Loyola University Chicago:


Books, Etc.
Online Links to Faculty Publications

Servants Of The Poor: Teachers And Mobility In Ireland And Irish America - Amazon

Ourselves Alone: Women's Emigration from Ireland, 1885-1920 - Amazon

 

 

Janet Nolan, Ph.D.
Professor

Research Interests:

Ireland and Irish-America, Modern Europe and
Oral History

Books:

Minds to Hands: Irish-American Women at the End of a Golden Age of Teaching, 1920-1935 (in progress).

Servants of the Poor: Teachers and Mobility in Ireland and Irish America. Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press, 2004.

Ourselves Alone: Women's Emigration from Ireland, 1885-1920. Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky, 1989.

Recent Research Grants:

LUC Summer 2007 Research Stipend

Recent Articles and Chapters:

The Ernie O'Malley Memorial Lecture, 2005: "The Nun Who Stopped Traffic and the Patrick Henry of the Classroom: Justitia Coffey, Margaret Haley, and Chicago's School Wars." Radharc: A Journal of Irish Studies, Glucksman Ireland House, New York University (in press).

Pioneers in the Classroom: Irish-American Teachers in San Francisco in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century." In The Irish Experience in the San Francisco Bay Area, eds. Donald Jordan and Timothy O'Keefe, 170-186. San Francisco: Irish Literary and Historical Society, 2005.

"Silent Generations: New Voices in Irish America: A Review Essay of Kerby Miller, Arnold Schrier, Bruce Boling, David Doyle, Irish Immigrants in the Land of Canaan: Letters and Memoirs from Colonial and Revolutionary America, 1675-1815;" Robert Dunne, Antebellum Irish Immigration and Emerging Ideologies of 'America': A Protestant Backlash; and Maureen Waters, Crossing Highbridge: A Memoir of Irish America. American Literary History 17:3 (Fall 2005): 595-603.

"Unintended Consequences: The National Schools and Women's Mobility in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth-Centuries." In Ireland in Transition, 1867-1921, eds. George Boyce and Alan O'Day, 179-191, 268-271. London: Routledge, 2004.

Recent Reviews:

"'A Manly Study': Irish Women Historians, 1868-1949 by Nadia Clare Smith." Irish Studies Review (in press).

"The Pastoral Role of the Roman Catholic Church in Pre-Famine Ireland by Emmet Larkin." The Historian (in press).

"The Bible War in Ireland: The 'Second Reformation' and the Polarization of Protestant-Catholic Relations, 1800-1840 by Irene Whelan." History: Reviews of New Books (Spring, 2006).

"Private Histories: The Writing of Irish Americans, 1900-1935 by Ron Ebest." History: Reviews of New Books (Winter 2006).

"'Your Fondest Annie': Letters from Annie O'Donnell to James P. Phelan, 1901-1904," ed. Maureen Murphy, Irish Literary Supplement (Spring 2006).

The Shamrock and the Lily: The New York Irish and the Creation of a Transatlantic Identity, 1845-1921, by Mary C. Kelly. Journal of American History (Spring 2006).

Pearse's Patriots: Saint Enda's and the Cult of Boyhood, by Elaine Sisson. Irish Studies Review 13:1 (February 2005).

The American Irish, by Kevin Kenny. Journal of American Ethnic History (Fall 2004).

Recent Invited Lectures:

Respondent,"Irish Gender in the Atlantic World," and panelist," Closing Plenary." The Irish in the Atlantic World, College of Charleston (S.C.), February-March, 2007.

"Nicholas II: The Last Romanov," The Teaching Company, March 2006.

"'The Nun Who Stopped Traffic' and the 'Patrick Henry of the Classroom': Justitia Coffey, Margaret Haley, and Chicago's School Wars,'" Michael Sundermeir Memorial Lecture, Creighton University, Omaha, November 2005.

"'The Nun Who Stopped Traffic' and the 'Patrick Henry of the Classroom'": Justitia Coffey, Margaret Haley, and Chicago's School Wars," O'Malley Memorial Lecture, Glucksman Ireland House, New York University, November 2005.

"Irish Women's Immigration to the United States in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries," Smurfit-Stone Corporation Endowed Professorship in Irish Studies, Center for International Studies, University of Missouri-St. Louis, October 2005.

"Minds to Hands: The End of a Golden Age of Teaching, 1920-1935," Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Mother House, Dubuque, IA, June 2005.

"Chicago's School Wars and Irish-American Teachers in the 1920s and 1930s," Irish-American Teachers Association, Chicago, June 2005.

"The Nun Who Stopped Traffic: Justitia Coffey and Chcago's School Wars," Gannon Center for Women and Leadership, Chicago,, February 2005.

"Servants of the Poor: Irish-American Teachers in Chicago at the Turn of the Twentieth Century," Irish American Heritage Center, Chicago, November 2004.

"Minds to Hands: A Work in Progress," Loyola University Chicago Graduate Seminar, April 2004.

"Pioneers in the Classroom: San Francisco's Irish-American Teachers at the Turn of the Twentieth Century," Crossroads Irish American Festival and New College of California, San Francisco Public Library, San Francisco, March 2004.

"Researching Irish America," New College of California, March 2004.

Recent Television Appearance:

"The Golden Door," Part I, "Destination America," PBS, October 2005.

Recent Oral History Workshop:

"What Is Oral History?," American Academy of Pediatrics, September 2005 and March 2006.

Recent Courses:

HISTORY 102: The Evolution of Western Ideas and Institutions of the West Since the Seventeenth Century
HISTORY 300: Ireland, 1916 to the Present
HISTORY 325: Europe, 1900-1945
HISTORY 333: Ireland From Colony to Nation State
HISTORY 384: The Irish Diaspora in America
HISTORY 425: Graduate Seminar: Twentieth Century Ireland
HISTORY 425: Graduate Seminar: Topics in Modern Irish History-Twentieth Century Ireland-Irish America and the Trans-atlantic Experience

Office Hours (Spring 2007):

Tu 11:00-Noon, 2:30-4:00, and by appointment.

Office Telephone:

773-508-2227

E-mail address:

jnolan@luc.edu

Faculty Office Hours

 


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