This paper examines the literary representation of the beginnings of the Northern Irish Troubles with regard to a gender variable (women’s roles and functions ascribed to them, mostly punitively, by men ), in the selected poems by Heaney, Durcan, Boland, Meehan and Morrissey. The reading of Heaney’s “Punishment” will attempt to focus not solely on the poem’s repeatedly criticized misogyny but on analyzing it in a broader, historical context of the North’s conflict. In Durcan’s case, his prominent nationalist descent or his declared contempt for any form of paramilitary terrorism (including the IRA) do not seem to prevent him entirely from immortalizing female victims of the Troubles. Boland’s attitude seems the most unequivocal: the clear a...
Irish literary criticism has long been interested in the politics of literature and its role in deco...
The Troubles in Northern Ireland provide a complex and intriguing topic for many scholars in various...
This paper attempts to look at what may be considered as the singularity of the Northern Irish ident...
This paper examines the literary representation of the beginnings of the Northern Irish Troubles wit...
- propaganda tract "Echtra mac nEchach Muigmedóin" ("The Mugmedón"), the vision in Aodhagán Ó Rathai...
Cúirt an Mheán Oíche by Brian Merriman is one of a number of poems which focuses on men's and women'...
The paper discusses the connections between gender, colonialism and nationalism by focussing on the ...
Looking into prison short fiction, this article discusses how a number of Northern Irish women write...
Ireland is rich in mythological and literary traditions. Irish nationalist mythology often personif...
The objective of this thesis was to provide a detailed analysis of three modern Irish plays which sh...
The Burial at Thebes, Seamus Heaney's adaptation of Antigone, was first performed at the centenary c...
This article critically considers the representation of armed femininity within the attendant song t...
This project examines how female metaphors are used to justify, resist and transform the impact of c...
These Graves and Ruinous Houses\u27: The Role of Domestic Items and Spaces in Revolutionary Ireland ...
The Easter Rising of 1916 is often considered to mark the end of the colonial period in the territor...
Irish literary criticism has long been interested in the politics of literature and its role in deco...
The Troubles in Northern Ireland provide a complex and intriguing topic for many scholars in various...
This paper attempts to look at what may be considered as the singularity of the Northern Irish ident...
This paper examines the literary representation of the beginnings of the Northern Irish Troubles wit...
- propaganda tract "Echtra mac nEchach Muigmedóin" ("The Mugmedón"), the vision in Aodhagán Ó Rathai...
Cúirt an Mheán Oíche by Brian Merriman is one of a number of poems which focuses on men's and women'...
The paper discusses the connections between gender, colonialism and nationalism by focussing on the ...
Looking into prison short fiction, this article discusses how a number of Northern Irish women write...
Ireland is rich in mythological and literary traditions. Irish nationalist mythology often personif...
The objective of this thesis was to provide a detailed analysis of three modern Irish plays which sh...
The Burial at Thebes, Seamus Heaney's adaptation of Antigone, was first performed at the centenary c...
This article critically considers the representation of armed femininity within the attendant song t...
This project examines how female metaphors are used to justify, resist and transform the impact of c...
These Graves and Ruinous Houses\u27: The Role of Domestic Items and Spaces in Revolutionary Ireland ...
The Easter Rising of 1916 is often considered to mark the end of the colonial period in the territor...
Irish literary criticism has long been interested in the politics of literature and its role in deco...
The Troubles in Northern Ireland provide a complex and intriguing topic for many scholars in various...
This paper attempts to look at what may be considered as the singularity of the Northern Irish ident...