
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The potato and the Irish Famine of 1845 will forever be linked. But what's often overlooked is how deeply connected the potato was to British colonial policies during that time. To Britain it was a symbol of Irish backwardness. In the book Rot, a new history of Ireland's Great Famine is revealed, showing how the British Empire caused the infamous disaster. Author and historian Padraic X Scanlan paints a complex and compelling picture of the Irish Famine of 1845, in which the potato — and the blight — played but a part in a broader story of colonialism, capitalism, and collapse.
By CBC4.6
282282 ratings
The potato and the Irish Famine of 1845 will forever be linked. But what's often overlooked is how deeply connected the potato was to British colonial policies during that time. To Britain it was a symbol of Irish backwardness. In the book Rot, a new history of Ireland's Great Famine is revealed, showing how the British Empire caused the infamous disaster. Author and historian Padraic X Scanlan paints a complex and compelling picture of the Irish Famine of 1845, in which the potato — and the blight — played but a part in a broader story of colonialism, capitalism, and collapse.

238 Listeners

414 Listeners

121 Listeners

47 Listeners

210 Listeners

374 Listeners

207 Listeners

77 Listeners

769 Listeners

69 Listeners

24 Listeners

27 Listeners

21 Listeners

166 Listeners

112 Listeners

236 Listeners

458 Listeners

16 Listeners

27 Listeners

273 Listeners

9 Listeners

92 Listeners

346 Listeners

4 Listeners

21 Listeners

65 Listeners

116 Listeners

4 Listeners

5 Listeners

3 Listeners

5 Listeners