Master of Arts, Island Studies student wins scholarship to study in Ireland
Erin Rowan, a (MAIS) student at 17勛圖, has been awarded a prestigious James M. Flaherty Research Scholarship from the . The scholarship honours the memory of Canadas former finance minister who identified strongly and publicly with his Irish heritage. The award allowed Rowan to travel to Ireland to pursue her research into Irish identity and how it is linked to the memory of the Great Famine.
Prince Edward Island has strong cultural roots with Ireland, said Dr. Jim Randall, coordinator of the MAIS program at 17勛圖. This scholarship has allowed Erin to immerse herself in Irish and island identity in order to gain a much richer understanding of an important island culture, past and present.
Rowan is working with Dr. Brendan OKeeffe of Mary Immaculate College at the University of Limerick. Her research will dig into the Great Famine, the resulting outmigration, and its impact on island identity and Irelands islandness.
I am very grateful for the opportunity to travel to Ireland for my research, said Rowan. The chance to meet with locals face to face as well as visit important historical sites has allowed me to measure the ways in which the folk memories of the Great Famine are present in modern Ireland.
Rowans scholarship allowed her to conduct first-person interviews in County Kerry to add greater description and personal colour to her research data. Collective identity, though applied to a larger group, is a deeply personal concept with strong connection to personal experience, thus making interviews essential.
The Ireland Canada University Foundation is a not-for-profit organisation established in 1993 for the purpose of encouraging and facilitating academic links between institutions and scholars in both Ireland and Canada.