| "A thig a thoo Gaeilge?" ; Famine immigrants' Irish words remembered by their children | Quinn, E. Moore | Article in Book | Quinnipiac University Press | 2018 |
| "All I had left were my words" : The widow's curse in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Ireland | Quinn, E. Moore | Article in Book | Palgrave Macmillan | 2015 |
| "All the themes of hagiography" : an turas Cholm Cille revisited | Quinn, E. Moore | Article in Journal | | 2010 |
| "I have been trying very hard to be powerful 'nice'..." : the correspondence of Sister M. de Sales (Brennan) during the American Civil War | Quinn, E. Moore | Article in Journal | | 2010 |
| Bounty, moderation, and miracles: women and food in narratives of the Great Famine | Delay, CaraQuinn, E. Moore | Article in Journal | | 2017 |
| Folklore in Irish America | Quinn, E. Moore ; Delay, Cara | Article in Book | | 2024 |
| Introduction : The Irish in the American Civil War | Quinn, E. Moore | Article in Journal | | 2010 |
| Portrait of a mythographer : discourses of identity in the work of Father James McDyer | Quinn, E. Moore | Article in Journal | | 2003 |
| The Irish rent … and mended : transitional textual communities in nineteenth-century America | Quinn, E. Moore | Article in Journal | | 2015 |
| ‘I have been trying very hard to be powerful “nice” …’ : the correspondence of Sister M. De Sales (Brennan) during the American Civil War | Quinn, E. Moore | Article in Journal | | 2010 |
| “A spectacle of our people in a strange land” : Irish women’s food experiences in Scotland’s tatie-hoking fields in the 20th century | Quinn, E. Moore | Article in Book | Quinnipiac University Press; Cork University Press | 2020 |