In this Book
Irish Fever: An Archaeology of Illness, Injury, and Healing in New York City, 1845–1875
Book
2024
Published by:
The University of Tennessee Press
summary
NAMED AN OUTSTANDING ACADEMIC TITLE OF 2024 BY CHOICE REVIEWS
During the Potato Famine of the nineteenth century, about one million Irish people perished from starvation and disease, while more than two million fled the country in fear and desperation, with some 850,000 landing in New York City. After a difficult journey, many found themselves impoverished, taking dangerous jobs, and battling miserable living conditions in an unfamiliar urban landscape. These circumstances resulted in high rates of illness, injury, and death compared with other immigrant groups and native-born Americans.
In this profound study, Meredith B. Linn explores three kinds of afflictions—typhus fever, tuberculosis, and work-related injuries—that disproportionately affected Irish immigrants, tracing how existing medical ideas and technologies intersected with American prejudices to further conspire against this once culturally distinct group. Linn makes a compelling case for how Americans’ interpretations of the visible bodily changes wrought by typhus fever and injuries contributed to essentializing and dehumanizing biases against these new immigrants, while tuberculosis—with its symptoms of fatigue, pallor, and emaciation—enabled Americans to see individuals beyond stereotypes and to recognize the equal humanity of the Irish.
Drawing upon extensive archaeological records, folkloric sources, and historical documents, Linn presents what she terms a “visceral historical archaeology”—a perspective rooted in historical archaeology and medical anthropology—to illuminate the experiences of these immigrants. She investigates their health-related ideas and practices and reveals their efforts to heal themselves using popular remedies from Ireland and several new American commodities. Laden with heartrending stories from real working-class Irish and their American doctors, this richly illustrated book provides new perspectives about urban experience in the context of the Irish diaspora and invites contemplation about how illness, injury, and healing have affected the lives and reception of newcomers to the US.
During the Potato Famine of the nineteenth century, about one million Irish people perished from starvation and disease, while more than two million fled the country in fear and desperation, with some 850,000 landing in New York City. After a difficult journey, many found themselves impoverished, taking dangerous jobs, and battling miserable living conditions in an unfamiliar urban landscape. These circumstances resulted in high rates of illness, injury, and death compared with other immigrant groups and native-born Americans.
In this profound study, Meredith B. Linn explores three kinds of afflictions—typhus fever, tuberculosis, and work-related injuries—that disproportionately affected Irish immigrants, tracing how existing medical ideas and technologies intersected with American prejudices to further conspire against this once culturally distinct group. Linn makes a compelling case for how Americans’ interpretations of the visible bodily changes wrought by typhus fever and injuries contributed to essentializing and dehumanizing biases against these new immigrants, while tuberculosis—with its symptoms of fatigue, pallor, and emaciation—enabled Americans to see individuals beyond stereotypes and to recognize the equal humanity of the Irish.
Drawing upon extensive archaeological records, folkloric sources, and historical documents, Linn presents what she terms a “visceral historical archaeology”—a perspective rooted in historical archaeology and medical anthropology—to illuminate the experiences of these immigrants. She investigates their health-related ideas and practices and reveals their efforts to heal themselves using popular remedies from Ireland and several new American commodities. Laden with heartrending stories from real working-class Irish and their American doctors, this richly illustrated book provides new perspectives about urban experience in the context of the Irish diaspora and invites contemplation about how illness, injury, and healing have affected the lives and reception of newcomers to the US.
Table of Contents
Cover
Title
pp. iii
Copyright
pp. iv
Dedication
pp. v-vi
Contents
pp. vii-viii
Illustrations
pp. ix-xii
Acknowledgments
pp. xiii-xvi
Introduction. Toward a Visceral Historical Archaeology of Irish Immigrant Life
pp. 1-20
Chapter 1. The Case of Huxley McGuire: Irish and American Ethnomedicine Collide in a New York City Boardinghouse
pp. 21-55
Chapter 2. “Irish Fever”: Typhus Fever and an Epidemic of Anti-Irish Prejudice
pp. 56-95
Chapter 3. Irish Immigrant Perspectives of and Remedies for Typhus Fever
pp. 96-130
Chapter 4. Fractures: Work, Injuries, and Irish Difference
pp. 131-180
Chapter 5. Irish Remedies for Relief: Old and New Recipes
pp. 181-231
Chapter 6. A Phthisical Paradox: Tuberculosis and the Beginnings of Irish Immigrant Incorporation
pp. 232-278
Chapter 7. Consumption and Community among the New York Irish
pp. 279-327
Conclusion. Looking Backward to Move Forward
pp. 328-338
Notes
pp. 339-388
References Cited
pp. 389-456
Index
pp. 457-469
| ISBN | 9781621908913 |
|---|---|
| Related ISBN(s) | 9781621908456 |
| MARC Record | Download |
| OCLC | 1399573017 |
| Pages | 456 |
| Launched on MUSE | 2026-02-18 |
| Language | English |
| Open Access | Yes |
Copyright
2024


