Academic literature on the topic 'Whiting family'

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Journal articles on the topic "Whiting family"

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Chen, Li, I. Chen, Pei Chen, and Ping Huang. "Application of Butterfly Pea Flower Extract in Mask Development." Scientia Pharmaceutica 86, no. 4 (December 5, 2018): 53. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/scipharm86040053.

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(1) Background: Clitoria ternatea (butterfly pea), a plant species belonging to the Leguminosae (Fabaceae) family, is useful for medical treatments and has been used in folk medicines and to cure different diseases. The antioxidation ability of the total phenolic compounds of butterfly pea is useful for preserving flavor, and colour and for preventing vitamin destruction in processed foods. In this study, a butterfly pea flower fermentation solution was added to cosmetics as a whiting ingredient. (2) Methods: After the phenolics, flavonoids and ascorbic acid content of the butterfly pea flower extraction had been determined, lactic acid bacteria fermented the extraction. The whitening and moisturizing effect was assayed by SSC3 and NF333 analyzers. (3) Results: This study demonstrated that the butterfly pea flower fermentation solution has free radical scavenging ability, a reducing power in high concentrations, a moisturizing effect, and a whiting effect. (4) Conclusions: The results showed that the butterfly pea flower fermentation solution not only inhibits redness, itching, allergies, and irritation to the skin, but also has antioxidation properties and promotes moisture retention and whitening effects, and the results increase as the concentration increases. Therefore, butterfly bean flowers may be suitable as a raw material for natural beauty care products.
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Burchmore, JJ, DA Pollard, MJ Middleton, JD Bell, and BC Pease. "Biology of four species of Whiting (Pisces: Sillaginidae) in Botany Bay, NSW." Marine and Freshwater Research 39, no. 6 (1988): 709. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/mf9880709.

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Four species of whiting (Family Sillaginidae) were collected from Botany Bay, New South Wales, between 1977 and 1979: Sillago ciliata (sand whiting), S. maculata maculata (trumpeter whiting), S. robusta (stout whiting) and S. bassensis flindersi (eastern school whiting). Sillago ciliata was the most abundant species over-all. Sillago ciliata was caught in greatest numbers in Zostera seagrass and shallow sandy habitats, whereas S. m. maculata, S. robusta and S. b. flindersi were most abundant over deeper muddy and sandy habitats. Sillago ciliata and S. b. flindersi were present mainly as juveniles. Gonosomatic indices and gonadal maturity stages of S. ciliata and S. m. maculata peaked around February. These species probably spawn within the Bay. Length to caudal fork at first maturity was 24 cm for male and female S. ciliata, 19 cm for male and female S. m. maculata, 17 cm for male and 18 cm for female S. robusta, and 14 cm for male and female S. b. flindersi. Although all species fed mainly on polychaetes and crustaceans, there was little overlap in specific dietary items between species. Variations observed in diet were due to fish size and temporal and spatial habitat differences within and among species.
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Nadash, Pamela, Rani Snyder, and Eileen Tell. "Policy Series: Family Caregiving Policies: Where We Are Now." Innovation in Aging 5, Supplement_1 (December 1, 2021): 63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igab046.242.

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Abstract This session reviews prospects for advancing family caregiving policy under the Biden Administration, by reporting on the RAISE (Recognize, Assist, Include, Support, and Engage) Family Caregivers Act, enacted in January 2018. The Act directs the Secretary of HHS to develop a national family caregiving strategy, and supports research and consensus-building activities, in collaboration with The John A. Hartford Foundation. It aims to identify actions that communities, providers, government, and others may take to recognize and support family caregivers. To this end, the Administration for Community Living (ACL) has convened an Advisory Council, comprising 15 voting members from various stakeholder groups, to guide the effort; the project also commissioned primary data collection on caregiver priorities and recommendations, using a Request for Information (RFI) in the Federal Register garnering roughly 1600 responses, 12 focus groups with diverse family caregivers, and listening sessions with stakeholder groups. Wendy Fox-Grage, of the National Academy on State Health Policy, which supports RAISE Act activities, will describe the project’s scope of work and activities to date. Pamela Nadash from the LeadingAge LTSS Center @UMass Boston, who leads the data analysis component, will present findings from the commissioned research, while Molly Evans, (MA Executive Office of Elder Affairs) will review the current state of state-level policies aimed at supporting family caregivers. The symposium will conclude with Grace Whiting, CEO of the National Alliance for Caregiving, who will present an advocate’s perspective on the status of family caregiving policy. Eileen Tell, of ET Consultants, will act as discussant.
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Prudencio, Gabriela, and Laura Gitlin. "Family Caregiver Assessments: What Have We Learned From Assessments Across Populations and Health Conditions?" Innovation in Aging 4, Supplement_1 (December 1, 2020): 689–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igaa057.2410.

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Abstract This symposium will bring together research on assessments of family caregivers for older individuals with different health conditions and discuss the components of effective assessments. Comprehensive characterizations of caregivers are essential due to an increase in the demand on caregivers, and how intense care contexts contribute to the caregiver’s decline in health and diminished capacity to provide quality care. According to Caregiving in the U.S. 2020 (n=1,400), only 13% of caregivers were asked by healthcare professionals what they needed to take care of themselves. Peer-reviewed studies have reported that caregivers are often reluctant to self-identify and to ask for the help that they need for themselves and those in their care. Since supports to caregivers have historically relied on this self-identification, the first presentation (Grace Whiting) will focus on the work NAC has done to build pathways between caregivers and supportive services to increase availability, accessibility, and patient-centeredness. The second presentation (Esther Friedman) will identify and discuss the barriers to fully incorporating family caregivers into the health care team, as well as the solutions for removing barriers. The next two presentations, respectively, will focus on characterizing the prevalence, burden, and unmet needs of caregivers of cancer patients (Erin Kent), and the unmet needs of families of adults with intellectual and development disabilities (Tamar Heller). The final presentation will explore caregiver readiness in dementia care using the Tailored Activity Program (TAP) and how TAP interventionists can use readiness scores to determine caregiver’s capacity (Katherine Marx).
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Williams, Richard. "Rituals in Families and Family Therapy. Edited by Evan Imber-Black, Janine Roberts and Richard Whiting. London: W. W. Norton. 1989. 414 pp. £24.50." British Journal of Psychiatry 156, no. 1 (January 1990): 140–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/s0007125000060839.

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Roques, Severine, Clive J. Fox, Maria I. Villasana, and Ciro Rico. "The complete mitochondrial genome of the whiting, Merlangius merlangus and the haddock, Melanogrammus aeglefinus: A detailed genomic comparison among closely related species of the Gadidae family." Gene 383 (November 2006): 12–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gene.2006.06.018.

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Debenedetti, Ángela, Elena Madrid, María Trelis, Francisco Codes, Florimar Gil-Gómez, Sandra Sáez-Durán, and Màrius Fuentes. "Prevalence and Risk of Anisakid Larvae in Fresh Fish Frequently Consumed in Spain: An Overview." Fishes 4, no. 1 (February 21, 2019): 13. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/fishes4010013.

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Anisakidosis is a fish-borne zoonosis caused by parasitic nematodes of the family Anisakidae, of which the species belonging to Anisakis simplex complex are the most representative. It is considered an emerging disease in Spain. The objective of this study is to analyse the presence of larvae in fish frequently consumed in Spanish supermarkets, inferring the risk of infection. In total 1,786 specimens of 9 different fish species, from two geographical origins (Atlantic and Mediterranean), acquired fresh and not eviscerated were examined for anisakid nematodes. Analysis showed that 33.7% of the samples were parasitized by Anisakis larvae. The horse mackerel (Trachurus trachurus) presented the highest total prevalence (66.0%), followed by the silver hake (Merluccius bilinearis) (59.5%), the mackerel (Scomber scombrus) (58.4%), the blue whiting (Micromesistius poutassou) (53.9%) and the European hake (Merlucius merlucius) (45.0%). In general, the prevalence was higher in Atlantic than in Mediterranean fish. In all the species analysed, a higher presence of the parasite was detected in the viscera than in the flesh, although in the most parasitized species a noteworthy prevalence and abundance was observed in the flesh. In conclusion, risk factors, like fish species and origin, should be considered by consumers, in addition of following the recommendations established by Commission Regulation (EU) No1276/2011 and the Spanish Royal Decree 1420/2006.
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Aung, Tim, Devita Surjana, and Manisha Singh. "Whitish genital lesions." Australian Journal of General Practice 50, no. 1-2 (February 1, 2021): 55–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.31128/ajgp-02-20-5247.

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Lücking, Robert. "Additions and Corrections to the Foliicolous Lichen Flora of Costa Rica. The Family Gyalectaceae." Lichenologist 31, no. 4 (July 1999): 359–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/lich.1999.0205.

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AbstractThis paper provides a revision of the foliicolous representatives of the Gyalectaceae in Costa Rica. Five species of Coenogonium and 13 of Dimerella are distinguished. Coenogonium interplexum, C. interpositum, C. leprieurii, C. linkii and Dimerella vezdana are ubiquitous as to the choice of their substratum, whereas C. moniliforme and Dimerella lutea are facultatively foliicolous. The remainder are typically foliicolous taxa but may occasionally be found on bark. The following species are for the first time reported as foliicolous from Costa Rica: Coenogonium interplexum, C. interpositum, C. leprieurii, C. moniliforme, Dimerella fallaciosa, D lisowskii, and D. aff. pilifera. Three new species are described: Dimerella isidiifera sp. nov. with disciform isidia, D. subzonatasp. nov. with small, bright yellow, dentate apothecia and a whitish prothallus, and D. siquirrensis sp. nov. with large, orange apothecia and a thin whitish prothallus. A key is presented for neotropical foliicolous Gyalectaceae, and notes on the distribution and ecology of the species are given.
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Milton, DA. "Genetic-Evidence for Sympatric Differentiation Between 2 Color Morphs of the Skink Egernia-Whitii." Australian Journal of Zoology 38, no. 2 (1990): 117. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/zo9900117.

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The viviparous skink Egernia whitii is dimorphic for dorsal colour pattern. Both patterned and plain morphs coexist throughout the species' range. Adults live in family groups beneath exfoliating granite rocks. The closely related E. modesta also coexists in similar habitats in the northern part of the range of E. whitii. The plain E. whitii morph is intermediate in colour pattern between patterned E. whitii and E. modesta. Three populations of E. whitii and two populations of E. modesta were examined electrophoretically to assess the status of the plain morph of E. whitii. There were no fixed differences between the two morphs of E. whitii at any of the 55 loci examined, and loci polymorphic in both rnorphs of E. whitii showed no evidence of linkage disequilibria. Although heterozygosity values (H=0.017�0.002) and the level of polymorphism (P 0.95=0.015) were low, there were highly significant allele frequency differences between sympatric samples of the two morphs of E. whitii. This indicated that the two morphs were conspecific, yet they were not interbreeding at random. The established frequency of gene exchange between the two colour morphs in the three populations sampled varied from 3.6 to 6 individuals per generation. Reproductive data confirmed that both colour morphs of E. whitii produced young of the same dorsal colour pattern as their own in much greater frequency than random. However, females of both colours can and do breed with males of the other colour in very low frequency. Analysis of the lateral colour pattern of the two E. whitii morphs and E. modesta suggests that the colour patterns of the two E. whitii morphs are very similar, yet differ slightly from the colour pattern of E. modesta in the region of geographic overlap of these species. These results suggest that behavioural or microhabit differences between the two morphs may be involved in mate recognition.
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Books on the topic "Whiting family"

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Hatch, Steven W. One lineage of William Whiting of Suffolk, England, 1600-1996. New Mexico, USA: Steven W. Hatch, 1996.

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Kingsbury, John Merriam. The ancestry of Titus Bullard, 1783-1849 and Esther Whiting Bullard, 1786-1868. Jersey Shore, PA: Bullbrier Press, 2008.

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Valko, George. Valko family genealogy: Zaturcie (Martin), Slovakia to Whiting, Indiana, c. 1770-2000. Chicago, IL: G. Valko, 2001.

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Mary Jane E. Doyle McArthur. Chase-Crane genealogy: The ancestors and descendants of Oliver Chase and Sarah Elizabeth Crane of Whiting, Maine. [Rockport, Me.]: Penobscot Press, 2000.

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Leatherwood, Betty Jean Lowry, 1920-, ed. Whiteis, Whitis, Whities: A family history. [S.l: s.n.], 1986.

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Cottrell, Richard G. The Tyler-Fruhauf family history: And genealogical record of associated Edwards, Ellis, Helme, Mason, Pritchard, Seymour, Sherrerd & Whiting families. Parma, Mich. (6131 N. Dearing, Parma, 49269): R.G. Cottrell, 1995.

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McKay, Roland J. Sillaginid fishes of the world (family Sillaginidae): An annotated and illustrated catalogue of the sillago, smelt, or Indo-Pacific whiting species known to date. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 1992.

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Yesterdays: Memoir and autobiographies from six generations of an American family, 1752-2006 : Morris, Whiton, Calkins, Washburn, Phillips. 2nd ed. Hamburg, NY: Evenhouse Printing, 2011.

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Whiteis, Whitis, Whities.: A family history. Mason City, Ia: Stoyles Graphic Services, 1997.

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Morrison, Karen Y. Whitening Revisited. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036637.003.0007.

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This chapter examines the question of whitening as a process that required both family and nation to force ideological and behavioral commitments on individuals. Focusing on race-making behaviors in nineteenth-century Cuba, it interrogates the historical ambiguity of blanqueamiento, or whitening process, using a methodology that emphasizes the social construction of race. More specifically, it proposes the concept of “sexual economy of race” as a means to elucidate the conjunction between reproductive behavior and the social construction of race. It also explores the restriction of interracial marriages in Cuba as part of its whitening agenda, along with the ways in which racialized reproductive choices influenced the standard system of racial classification and fostered whitening in some cases and discouraged it in others. The chapter shows that whitening efforts in colonial Cuba were not as predictable or linear as previously theorized.
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Book chapters on the topic "Whiting family"

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Hill-Saya, Blake. "Normal School." In Aaron McDuffie Moore, 28–34. University of North Carolina Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469655857.003.0005.

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Following three years teaching as a junior country schoolmaster in Columbia County as a teenager, Moore left to get a teaching certificate at the Whittin Normal School in Lumberton. The chapter documents the importance of Professor David P. Allen, who established the Whitten Normal School, to the Moore family. It also provides an overview of normal schools and how David P. Allen and his school fit into that model.
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Khodayari, Samira, and Nayereh Hamedi. "Biological Control of Tetranychidae by Considering the Effect of Insecticides." In Insecticides [Working Title]. IntechOpen, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.100296.

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Spider mites (family Tetranychidae) are important pests of many agricultural, medicinal and ornamental plants worldwide. They possess needle-like chelicerae which pierce plant cells, often feeding on chloroplasts on the under surface of the leaf and cause upper leaf surfaces develop whitish or yellowish stippling. Additionally spider mites produce silk webbing which covers the leaves. In this chapter we present common control methods of these mites including biological control with emphasizing on the prey preference, switching behavior and mutual interference of a biological control agent, Phytoseius plumifer (Canestrini and Fanzago). Additionally the side effects of two acaricides, abamectin and fenpyroxymate, on this predator will be discussed.
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Roth-Gordon, Jennifer. "Avoiding Blackness." In Race and the Brazilian Body. University of California Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520293793.003.0005.

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Chapter 5 explores the “flip side” of boa aparência (or whitening), as middle-class youth and parents seek to secure the investment that they have made in their family’s whiteness by avoiding contact with black people and black spaces. Stronger than the fear of physically “black” bodies, however, is the fear of embodied practices associated with blackness, practices which circulate independent of dark-skinned people while threatening to steal the whiteness of middle-class youth. These fears, and the social imperative to avoid contact with blackness, are presented through the case study of Bola, a moreno (brown-skinned) middle-class youth who boldly disregards established social and racial borders. This chapter also expands on the struggle over prime urban spaces in Rio de Janeiro, showing how the presence of black youth in private, air-conditioned, and exclusive shopping malls inspires increased racial anxiety.
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Burke, Mary M. "White Wedding." In Race, Politics, and Irish America, 135–62. Oxford University PressOxford, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192859730.003.0006.

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Abstract Chapter 5 suggests that the WASP persona movie studio executives created for film star Grace Kelly (later known as Princess Grace of Monaco) was meant to diminish the usual associations of her background. These Famine-Catholic Philadelphia roots are explored through the neglected drama of her Pulitzer Prize-winning uncle, George Kelly. The symbiosis between ‘whiteness’ and the images of women deployed to sell beauty, fashion, and film industry products is well documented. Such links, overlooked in male-centred accounts of the ‘whitening’ of Irish America, are used to analyse Kelly’s impact. In Dial M for Murder, Kelly performs a woman who duplicitously performs the role of a proper English wife, for which she was coached by Alfred Hitchcock. They shared a surprisingly similar background: both were, by origin, Catholic-Irish outsiders to elite WASP culture who learned to ‘pass’. Kelly’s wedding to Prince Rainier of Monaco in 1956 was one of the largest international media events of that decade. To Catholic-Irish Philadelphia it constituted the rejoinder of a ‘hometown girl’ to the 1953 spectacular of Elizabeth II’s coronation. Grace’s globally broadcast ascent to fairy-tale whiteness paved the way for ‘America’s royals’, the Kennedy dynasty, as well as broader Irish America’s assimilation. However, centuries of Gothic literature holds that where there is a fair princess in a castle, there is soon to be horror, as the epilogue unfolds.
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Bhatti, M. Tariq, Eric R. Eggenberger, Marie D. Acierno, and John J. Chen. "A Young Man With Visual Field Loss, Decreased Hearing, and Confusion." In Mayo Clinic Cases in Neuroimmunology, edited by Andrew McKeon, B. Mark Keegan, and W. Oliver Tobin, 168–70. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780197583425.003.0054.

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A 27-year-old man noted imbalance and staggering when walking. Vertigo, nausea, vomiting, and mild fever developed. This was presumed to be due to an inner ear infection, and antibiotics were prescribed. He began experiencing intermittent left face and arm numbness, bilateral hearing loss and tinnitus. Audiography indicated low-frequency hearing loss in both ears, left worse than right. He reported headaches and neck stiffness, and his family noticed that he was moody, easily aggravated, and confused, with slow mentation. Magnetic resonance imaging showed patchy, nodular, leptomeningeal enhancement involving both cerebral hemispheres and the posterior fossa, with scattered hyperintense T2 signal changes of the internal capsule and prominent abnormal signal changes in the corpus callosum. Cerebrospinal fluid analysis was remarkable for a markedly increased protein concentration and white blood cells. Eye examination showed 20/20 vision in both eyes with a superior visual field defect in the right eye. Retinal whitening was noted in the vascular distribution of the inferotemporal arcade. Intravenous fluorescein angiography showed delayed filling in this region consistent with a branch retinal artery occlusion and scattered areas of arteriolar wall hyperfluorescence. A diagnosis of Susac syndrome was made on the basis of the branch retinal artery occlusion, magnetic resonance imaging findings, and hearing deficit. Intravenous methylprednisolone was given, followed oral prednisone, which resulted in substantial improvement in headaches and cognition. Cyclophosphamide was also started at the same time as intravenous methylprednisolone. A new visual field defect developed due to a branch retinal artery occlusion in the left eye, which prompted initiation of intravenous immunoglobulin and transition from cyclophosphamide to rituximab. He had no recurrent branch retinal artery occlusions or other relapses of his underlying Susac syndrome on this treatment regimen. Susac syndrome was initially described as a microangiopathy of the brain and retina. It is an idiopathic autoimmune disorder that primarily affects the brain, eye, and inner ear.
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Burke, Mary M. "Introduction." In Race, Politics, and Irish America, 1–10. Oxford University PressOxford, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192859730.003.0001.

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Abstract Figures from the Scots-Irish Andrew Jackson to the Caribbean-Irish Rihanna, as well as literature, film, caricature, and beauty discourse, convey how the Irish racially transformed multiple times: in the slave-holding Caribbean, on America’s frontiers and antebellum plantations, and along its eastern seaboard. This cultural history of race and centuries of Irishness in the Americas examines the forcibly transported Irish, the eighteenth-century Presbyterian Ulster Scots, and post-1845 Famine immigrants. Their racial transformations are indicated by the designations they acquired in the Americas: ‘Redlegs,’ ‘Scots-Irish,’ and ‘black Irish.’ In literature by Fitzgerald, O’Neill, Mitchell, Glasgow, and Yerby (an African-American author of Scots-Irish heritage), the Irish are both colluders and victims within America’s racial structure. Depictions range from Irish encounters with Native and African Americans to competition within America’s immigrant hierarchy between ‘Saxon’ Scots-Irish and ‘Celtic’ Irish Catholic. Irish-connected presidents feature, but attention to queer and multiracial authors, public women, beauty professionals, and performers complicates the ‘Irish whitening’ narrative. Thus, ‘Irish Princess’ Grace Kelly’s globally-broadcast ascent to royalty paves the way for ‘America’s royals,’ the Kennedys. The presidencies of the Scots-Irish Jackson and Catholic-Irish Kennedy signalled their respective cohorts’ assimilation. Since Gothic literature particularly expresses the complicity that attaining power (‘whiteness’) entails, subgenres named ‘Scots-Irish Gothic’ and ‘Kennedy Gothic’ are identified: in Gothic by Brown, Poe, James, Faulkner, and Welty, the violence of the colonial Irish motherland is visited upon marginalized Americans, including, sometimes, other Irish groupings. History is Gothic in Irish-American narrative because the undead Irish past replays within America’s contexts of race.
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