The lack of an overarching narrative of place for Northern Ireland, and its territorial conflict, have resulted in fragmented, highly localized and strictly bounded senses of place. This is nowhere more evident than in Belfast, a city profoundly shaped by its sectarian geographies. As a result, what theorists have come to characterize as the relative liberty of urban space is overtly compromised, with movement through and within Belfast being restricted by the policing of its internal boundaries. These difficulties, and their gendered effects, are focused here in relation to the particular experience of artist Sandra Johnston. Johnston ...
Belfast seems well known as a violent city; it has experienced a long history of turmoil related to ...
Much work has been attempted to forge identities beyond the dominant topographies of the political d...
This conference was the result of an observation: the violent events that occurred between the end o...
The lack of an overarching narrative of place for Northern Ireland, and its territori...
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...
In the nearly 15 years since the Good Friday Agreement, a range of public art initiatives, from smal...
This chapter employs relational space on postwar Belfast (Northern Ireland) to understand the role o...
This study investigates the ways in which contemporary Northern Irish fiction and film have responde...
This article explores what the symbolic landscapes in an area of Belfast reflect about the developme...
Paper presented at the conference 'Protestant Traditions and the Paths to Peace: Beyond the Legacie...
This paper investigates processes and actions of diversifying memories of division in Northern Irela...
This study examines how borders are socially produced and deconstructed in “post-conflict” North Bel...
In Northern Ireland, the concept of 'shared space' has evolved through a number of policy documents ...
The increasing convergences in new media technologies and modes of film-making compromise the useful...
Belfast seems well known as a violent city; it has experienced a long history of turmoil related to ...
Much work has been attempted to forge identities beyond the dominant topographies of the political d...
This conference was the result of an observation: the violent events that occurred between the end o...
The lack of an overarching narrative of place for Northern Ireland, and its territori...
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...
In the nearly 15 years since the Good Friday Agreement, a range of public art initiatives, from smal...
This chapter employs relational space on postwar Belfast (Northern Ireland) to understand the role o...
This study investigates the ways in which contemporary Northern Irish fiction and film have responde...
This article explores what the symbolic landscapes in an area of Belfast reflect about the developme...
Paper presented at the conference 'Protestant Traditions and the Paths to Peace: Beyond the Legacie...
This paper investigates processes and actions of diversifying memories of division in Northern Irela...
This study examines how borders are socially produced and deconstructed in “post-conflict” North Bel...
In Northern Ireland, the concept of 'shared space' has evolved through a number of policy documents ...
The increasing convergences in new media technologies and modes of film-making compromise the useful...
Belfast seems well known as a violent city; it has experienced a long history of turmoil related to ...
Much work has been attempted to forge identities beyond the dominant topographies of the political d...
This conference was the result of an observation: the violent events that occurred between the end o...