This paper examines how women in the North of Ireland used menstrual blood as a means of resisting the state. It explores the central role that menstrual blood and menstruation have played throughout the conflict – both as an instrument of war and as a weapon of resistance for female political prisoners. Various arms of the state used menstruation as a means of control over republican women. But women also used menstrual blood to challenge and to resist such attempts by the state. This article suggests that the use of menstrual blood in resisting the state is an act so subversive that it effectively disrupted staunchly entrenched gender norms in Northern Irish society prior to the height of the conflict. This in turn provoked the ri...
The research for this work was funded by the Royal Society of Edinburgh’s Arts and Humanities Resear...
This thesis explores the conflict transition experiences of republican women in the North of Ireland...
Irish Republican women in Britain formed a vital network which provided their counterparts in Irelan...
This paper examines how women in the North of Ireland used menstrual blood as a means of resisting ...
This article draws on the voices of women political prisoners who were detained at Armagh Prison dur...
In the context of the discourses that shape hegemonic understandings of the Irish nationalist strugg...
Assuming that gender relationships are essential to any analysis of terrorism and political violence...
This article sets the Period Products (Free Provision) (Scotland) (2021) Act in the context of histo...
Female revolutionaries suffered various traumas – including sexual trauma – during Ireland’s revolut...
Published online: 12 Dec 2018The split of Sinn Féin and the IRA in 1969 established a lasting schism...
An absentee from the Western culture, the phenomenon of menstruation is an unlikely theme to be foun...
With this thesis, I will utilize both feminist and queer theory to highlight the gendered and bodily...
This paper argues that the first involvement of Irish women in war was ‘accidental’ and came as an e...
This thesis is an examination of feminist republicanism(s) in the north of Ireland between 1975 – 19...
The purpose of this article is to examine the positive and negative properties of menstrual blood in...
The research for this work was funded by the Royal Society of Edinburgh’s Arts and Humanities Resear...
This thesis explores the conflict transition experiences of republican women in the North of Ireland...
Irish Republican women in Britain formed a vital network which provided their counterparts in Irelan...
This paper examines how women in the North of Ireland used menstrual blood as a means of resisting ...
This article draws on the voices of women political prisoners who were detained at Armagh Prison dur...
In the context of the discourses that shape hegemonic understandings of the Irish nationalist strugg...
Assuming that gender relationships are essential to any analysis of terrorism and political violence...
This article sets the Period Products (Free Provision) (Scotland) (2021) Act in the context of histo...
Female revolutionaries suffered various traumas – including sexual trauma – during Ireland’s revolut...
Published online: 12 Dec 2018The split of Sinn Féin and the IRA in 1969 established a lasting schism...
An absentee from the Western culture, the phenomenon of menstruation is an unlikely theme to be foun...
With this thesis, I will utilize both feminist and queer theory to highlight the gendered and bodily...
This paper argues that the first involvement of Irish women in war was ‘accidental’ and came as an e...
This thesis is an examination of feminist republicanism(s) in the north of Ireland between 1975 – 19...
The purpose of this article is to examine the positive and negative properties of menstrual blood in...
The research for this work was funded by the Royal Society of Edinburgh’s Arts and Humanities Resear...
This thesis explores the conflict transition experiences of republican women in the North of Ireland...
Irish Republican women in Britain formed a vital network which provided their counterparts in Irelan...