The present study investigates how attendees at national celebratory crowd events - specifically St. Patrick’s Day parades - understand the role of such events in representing and uniting the national community. We conducted semi-structured interviews with people who attended St. Patrick’s Day parades in either Dublin or Belfast. In year 1, full-length interviews were conducted before and after the events (N=17), and in years 1 and 2, shorter interviews were conducted during the events (year 1 N=170; year 2 N=142). Interview data were analysed using thematic analysis, allowing the identification of three broad themes. Participants reported that (a) the events extend the boundary of the national group, using participation to define who count...
Across the world, from India to Israel, it is common for parades to trigger episodes of ethnic viole...
peer-reviewedThe nation has often been viewed as a unifying force (Anderson, 1981); however, groups ...
This thesis argues that by comparing the Toronto and Montreal St. Patrick’s Day parade of 1858 and 1...
peer-reviewedThe present study investigates how attendees at national celebratory crowd eventsspecif...
The present study investigates how attendees at national celebratory crowd events – specifically St....
The present study investigates how attendees at national celebratory crowd events – specifically St....
This research was supported by matched grants from the Irish Research Council and the Economic and S...
The full text of this article will not be available in ULIR until the embargo expires on the 12/08/2...
We examine experiences of collective self-objectification (or its failure) among participants in a ‘...
In Ireland, ritual events and parades have been a central part of civic and public life. However, th...
In Ireland, ritual events and parades have been a central part of civic and public life. However, th...
One of the more intriguing aspects of St. Patrick's Day celebrations as a nationalised ritual of a p...
The Dublin St Patrick’s Day Festival Parade conjures in the popular imagination images of green-clad...
Whose day is it anyway? – St. Patrick’s Day as a contested performance of national and diasporic Iri...
One of the more intriguing aspects of St. Patrick's Day celebrations as a nationalised ritual of a p...
Across the world, from India to Israel, it is common for parades to trigger episodes of ethnic viole...
peer-reviewedThe nation has often been viewed as a unifying force (Anderson, 1981); however, groups ...
This thesis argues that by comparing the Toronto and Montreal St. Patrick’s Day parade of 1858 and 1...
peer-reviewedThe present study investigates how attendees at national celebratory crowd eventsspecif...
The present study investigates how attendees at national celebratory crowd events – specifically St....
The present study investigates how attendees at national celebratory crowd events – specifically St....
This research was supported by matched grants from the Irish Research Council and the Economic and S...
The full text of this article will not be available in ULIR until the embargo expires on the 12/08/2...
We examine experiences of collective self-objectification (or its failure) among participants in a ‘...
In Ireland, ritual events and parades have been a central part of civic and public life. However, th...
In Ireland, ritual events and parades have been a central part of civic and public life. However, th...
One of the more intriguing aspects of St. Patrick's Day celebrations as a nationalised ritual of a p...
The Dublin St Patrick’s Day Festival Parade conjures in the popular imagination images of green-clad...
Whose day is it anyway? – St. Patrick’s Day as a contested performance of national and diasporic Iri...
One of the more intriguing aspects of St. Patrick's Day celebrations as a nationalised ritual of a p...
Across the world, from India to Israel, it is common for parades to trigger episodes of ethnic viole...
peer-reviewedThe nation has often been viewed as a unifying force (Anderson, 1981); however, groups ...
This thesis argues that by comparing the Toronto and Montreal St. Patrick’s Day parade of 1858 and 1...