In the nearly 15 years since the Good Friday Agreement, a range of public art initiatives, from small-scale community projects to expensive contemporary installations, have been touted by Northern Irish officials as transformative tools that can contribute to social reconciliation and economic renaissance. This thesis critiques the reimagining of public space across five 'post-conflict' urban landscapes in Belfast and Derry/Londonderry. These landscapes explore the spatialisation of discourses around globalisation, consumption, community, troubled history and culture. Each discourse sheds light on the ways the state has used symbolic elements, specifically public art, to telegraph new images (both real and conceptual) in public space as par...
The academic interest in cultural expressions and practices and their relationship to peace studies ...
The research study investigates the social and political dimension of contemporary street art produc...
Paper presented at the conference 'Protestant Traditions and the Paths to Peace: Beyond the Legacie...
The boundary between the built environment and social reality in post-agreement environments is diff...
Public art is a battleground of myriad complexity in Belfast and discourses of ‘community’ are often...
Despite the undeniable progress achieved in the seventeen years since the Belfast/Good Friday Agreem...
International audienceToday, despite major political advances, Belfast’s urban landscape still tells...
In post-Agreement Northern Ireland, issues of cultural identity have risen to the forefront of regio...
The Great Reimagining: Public Art, Urban Space and the Symbolic Landscapes of a ‘New’ Northern Irel...
Although Northern Irish society looks similar to its counterparts in Great Britain and the Republic ...
Northern Ireland has a complex urbanism with multilayered socio-spatial politics. In this environmen...
Murals have figured as a prominent feature of the visual environment of Northern Ireland since the e...
This study explores the relationship between the frequently violent imagery used in Belfast\u27s abu...
This article explores what the symbolic landscapes in an area of Belfast reflect about the developme...
This chapter illustrates the generative cultural practices of street murals in Belfast, in illuminat...
The academic interest in cultural expressions and practices and their relationship to peace studies ...
The research study investigates the social and political dimension of contemporary street art produc...
Paper presented at the conference 'Protestant Traditions and the Paths to Peace: Beyond the Legacie...
The boundary between the built environment and social reality in post-agreement environments is diff...
Public art is a battleground of myriad complexity in Belfast and discourses of ‘community’ are often...
Despite the undeniable progress achieved in the seventeen years since the Belfast/Good Friday Agreem...
International audienceToday, despite major political advances, Belfast’s urban landscape still tells...
In post-Agreement Northern Ireland, issues of cultural identity have risen to the forefront of regio...
The Great Reimagining: Public Art, Urban Space and the Symbolic Landscapes of a ‘New’ Northern Irel...
Although Northern Irish society looks similar to its counterparts in Great Britain and the Republic ...
Northern Ireland has a complex urbanism with multilayered socio-spatial politics. In this environmen...
Murals have figured as a prominent feature of the visual environment of Northern Ireland since the e...
This study explores the relationship between the frequently violent imagery used in Belfast\u27s abu...
This article explores what the symbolic landscapes in an area of Belfast reflect about the developme...
This chapter illustrates the generative cultural practices of street murals in Belfast, in illuminat...
The academic interest in cultural expressions and practices and their relationship to peace studies ...
The research study investigates the social and political dimension of contemporary street art produc...
Paper presented at the conference 'Protestant Traditions and the Paths to Peace: Beyond the Legacie...