This article explores how the Island of Ireland Peace Park, opened in 1998 in Belgium, intervenes in the discursive construction of national identity using the ‘memory’ of the First World War. Analysing memory as a discourse it examines how the texts within the Park and their use in practices produce meanings which challenge the hierarchical binary of ‘Irish/British’, itself a product, in part, of previous memory work involving the war, and thus present the possibility of reimagined forms of subjectivity and reconceived senses of national identity. It goes on to argue that the Park’s design as an unheroic anti-war memorial also intertextually challenges identities dependent on engagement in physical conflict on the island. In both ways the ...
The article explores the production of historical narratives in two national museums, the National M...
This article addresses avenues for reconciliation and the persistence of the Troubles in Northern I...
This article offers a reflection on the potency of combining oral history and agonistic memory. Via ...
This work explores the way in which the texts and practices of Remembrance of the First World War in...
dynamics of collective remembrance The commemoration of the participation of Irishmen in the British...
This article explores practices of memorialisation in post-conflict society, through the case study ...
Preservation of historical remains is ridden with complexity. In particular, battle landscapes are m...
The 1917 call for a national memorial to the First World War led to the establishment of the Imperia...
The Beaumont Hamel Newfoundland Memorial is a 16.5-hectare (40 acres) tract of preserved battlegroun...
The narrative of the 16th (Irish) and 36th (Ulster) divisions fighting side-by-side at Messines in J...
Bloody Sunday. Derry, Northern Ireland, January 30, 1972, in which 13 Catholic civilians were shot d...
This article examines the politics of memory informing Northern Irish poetry published after the Goo...
This thesis explores the cultural geographies of peacebuilding through a study of Belfast, Northern...
International audienceHistory, as an academic discipline, has traditionally focused more on conflict...
Prime Minister David Cameron has called for ‘a truly national commemoration of the First World War’....
The article explores the production of historical narratives in two national museums, the National M...
This article addresses avenues for reconciliation and the persistence of the Troubles in Northern I...
This article offers a reflection on the potency of combining oral history and agonistic memory. Via ...
This work explores the way in which the texts and practices of Remembrance of the First World War in...
dynamics of collective remembrance The commemoration of the participation of Irishmen in the British...
This article explores practices of memorialisation in post-conflict society, through the case study ...
Preservation of historical remains is ridden with complexity. In particular, battle landscapes are m...
The 1917 call for a national memorial to the First World War led to the establishment of the Imperia...
The Beaumont Hamel Newfoundland Memorial is a 16.5-hectare (40 acres) tract of preserved battlegroun...
The narrative of the 16th (Irish) and 36th (Ulster) divisions fighting side-by-side at Messines in J...
Bloody Sunday. Derry, Northern Ireland, January 30, 1972, in which 13 Catholic civilians were shot d...
This article examines the politics of memory informing Northern Irish poetry published after the Goo...
This thesis explores the cultural geographies of peacebuilding through a study of Belfast, Northern...
International audienceHistory, as an academic discipline, has traditionally focused more on conflict...
Prime Minister David Cameron has called for ‘a truly national commemoration of the First World War’....
The article explores the production of historical narratives in two national museums, the National M...
This article addresses avenues for reconciliation and the persistence of the Troubles in Northern I...
This article offers a reflection on the potency of combining oral history and agonistic memory. Via ...