We use cookies to make your experience better. To comply with the new e-Privacy directive, we need to ask for your consent to set the cookies. Learn more.
From 1882 onwards efforts commenced to have street traders banned alongside gentrification projects. A watershed came with the passage of the Street Trading Act of 1926. This book examines the resistance of the traders when those with power refused to recognize them as stakeholders. What the establishment learned was that the women were prepared to engage in civil disobedience, endure violence from Gardaí and serve time in jail to both protect their livelihoods and protest what they characterized as ‘banishment to the slums’.
Susan Marie Martin is a historical sociologist. She is a guest lecturer and research project supervisor in University College Cork's Food Studies and Irish Foodways programme.
| ISBN | 9781801511773 |
|---|---|
| Author | Susan Marie Martin |
| Publisher | Four Courts Press |
| Publication date | 19 Sep 2025 |
| Format | Paperback |
| Weight | 0.250000 |
Write Your Own Review
Dublin’s women street traders, 1882-1932
Maynooth Studies in Local History Series
A ballad about a woman street trader is widely regarded as Dublin’s anthem, yet the city’s relationship with those who traded on its streets was often acrimonious. . .
Estimated delivery in 3-10 working days
Read more about our shipping and delivery
OTHER PRODUCTS YOU MIGHT LIKE!



