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Niamh Cullen
@niamhcullen.bsky.social
Lecturer at QUB history. Twentieth century Italy, history of emotions, family, motherhood. Creative approaches to history. Essays and stories in the Dublin Review @londonmagazine, Tangerine magazine
160 followers194 following74 posts
NCniamhcullen.bsky.social

Indeed!

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NCniamhcullen.bsky.social

I love the luci d’artista! Always my favorite part of Turin in winter

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NCniamhcullen.bsky.social

These are all so familiar to me! I can sing them in my head despite not being to mass in over 20 years…

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Reposted by Niamh Cullen
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NCniamhcullen.bsky.social

Looks fascinating Neil!

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NCniamhcullen.bsky.social

I love travelling by train in Italy. The trains usually work so well! And the double decker ones in the north are fab

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Reposted by Niamh Cullen
AEamalelmohtar.com

Obligatory reminder that this is from 2014 & it has *never needed to change* because it is *working just fine*

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NCniamhcullen.bsky.social

I will need to check the text again but I don’t think there is too much sardo, apart from the words for folk culture/traditions. I don’t know Sardinian so I wouldn’t have understood it well otherwise.

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NCniamhcullen.bsky.social

I loved l’Accabadora when I read it in Italian last year, great to see it getting more attention in English. I also thought about the connections with folk culture in rural Ireland when reading so really interesting to see the Irish translation

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Niamh Cullen
@niamhcullen.bsky.social
Lecturer at QUB history. Twentieth century Italy, history of emotions, family, motherhood. Creative approaches to history. Essays and stories in the Dublin Review @londonmagazine, Tangerine magazine
160 followers194 following74 posts