As Northern Ireland\u27s landmark Good Friday Agreement approaches its 20-year anniversary, one site looms particularly large in the memories and perspectives of men and women who lived through the civil conflict known as the Troubles. The remains of HM Maze Prison stand unoccupied and unused while Northern Ireland debates how this polarizing historical landscape figures into the population\u27s recovery from historical violence. The Maze Prison/Long Kesh housed paramilitary prisoners from 1971 to 2000. A brief review of the prison history suggests that far from being placed out of site, out of mind, its prisoners, employees, and administration retained an active role in the violence of the Troubles. Today the Maze Prison/Long Kesh serves...
This article offers a reflection on the potency of combining oral history and agonistic memory. Via ...
Prisons play a prominent role in Irish imagination and collective memory, because their wings and ce...
This article explores the reasons for persistent memory wars surrounding the Northern Ireland confli...
The former Maze Prison/Long Kesh in Lisburn, near Belfast, is one of the primary sites associated wi...
In both heritage theory and practice, participation is now a key concern. Participation is not a mat...
Long Kesh/Maze, once Northern Ireland's largest prison, is one of its most important sites of confli...
Long Kesh/Maze prison first came to public attention as a short-term solution to prison overcrowding...
This article is an autoethnographic account of the authors’ trespassing in the abandoned Maze Prison...
The prison called both Long Kesh and the Maze is regarded as a symbol of the Northern Ireland confli...
Prisons play a prominent role in Irish imagination and collective memory, because their wings and ce...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 89-98.1. Introduction -- 2. Violence and place in the early t...
Sixteen years after the Good Friday Agreement, Northern Ireland remains a deeply segregated society....
The ‘Troubles’ is a euphemism associated with sectarian conflict in Northern Ireland from the late 1...
This article is an autoethnographic account of the authors’ trespassing in the abandoned Maze Prison...
This chapter outlines the events which sparked the educational journeys of hundreds of loyalist and ...
This article offers a reflection on the potency of combining oral history and agonistic memory. Via ...
Prisons play a prominent role in Irish imagination and collective memory, because their wings and ce...
This article explores the reasons for persistent memory wars surrounding the Northern Ireland confli...
The former Maze Prison/Long Kesh in Lisburn, near Belfast, is one of the primary sites associated wi...
In both heritage theory and practice, participation is now a key concern. Participation is not a mat...
Long Kesh/Maze, once Northern Ireland's largest prison, is one of its most important sites of confli...
Long Kesh/Maze prison first came to public attention as a short-term solution to prison overcrowding...
This article is an autoethnographic account of the authors’ trespassing in the abandoned Maze Prison...
The prison called both Long Kesh and the Maze is regarded as a symbol of the Northern Ireland confli...
Prisons play a prominent role in Irish imagination and collective memory, because their wings and ce...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 89-98.1. Introduction -- 2. Violence and place in the early t...
Sixteen years after the Good Friday Agreement, Northern Ireland remains a deeply segregated society....
The ‘Troubles’ is a euphemism associated with sectarian conflict in Northern Ireland from the late 1...
This article is an autoethnographic account of the authors’ trespassing in the abandoned Maze Prison...
This chapter outlines the events which sparked the educational journeys of hundreds of loyalist and ...
This article offers a reflection on the potency of combining oral history and agonistic memory. Via ...
Prisons play a prominent role in Irish imagination and collective memory, because their wings and ce...
This article explores the reasons for persistent memory wars surrounding the Northern Ireland confli...