This paper explores the role of clothing in the hunger strikes in Northern Irish prisons in the 1970s/80s.One of the five demands of prisoners made was the right to wear their own clothes. As the body became a site of struggle, clothing was given a central focus in political debate, media coverage and public discourse. I explore the refusal to wear prison clothes and the adoption of the blanket, which created compelling images of abjection and drew attention to the harsh realities of the conflict in Northern Ireland at the time
The prison called both Long Kesh and the Maze is regarded as a symbol of the Northern Ireland confli...
This paper engages with the former prison at Long Kesh in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and, in particu...
First online: 2 October 2019This chapter shows how Irish Republican Army (IRA) prisoners started a c...
In 1981 a hunger strike broke out wich was held in the correctional facility Maze in Belfast. The hu...
In 1981, ten men starved themselves to death in Northern Ireland’s Maze prison to prove to the world...
This study explores the prison experience of Ulster loyalist paramilitary prisoners during the 'Tr...
First published online: 29 March 2021Between 1973 and 1977, about 100 Provisional republican prisone...
This thesis examines the 1981 hunger strike by republican prisoners in Northern Ireland against the ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [126]-144)During 1981, 10 inmates of the Maze Prison in N...
Abstract provided by publisher.This book is an oral history of former Irish republican prisoners in ...
This article draws on the voices of women political prisoners who were detained at Armagh Prison dur...
An examination of prison clothing in the Galleries of Justice Galleries archive makes visible the pr...
Research for this sole-authored book was undertaken during AHRC-funded Research Leave (2007). It rep...
The mass incarceration of Republicans in the North of Ireland was a policy decision that would have ...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to critically explore the importance of the experiences of fem...
The prison called both Long Kesh and the Maze is regarded as a symbol of the Northern Ireland confli...
This paper engages with the former prison at Long Kesh in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and, in particu...
First online: 2 October 2019This chapter shows how Irish Republican Army (IRA) prisoners started a c...
In 1981 a hunger strike broke out wich was held in the correctional facility Maze in Belfast. The hu...
In 1981, ten men starved themselves to death in Northern Ireland’s Maze prison to prove to the world...
This study explores the prison experience of Ulster loyalist paramilitary prisoners during the 'Tr...
First published online: 29 March 2021Between 1973 and 1977, about 100 Provisional republican prisone...
This thesis examines the 1981 hunger strike by republican prisoners in Northern Ireland against the ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [126]-144)During 1981, 10 inmates of the Maze Prison in N...
Abstract provided by publisher.This book is an oral history of former Irish republican prisoners in ...
This article draws on the voices of women political prisoners who were detained at Armagh Prison dur...
An examination of prison clothing in the Galleries of Justice Galleries archive makes visible the pr...
Research for this sole-authored book was undertaken during AHRC-funded Research Leave (2007). It rep...
The mass incarceration of Republicans in the North of Ireland was a policy decision that would have ...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to critically explore the importance of the experiences of fem...
The prison called both Long Kesh and the Maze is regarded as a symbol of the Northern Ireland confli...
This paper engages with the former prison at Long Kesh in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and, in particu...
First online: 2 October 2019This chapter shows how Irish Republican Army (IRA) prisoners started a c...