
My doctoral research examines how archaeological landscapes and Celtic symbols were used to shape Irish identity in Union Ireland (1801–1922). I focus on three areas: the agency of marginalised groups such as women, travellers, and the rural poor in influencing narratives through oral traditions; the roles of antiquarians, nationalists, and British travel writers in interpreting and appropriating archaeology; and the impact of modernisation and mobility on these interactions. By using archival sources, material culture along with feminist, postcolonial, and landscape theory, I aim to reveal how competing interpretations of heritage created a fractured and competing vision of Ireland’s past.
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Publications
( https://ejournals.epublishing.ekt.gr/index.php/mhist/article/view/38752 )
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I hold a MA in Naval History from the University of Portsmouth where I worked as a student researcher on the Wellington Trust project, Women on the Waves which explored women’s sea and shore-based employment from 1860 to present day.
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Walker, Robert. ‘Activism, Morality and the Law: The Case-Study of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society’. Edited by Jessica Gröling. EASE Working Paper Series Volume 2 (2024): 185–92.
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My MRes dissertation explored changes to perceptions and practices of marriage within the context of the shifting eighteenth-century economy. Through the combined analysis of advice literature, parliamentary debates and satire, it explored the intertwined nature of the social and the economic.
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