Product Description
Emigration is a common theme throughout Irish history. As Dermot Bolger recognises in his foreword, it is one that has touched almost every family in Ireland. Until recently thousands found work in Britains major industrial centres. For a large proportion of people leaving County Mayo in the west of Ireland, the Yorkshire city of Leeds was their chosen destination.
Today the Leeds-Irish population measures around 20,000. Although Ireland now enjoys a booming economy, for many Irish in Britain a mixture of family ties, economic dependence and prolonged absence means that whilst Ireland is still home, the imagined permanent return is often an impossibility.
Róisín Bán refers to the floral symbol of Yorkshire, the white rose. By contrast, Róisín Dubh, the black rose or dark maiden, was an allegory for Ireland used in poetry and song during times of persecution when it was considered too dangerous to openly express patriotism.
In the historical accounts written by Brendan McGowan and through the lens of Corinne Silva, Róisín Bán explores and celebrates the Irish community living in Leeds and their ties to Ireland. Silvas images accompany frank interviews describing the peaks and troughs of being a part of an invisible minority, the global Irish diaspora.