This article considers the representation of the history of Belfast in Glenn Patterson's 2012 novel The Mill for Grinding Old People Young. It situates this novel within the context of Patterson's previous work and the history of the Northern Irish novel, as well as with the representation of maritime Belfast in the Titanic centenary year. This novel will be read as a recovery and rehabilitation of a Protestant history which could be problematic for Patterson, an avowedly liberal writer, but instead this context allows for an exploration of the uses of history in contemporary Northern Irish cultural and political discourse
History, in one capacity or another, is relevant to all of us. History influences and affects every ...
The Siege of Derry (1688-89), as is well known, remains the central political myth in Northern Irish...
The legitimacy of the historical novel as a means of interpreting the past continues to divide criti...
This article considers the representation of the history of Belfast in Glenn Patterson's 2012 novel ...
Northern Irish literature of the last decade illustrates an arduous effort of the Ulster men to brea...
The Troubles is the most defining conflict in the history of Northern Ireland. However, as Glenn Pat...
Northern Ireland’s socio-political milieu over recent decades “pressured” its residents to affiliate...
The common assertion that the Protestant working class in Northern Ireland is passive, even reaction...
Working within a Gramscian problematic this article analyses the contemporary issue of identity amon...
Critics of contemporary Irish literature note a surprising omnipresence of historical themes in the ...
This book is the first major academic study of the Ulster Plantation in over 25 years. The pivotal i...
Deutsch Richard. Henry Patterson : Class Conflict and Sectarianism ; Patrick Buckland : A History of...
This thesis reviews a great number of novels by Anglo-Irish women novelists that - with few exceptio...
This article assesses ‘Rotten Protestants’, or Protestant home rulers in Ulster, by means of an anal...
Paper presented at the conference 'Protestant Traditions and the Paths to Peace: Beyond the Legacie...
History, in one capacity or another, is relevant to all of us. History influences and affects every ...
The Siege of Derry (1688-89), as is well known, remains the central political myth in Northern Irish...
The legitimacy of the historical novel as a means of interpreting the past continues to divide criti...
This article considers the representation of the history of Belfast in Glenn Patterson's 2012 novel ...
Northern Irish literature of the last decade illustrates an arduous effort of the Ulster men to brea...
The Troubles is the most defining conflict in the history of Northern Ireland. However, as Glenn Pat...
Northern Ireland’s socio-political milieu over recent decades “pressured” its residents to affiliate...
The common assertion that the Protestant working class in Northern Ireland is passive, even reaction...
Working within a Gramscian problematic this article analyses the contemporary issue of identity amon...
Critics of contemporary Irish literature note a surprising omnipresence of historical themes in the ...
This book is the first major academic study of the Ulster Plantation in over 25 years. The pivotal i...
Deutsch Richard. Henry Patterson : Class Conflict and Sectarianism ; Patrick Buckland : A History of...
This thesis reviews a great number of novels by Anglo-Irish women novelists that - with few exceptio...
This article assesses ‘Rotten Protestants’, or Protestant home rulers in Ulster, by means of an anal...
Paper presented at the conference 'Protestant Traditions and the Paths to Peace: Beyond the Legacie...
History, in one capacity or another, is relevant to all of us. History influences and affects every ...
The Siege of Derry (1688-89), as is well known, remains the central political myth in Northern Irish...
The legitimacy of the historical novel as a means of interpreting the past continues to divide criti...