In Northern Ireland there is a constant struggle between competing interpretations of historical events, the determination of which serves to validate and legitimate views of the present and to meet contemporary political concerns. The memory of historical events carry a profound political significance, as the past is altered to suit present purposes, and transmitted across generations by commemoration and memorialization. This article examines how Ulster Loyalist collective memory is characterized by an attempt to ensure collective coherence and how individuals understand their relationship to contemporary political events through their interactions with the past
Recalled memories are recalled from somewhere, and usually for some specific reason. After a generat...
This paper is concerned with the politics of memory and their consequences – how memory in its tangi...
This work explores the way in which the texts and practices of Remembrance of the First World War in...
This article explores the reasons for persistent memory wars surrounding the Northern Ireland confli...
Bloody Sunday. Derry, Northern Ireland, January 30, 1972, in which 13 Catholic civilians were shot d...
In this paper Alan Falconer examines the lessons learned from a study into the way in which memorie...
This dissertation explores Catholic nationalist residents of Derry, Northern Ireland\u27s expression...
This article is a case study of Irish republican memory entrepreneurship that critically examines th...
The question of how to ‘deal’ with the past in post‐conflict Northern Ireland preoccupies public con...
On the face of it, the legacy of the 1798 rebellion in the northeastern Irish counties of Antrim and...
In this paper Alan Falconer examines the lessons learned from a study into the way in which memories...
Discussing the relationship between the past and the present in Irish society, this title outlines t...
On the ninetieth anniversary of the Easter Rising in Ireland this year, a large and well-attended p...
This article contributes to debates about the theoretical coherence and historical utility of the co...
History, in one capacity or another, is relevant to all of us. History influences and affects every ...
Recalled memories are recalled from somewhere, and usually for some specific reason. After a generat...
This paper is concerned with the politics of memory and their consequences – how memory in its tangi...
This work explores the way in which the texts and practices of Remembrance of the First World War in...
This article explores the reasons for persistent memory wars surrounding the Northern Ireland confli...
Bloody Sunday. Derry, Northern Ireland, January 30, 1972, in which 13 Catholic civilians were shot d...
In this paper Alan Falconer examines the lessons learned from a study into the way in which memorie...
This dissertation explores Catholic nationalist residents of Derry, Northern Ireland\u27s expression...
This article is a case study of Irish republican memory entrepreneurship that critically examines th...
The question of how to ‘deal’ with the past in post‐conflict Northern Ireland preoccupies public con...
On the face of it, the legacy of the 1798 rebellion in the northeastern Irish counties of Antrim and...
In this paper Alan Falconer examines the lessons learned from a study into the way in which memories...
Discussing the relationship between the past and the present in Irish society, this title outlines t...
On the ninetieth anniversary of the Easter Rising in Ireland this year, a large and well-attended p...
This article contributes to debates about the theoretical coherence and historical utility of the co...
History, in one capacity or another, is relevant to all of us. History influences and affects every ...
Recalled memories are recalled from somewhere, and usually for some specific reason. After a generat...
This paper is concerned with the politics of memory and their consequences – how memory in its tangi...
This work explores the way in which the texts and practices of Remembrance of the First World War in...