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My Nintendo Switch
Since I was small I have always had a video game console in my hand, to my mother's disappointment. I would always have one. There are family photos of me as a child trying to hide my Gameboy because my mum asked me to get ride of it. School was the only the exception. I would even sleep with a Gameboy. It's as much a part of my arm or body as any other limb I have.
I am emigrating in two months…
Contributors
- Nikki Smith
Subject
- Immigration to United Kingdom
- Emigration from Ireland
- Migrant workers
- Archaeologists
- Emigration
- Human migration
- http://contribute.europeana.eu/contributions/bf898c20-d203-0136-c5d4-6eee0af7a2cb#agent-bf8a68e0-d203-0136-c5d4-6eee0af7a2cb
- Human migration
- Archaeologist
Contributors
- Nikki Smith
Subject
- Immigration to United Kingdom
- Emigration from Ireland
- Migrant workers
- Archaeologists
- Emigration
- Human migration
- http://contribute.europeana.eu/contributions/bf898c20-d203-0136-c5d4-6eee0af7a2cb#agent-bf8a68e0-d203-0136-c5d4-6eee0af7a2cb
- Human migration
- Archaeologist
Providing institution
Aggregator
Rights statement for the media in this item (unless otherwise specified)
- http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
Places
- Dublin, Ireland
- Britain
- Great Britain
- U.K.
- UK
- United Kingdom
- United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
- Dublin
- Republic of Ireland
- United Kingdom
Identifier
- 072
- http://contribute.europeana.eu/contributions/bf898c20-d203-0136-c5d4-6eee0af7a2cb
Language
- en
- eng
Is part of
- Migrant Women, EPIC The Irish Emigration Museum, Dublin, 2018-11-24–2018-11-25
Providing country
- Europe
Collection name
First time published on Europeana
- 2019-07-25T07:45:11.829Z
Last time updated from providing institution
- 2021-11-03T11:22:04.772Z