Northern Ireland remains part of the United Kingdom, yet its postcolonial position is subject to fierce debate among British loyalists and Irish republicans. Using Tommy Skelly’s 1972 “Go on Home British Soldiers” as its central focus, this article unpicks the various (post)colonial narratives played out through republican music in the North of Ireland, challenging the parameters of the postcolonial, and demonstrating how Irish rebel songs continue to function as a form of political engagement and cultural resistance within and against the British state
This article examines the evolution of the British Government’s position regarding the question of t...
This article explores the reasons for persistent memory wars surrounding the Northern Ireland confli...
The course of music in Ireland in the last two centuries presents a depressing picture. The creativ...
Northern Ireland remains part of the United Kingdom, yet its postcolonial position is subject to fie...
During the Northern Ireland conflict (1968–1998), paramilitary groups were supported and sustained b...
From the glamorous, cross-dressing “Rebel, Rebel” of David Bowie, to the righteous Trenchtown “Soul ...
The relationship between music and national identity is well-established in Ireland as elsewhere. Ri...
Scholarly disagreements over the applicability of a colonial framework to Ireland’s relationship wit...
The signing of the Good Friday Agreement on April 10, 1998, marked the beginning of a new era of pea...
Irish rebel songs afford Scotland's Irish diaspora a means to assert, experience and perform their a...
Popular music has had a long and often complex relationship with political life. A specific event in...
During the late 1960s pandemonium and chaos spread throughout the northeast part of the Irish island...
This thesis surveys musical cultureâs relationship with Irish nationalism after the Irish confederac...
Music and art can be very effective mediums for individual expression, both in personal life and for...
This article explores popular-musical invocations of the Northern Ireland conflict (1968–1998), focu...
This article examines the evolution of the British Government’s position regarding the question of t...
This article explores the reasons for persistent memory wars surrounding the Northern Ireland confli...
The course of music in Ireland in the last two centuries presents a depressing picture. The creativ...
Northern Ireland remains part of the United Kingdom, yet its postcolonial position is subject to fie...
During the Northern Ireland conflict (1968–1998), paramilitary groups were supported and sustained b...
From the glamorous, cross-dressing “Rebel, Rebel” of David Bowie, to the righteous Trenchtown “Soul ...
The relationship between music and national identity is well-established in Ireland as elsewhere. Ri...
Scholarly disagreements over the applicability of a colonial framework to Ireland’s relationship wit...
The signing of the Good Friday Agreement on April 10, 1998, marked the beginning of a new era of pea...
Irish rebel songs afford Scotland's Irish diaspora a means to assert, experience and perform their a...
Popular music has had a long and often complex relationship with political life. A specific event in...
During the late 1960s pandemonium and chaos spread throughout the northeast part of the Irish island...
This thesis surveys musical cultureâs relationship with Irish nationalism after the Irish confederac...
Music and art can be very effective mediums for individual expression, both in personal life and for...
This article explores popular-musical invocations of the Northern Ireland conflict (1968–1998), focu...
This article examines the evolution of the British Government’s position regarding the question of t...
This article explores the reasons for persistent memory wars surrounding the Northern Ireland confli...
The course of music in Ireland in the last two centuries presents a depressing picture. The creativ...