2016
DOI: 10.1177/0791603516659503
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The sensuous secrets of shelter: How recollections of food stimulate Irish men’s reconstructions of their early formative residential experiences in Leicester, Sheffield and Manchester

Abstract: This paper examines the intersection between food, recollection and Irish migrants’ reconstructions of their housing pathways in the three English cities of Leicester (East Midlands), Sheffield (South Yorkshire) and Manchester (North). Previous studies have acknowledged more implicitly the role of memory in representing the Irish migrant experience in England. Here, we adopt a different stance. We explore the mnemonic power of food to encode, decode and recode Irish men’s reconstructions of their housing pathw… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Oral history is a flexible approach centred on enabling participants to recount their experiences in their own words, often with little prompting. Like Maye-Banbury and Casey's [64] study of emigrants from Ireland to England, we guided the participants through their housing histories; in a variation to that study, however, we prompted specific reflections on comfort practices and energy use, reflecting the specific focus of the research. Although it is common to make available oral history transcripts with named interviewees available in public repositories, this would in this case be counter to the ethical approach of ongoing research at Lochiel Park and we have therefore anonymised respondents' accounts.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Oral history is a flexible approach centred on enabling participants to recount their experiences in their own words, often with little prompting. Like Maye-Banbury and Casey's [64] study of emigrants from Ireland to England, we guided the participants through their housing histories; in a variation to that study, however, we prompted specific reflections on comfort practices and energy use, reflecting the specific focus of the research. Although it is common to make available oral history transcripts with named interviewees available in public repositories, this would in this case be counter to the ethical approach of ongoing research at Lochiel Park and we have therefore anonymised respondents' accounts.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Oral history offers a narrative method of research that has been seldom applied to case studies of domestic technologies and energy use (Brown 2017). However, there is a sufficient number of examples, dealing either with domestic heating (Goodchild et al 2014) or the impact of migration (Casey & Maye-Banbury 2017: Maye-Banbury & Casey 2016 to suggest that oral history is a valid method. Oral history encourages respondents to provide a chronology of events, whilst reflecting on the past and the present and on the difference between the two.…”
Section: Oral History As Methodology and Ontologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this way, life experiences may be reconstructed and ‘re-presented’ reflexively on the interviewees’ own terms underpinned by the principles of dialogicality. Replicating the approach adopted in Maye-Banbury and Casey (2016) and Maye-Banbury (2018, 2021), the housing pathway model informed the overall research design. Participants were recruited with the support of two leading community organisations who work directly with Irish men and women in NYC.…”
Section: (Re)constructing Places Of the Past In The Present: The Pow...mentioning
confidence: 99%