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10 September 2018

BOOK: Lucy E. SALYER, Under the Starry Flag : How a Band of Irish Americans Joined the Fenian Revolt and Sparked a Crisis over Citizenship (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2018). ISBN 9780674057630, €27.00


(Source: HUP)

Harvard University Press is publishing a new book which deals i.a. with aspects of the history of US emigration/immigration law.

ABOUT THE BOOK  

The riveting story of forty Irish Americans who set off to fight for Irish independence, only to be arrested by Queen Victoria’s authorities and accused of treason: a tale of idealism and justice with profound implications for future conceptions of citizenship and immigration.

In 1867 forty Irish-American freedom fighters, outfitted with guns and ammunition, sailed to Ireland to join the effort to end British rule. Yet they never got a chance to fight. British authorities arrested them for treason as soon as they landed, sparking an international conflict that dragged the United States and Britain to the brink of war. Under the Starry Flag recounts this gripping legal saga, a prelude to today’s immigration battles.

The Fenians, as the freedom fighters were known, claimed American citizenship. British authorities disagreed, insisting that naturalized Irish Americans remained British subjects. Following in the wake of the Civil War, the Fenian crisis dramatized anew the idea of citizenship as an inalienable right, as natural as freedom of speech and religion. The captivating trial of these men illustrated the stakes of extending those rights to arrivals from far-flung lands. The case of the Fenians, Lucy E. Salyer shows, led to landmark treaties and laws acknowledging the right of exit. The U.S. Congress passed the Expatriation Act of 1868, which guaranteed the right to renounce one’s citizenship, in the same month it granted citizenship to former American slaves.

The small ruckus created by these impassioned Irish Americans provoked a human rights revolution that is not, even now, fully realized. Placing Reconstruction-era debates over citizenship within a global context, Under the Starry Flag raises important questions about citizenship and immigration.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Lucy E. Salyer is Associate Professor of History at the University of New Hampshire and the author of Laws Harsh as Tigers: Chinese Immigrants and the Shaping of Modern Immigration Law, which won the Theodore Saloutos Book Award for the best book on immigration history. A former Constance E. Smith Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Salyer has received the Arthur K. Whitcomb Professorship for teaching excellence and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the National Science Foundation, and the American Council of Learned Societies.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Prologue: Erin’s Hope and the Forgotten Right of Expatriation
I. The Fenians and the Making of a Crisis
1. Clonakilty, God Help Us!
2. Exiles and Expatriates
3. The Fenian Pest
4. Civis Americanus Sum
II. Citizenship on Trial
5. A Floating Rebellion
6. The Voice from the Dungeon
7. All the World’s a Stage
III. Reconstructing Citizenship
8. Are Naturalized Americans, Americans?
9. This Is a White Man’s Government!
10. The Politics of Expatriation
11. Private Diplomatizing
12. Treating Expatriation
Epilogue: Exits
Notes
Acknowledgments
Credits
Index

More information here

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