Daniel O'Connell, The British Press and The Irish Famine

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Daniel O'Connell, The British Press and The Irish Famine

Killing Remarks

Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900 Media studies News media and journalism European history

Author: Leslie A. Williams

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Collection: The Nineteenth Century Series

Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 2nd March 2017

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 7 Mb

ISBN: 9781351946360


Introduction

Through an investigation of the reportage in nineteenth-century English metropolitan newspapers and illustrated journals, this book begins with the question "Did anti-O''Connell sentiment in the British press lead to 'killing remarks,' rhetoric that helped the press, government and public opinion distance themselves from the Irish Famine?"

The book explores the reportage of events and people in Ireland, focusing first on Daniel O''Connell, and then on debates about the seriousness of the Famine. Drawing upon such journals as The Times, The Observer, the Morning Chronicle, The Scotsman, the Manchester Guardian, the Illustrated London News, and Punch, Williams suggests how this reportage may have affected Britain''s response to Ireland''s tragedy.

Continuing her survey of the press after the death of O''Connell, Leslie Williams demonstrates how the editors, writers, and cartoonists who reported and commented on the growing crisis in peripheral Ireland drew upon a metropolitan mentality. In doing so, the press engaged in what Edward Said identifies as "exteriority," whereby reporters, cartoonists, and illustrators, basing their viewpoints on their very status as outsiders, reflected the interests of metropolitan readers.

Although this was overtly excused as an effort to reduce bias, stereotyping, and historic enmity—much of it unconscious—were deeply embedded in the language and images of the press. Williams argues that the biases in language and the presentation of information proved dangerous. She illustrates how David Spurr''s categories or tropes of invalidation, debasement, and negation are frequently exhibited in the reports, editorials, and cartoons.

However, drawing upon the communications theories of Gregory Bateson, Williams concludes that the real "subject" of the British Press commentary on Ireland was Britain itself. Ireland was used as a negative mirror to reinforce Britain''s own commitment to capitalist, industrial values at a time of great internal stress.

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