This article examines a handkerchief decorated by female members of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) imprisoned in Armagh Jail, Northern Ireland, in 1976. It attends to the materiality of a gendered and politicised object. The stenciling, colouring, signing and exchanging of this piece of cloth took place at the end of an early phase in the conflict ‘in and about’ Northern Ireland, a period known as ‘reactive containment’ and characterised by political imprisonment. Stitching upon cloth, a feminine pursuit, was adapted by male prisoners to become widespread republican practice in the 1970s. The Armagh handkerchief considered here, represents a contradictory and borrowed form but one in which the gendered properties of cloth persist. Thus, th...
This paper explores the role of clothing in the hunger strikes in Northern Irish prisons in the 1970...
This paper examines how women in the North of Ireland used menstrual blood as a means of resisting ...
Assuming that gender relationships are essential to any analysis of terrorism and political violence...
This article examines a handkerchief decorated by female members of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) ...
The Troubles in Northern Ireland provide a complex and intriguing topic for many scholars in various...
Between 1911 and 1912 hundreds of suffragettes were incarcerated in Holloway Prison for participatin...
Between 1911 and 1912 hundreds of suffragettes were incarcerated in Holloway Prison for participatin...
While on a hunger strike within the walls of Halloway Prison in 1912, a woman recorded her experienc...
This article draws on the voices of women political prisoners who were detained at Armagh Prison dur...
This paper examines contemporary needlework on vintage handkerchiefs, identifying a new genre of fem...
Over many thousands of years there have been political, social meanings woven into the very fabric o...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a published work that appeared in final form in ...
In this article, I trace the politics of shame in the context of the problematization of women’s bod...
Irish Republican women in Britain formed a vital network which provided their counterparts in Irelan...
With this thesis, I will utilize both feminist and queer theory to highlight the gendered and bodily...
This paper explores the role of clothing in the hunger strikes in Northern Irish prisons in the 1970...
This paper examines how women in the North of Ireland used menstrual blood as a means of resisting ...
Assuming that gender relationships are essential to any analysis of terrorism and political violence...
This article examines a handkerchief decorated by female members of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) ...
The Troubles in Northern Ireland provide a complex and intriguing topic for many scholars in various...
Between 1911 and 1912 hundreds of suffragettes were incarcerated in Holloway Prison for participatin...
Between 1911 and 1912 hundreds of suffragettes were incarcerated in Holloway Prison for participatin...
While on a hunger strike within the walls of Halloway Prison in 1912, a woman recorded her experienc...
This article draws on the voices of women political prisoners who were detained at Armagh Prison dur...
This paper examines contemporary needlework on vintage handkerchiefs, identifying a new genre of fem...
Over many thousands of years there have been political, social meanings woven into the very fabric o...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a published work that appeared in final form in ...
In this article, I trace the politics of shame in the context of the problematization of women’s bod...
Irish Republican women in Britain formed a vital network which provided their counterparts in Irelan...
With this thesis, I will utilize both feminist and queer theory to highlight the gendered and bodily...
This paper explores the role of clothing in the hunger strikes in Northern Irish prisons in the 1970...
This paper examines how women in the North of Ireland used menstrual blood as a means of resisting ...
Assuming that gender relationships are essential to any analysis of terrorism and political violence...