This article examines the TV series The Fall in terms of the relationship to its location in the city of Belfast. Viewing the process of production and dramatization as intrinsically linked to aspects of the city from a post-conflict perspective, the paper examines how issues of onscreen violence and gender are worked out in this context of economic regeneration in operation since the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. The introduction of a fictional serial killer to the province after decades of violence and a fragile peace process can be seen as an attempt to normalize the region in the popular imagination. The paper firstly examines the various ways that the older geography and spatial markers of the city are incorporated into the series and ch...
This article is concerned with narratives of ethno-religious conflict depicted in a genre I term ‘co...
This dissertation argues that the political and spatial control over time and temporality is a deepl...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 89-98.1. Introduction -- 2. Violence and place in the early t...
For all the gains made during its celebrated peace process, Northern Ireland remains haunted by a co...
This article explores the increased attractiveness of a ‘post-conflict’ Belfast as a television sett...
Belfast seems well known as a violent city; it has experienced a long history of turmoil related to ...
Belfast seems well known as a violent city; it has experienced a long history of turmoil related to ...
Focising on Belfast, the article explores the relation of memorialisation and historical reconciliat...
In Belfast, despite everyone knowing the conventional date that put an end to the Northern Irish con...
The conflict known as the “Troubles” in Northern Ireland began during the late 1960s and is defined ...
This article explores the treatment of Northern Irish electoral politics in two plays featuring Memb...
Drawing on interviews conducted between September 2004 and April 2006, this article examines the int...
AbstractAs Northern Ireland moves further from the period of conflict known as the ‘Troubles’, atten...
The media can contribute to the reproduction of violent conflict in societies either through direct ...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the article\u27s first paragraph. A conflict exists between the cou...
This article is concerned with narratives of ethno-religious conflict depicted in a genre I term ‘co...
This dissertation argues that the political and spatial control over time and temporality is a deepl...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 89-98.1. Introduction -- 2. Violence and place in the early t...
For all the gains made during its celebrated peace process, Northern Ireland remains haunted by a co...
This article explores the increased attractiveness of a ‘post-conflict’ Belfast as a television sett...
Belfast seems well known as a violent city; it has experienced a long history of turmoil related to ...
Belfast seems well known as a violent city; it has experienced a long history of turmoil related to ...
Focising on Belfast, the article explores the relation of memorialisation and historical reconciliat...
In Belfast, despite everyone knowing the conventional date that put an end to the Northern Irish con...
The conflict known as the “Troubles” in Northern Ireland began during the late 1960s and is defined ...
This article explores the treatment of Northern Irish electoral politics in two plays featuring Memb...
Drawing on interviews conducted between September 2004 and April 2006, this article examines the int...
AbstractAs Northern Ireland moves further from the period of conflict known as the ‘Troubles’, atten...
The media can contribute to the reproduction of violent conflict in societies either through direct ...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the article\u27s first paragraph. A conflict exists between the cou...
This article is concerned with narratives of ethno-religious conflict depicted in a genre I term ‘co...
This dissertation argues that the political and spatial control over time and temporality is a deepl...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 89-98.1. Introduction -- 2. Violence and place in the early t...