Abolition
Praise for the author's Slave Empire: This accessible synthesis of recent scholarship comes at the right time to help shape current debates about Britain and slavery. -- Nicholas Draper, author of The Price of Emancipation: Slave-Ownership, Compensation and British Society at the End of Slavery
Praise for the author's Slave Empire: Powerful, often devastating, always compelling. * All About History *

Author Bio

PADRAIC X. SCANLAN earned a BA (Hons) in History from McGill University in 2008, and a PhD in History from Princeton University in 2013. He is Assistant Professor in the Centre for Industrial Relations and Human Resources and the Centre for Diaspora & Transnational Studies at the University of Toronto and a Research Associate at the Joint Centre for History and Economics at the University of Cambridge. He has also held appointments at the London School of Economics and Harvard University. He is the author of Freedom's Debtors, which, in 2018, was awarded the James A. Rawley Prize and the Wallace K. Ferguson Prize, and Slave Empire.

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