Oonagh Walsh

Oonagh Walsh was educated at Trinity College, Dublin (B.A. History & English and PhD in modern Irish history) and Nottingham University (M.A. American Studies). She later taught at LSU College, Southampton, Aberdeen University and University College Cork before her appointment as Professor of Gender Studies at Glasgow Caledonian University in 2012. Walsh's principal research interests lie in gender and medical histories, and in the nineteenth century history of Irish psychiatry in particular. She is published in a range of areas in modern Irish history, including Protestant women’s social, political and cultural experiences, the development of the asylum system in the west of Ireland, and twentieth century obstetrics.

At present, Walsh is finalising a report on symphysiotomy for the Department of Health (Ireland), and a monograph on the Irish asylum system in the nineteenth-century west of Ireland.

She is at the early stages of two distinct research projects: the first of which relates to health and illness amongst Irish sailors in the Royal Navy, and the second is a study of possible epigenetic change as a result of the Great Famine.

Ireland's Independence: 1880-1923

Ireland's Independence: 1880-1923

by Oonagh Walsh

  • Paperback £34.99

Review:

'A comprehensive guide to the political history of a most complex period. This excellent book manages to achieve the difficult trick of combining a vast amount of detail with a humane... (more)

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