For all the gains made during its celebrated peace process, Northern Ireland remains haunted by a conflict that claimed more than 3,700 lives. One of the spaces in which the ghosts of the past manifest themselves is that of television drama. In this article, Mark Fisher’s reading of “hauntology” provides the theoretical frame for an analysis of two recent TV series set in Northern Ireland: The Fall and Derry Girls. Although the programs could not be more different in both tone and content, they both illustrate sharply that the region remains, in John Hewitt’s indelible phrase, a “ghost-haunted land.” In particular, The Fall and Derry Girls reveal that Northern Ireland continues to be deeply troubled both by those who were lost during the co...
International audienceWithin the growing field of television studies, little work has yet been done ...
With over four hundred produced between 1969 and 1998, the thriller was the most popular fictional f...
This paper aims to present the main contours of Burns’s literary output which, interestingly enough,...
For all the gains made during its celebrated peace process, Northern Ireland remains haunted by a co...
This article examines the TV series The Fall in terms of the relationship to its location in the cit...
This article explores the increased attractiveness of a ‘post-conflict’ Belfast as a television sett...
That Northern Ireland remains profoundly troubled by its own violent past becomes readily apparent i...
This thesis investigates British media representations of the conflict in Northern Ireland between 1...
The media can contribute to the reproduction of violent conflict in societies either through direct ...
This essay explores several novels by contemporary Northern Irish writers with an eye to assessing h...
Drawing on interviews conducted between September 2004 and April 2006, this article examines the int...
The research was developed and conducted to analyse the way in which the conflict is represented in ...
[eng] This paper examines how Lisa McGee’s Derry Girls (2018, 2019) portrays the identitybuilding p...
Almost exactly fifty years ago, an illegal Civil Rights march in Londonderry in Northern Ireland was...
The Divis and Rossville Flats in Derry and Belfast were high-rise housing projects built as part of ...
International audienceWithin the growing field of television studies, little work has yet been done ...
With over four hundred produced between 1969 and 1998, the thriller was the most popular fictional f...
This paper aims to present the main contours of Burns’s literary output which, interestingly enough,...
For all the gains made during its celebrated peace process, Northern Ireland remains haunted by a co...
This article examines the TV series The Fall in terms of the relationship to its location in the cit...
This article explores the increased attractiveness of a ‘post-conflict’ Belfast as a television sett...
That Northern Ireland remains profoundly troubled by its own violent past becomes readily apparent i...
This thesis investigates British media representations of the conflict in Northern Ireland between 1...
The media can contribute to the reproduction of violent conflict in societies either through direct ...
This essay explores several novels by contemporary Northern Irish writers with an eye to assessing h...
Drawing on interviews conducted between September 2004 and April 2006, this article examines the int...
The research was developed and conducted to analyse the way in which the conflict is represented in ...
[eng] This paper examines how Lisa McGee’s Derry Girls (2018, 2019) portrays the identitybuilding p...
Almost exactly fifty years ago, an illegal Civil Rights march in Londonderry in Northern Ireland was...
The Divis and Rossville Flats in Derry and Belfast were high-rise housing projects built as part of ...
International audienceWithin the growing field of television studies, little work has yet been done ...
With over four hundred produced between 1969 and 1998, the thriller was the most popular fictional f...
This paper aims to present the main contours of Burns’s literary output which, interestingly enough,...