Kerby A. Miller

Kerby A. Miller is an American historian, and Emeritus Professor at University of Missouri.[1]

Life

He graduated from Pomona College, and from University of California, Berkeley with an MA and Ph.D. in 1976. He is a visiting researcher at Queen's University Belfast.[2]

He has argued extensively that historian Richard J. Jensen's claims about anti-Irish sentiment in America were inaccurate.[3]

Awards

Works

Chapters

  • Yans-McLaughlin, Virginia (1990). "Class, Culture, and Immigrant Group Identity in the United States". In Virginia Yans-McLaughlin (ed.). Immigration reconsidered: history, sociology, and politics. Oxford University Press. p. 96. ISBN 978-0-19-505510-8.
  • Dermot Keogh; Michael H. Haltzel, eds. (1993). "Revising revisionism: comments and reflections". Northern Ireland and the politics of reconciliation. Cambridge University Press. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-521-45933-4.
  • Charles Fanning, ed. (2000). ""Scotch-Irish" Myths and "Irish" Identities in Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century America". New perspectives on the Irish diaspora. SIU Press. ISBN 978-0-8093-2344-9.
  • Kerby A. Miller; Bruce D. Bolling; Liam Kennedy (2003). "The Famine's Scars: William Murphy's Ulster, and American Odyssey". In Kevin Kenny (ed.). New directions in Irish-American history. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0-299-18714-9.
  • Margaret M. Mulrooney, ed. (2003). "In the Famine's Shadow: An Irish Immigrant from West Kerry to South Dakota, 1881 - 1979". Fleeing the famine: North America and Irish refugees, 1845-1851. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-275-97670-5.

Bibliography

References

  • Kerby Miller Papers at Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives at New York University Special Collections


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