Mairead Farrell: IRA Member, Female Prisoner/Hunger Striker and the Treatment of Women Prisoners in Armagh Jail
Title: Mairead Farrell: IRA Member, Female Prisoner/Hunger Striker and the Treatment of Women Prisoners in Armagh Jail
Category: /History/European History
Details: Words: 1975 | Pages: 7 (approximately 235 words/page)
Mairead Farrell: IRA Member, Female Prisoner/Hunger Striker and the Treatment of Women Prisoners in Armagh Jail
Category: /History/European History
Details: Words: 1975 | Pages: 7 (approximately 235 words/page)
Hunger strikes have a long history in Irish culture. The Celts would starve themselves to disgrace someone who wronged them, and the starvation would go on until the situation/situations were made right. It was a way of "self-sacrifice" to the Catholics. If a hunger striker died, the person or people who caused the strike would suffer socially and have to pay costs to that striker's family (http://irelandsown.net/armaghwomen.html). In 1980-81, the
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strikes/chapter14.html.
Mairead Farrell. Retrieved from www.geocities.com/pettigolass/farrell.html.
Maireed Farrell- Irish Rebel. Retrieved from freespace.virgin.net/sean.Farrell/maread_Farrell.htm.
Mairead Farrell. Retrieved from http://members.lycos.co.uk/inac/farrell.html.
Irish Hunger Strikes Chapter 49. Retrieved from inac.org/irishhistory/hunger strikes/chapters/49.
Other websites used for information:
www.angelfire.com/sc/johnfhome/hunger.htnl
www.guardian.co.uk/gender/story
www.webster.edu/~woolflm/ireland.html