Catalogue and paper on 'A Mile Apart', also linked to an exhibition of the same nameAbstract: This paper explores through the use of photography, a parallel mapping of the ‘unspoken’ domestic sphere, the myth of the safety of home, and set against political and external events in a unique period of recent history. It is focused on Belfast, Northern Ireland and the period of ‘The Troubles’. It examines the nature of the space we inhabit, the vernacular, the everyday and how this might influence our identity. Drawing on the work of Bachelard (1969) it will also explore how the vernacular can be located in a different time frame, and therefore allows for a new representation and perspective. The recreation of a wholly new space that parti...
Photographs, despite their representational realism and apparent immediacy do not necessarily provid...
What is a memory? What is the past? A memory is not happening in terrain, in section or in plan. All...
Research on the relationship between place, memory, and identity has tended to focus on either 'feli...
A collective memory project and digital online archive derived from public call-out in collaboration...
In the following thesis I seek to examine the significance of the photograph in relation to a series...
This thesis describes the interdependence of visual and material cultures in the home and seeks to ...
This paper investigates processes and actions of diversifying memories of division in Northern Irela...
This thesis explores the relationships between different memory narratives within the unglamorous, e...
Using my own photographic practice as an example, in this paper I propose to reflect on how the medi...
This article posits the home as a key site in the Northern Irish conflict and examines the possibili...
This paper is concerned with the politics of memory and their consequences – how memory in its tangi...
Objects, places and events that occur in separate times and places can coexist psychologically. My ...
Territoriality profoundly impacts people’s encounters of contact and social identity driven by polit...
DCU Intergenerational Learning Programme, in partnership with Photowings and the University of North...
IN recent years, scholars from different disciplinary backgrounds such as anthropology, sociology, p...
Photographs, despite their representational realism and apparent immediacy do not necessarily provid...
What is a memory? What is the past? A memory is not happening in terrain, in section or in plan. All...
Research on the relationship between place, memory, and identity has tended to focus on either 'feli...
A collective memory project and digital online archive derived from public call-out in collaboration...
In the following thesis I seek to examine the significance of the photograph in relation to a series...
This thesis describes the interdependence of visual and material cultures in the home and seeks to ...
This paper investigates processes and actions of diversifying memories of division in Northern Irela...
This thesis explores the relationships between different memory narratives within the unglamorous, e...
Using my own photographic practice as an example, in this paper I propose to reflect on how the medi...
This article posits the home as a key site in the Northern Irish conflict and examines the possibili...
This paper is concerned with the politics of memory and their consequences – how memory in its tangi...
Objects, places and events that occur in separate times and places can coexist psychologically. My ...
Territoriality profoundly impacts people’s encounters of contact and social identity driven by polit...
DCU Intergenerational Learning Programme, in partnership with Photowings and the University of North...
IN recent years, scholars from different disciplinary backgrounds such as anthropology, sociology, p...
Photographs, despite their representational realism and apparent immediacy do not necessarily provid...
What is a memory? What is the past? A memory is not happening in terrain, in section or in plan. All...
Research on the relationship between place, memory, and identity has tended to focus on either 'feli...