This collection brings together academics and practitioners to consider the increasingly central role that memory and recalling the past plays in determining contemporary politics and the future direction of Northern Irish society. Using theoretical, comparative and case-study approaches, it considers not only how narratives of the past are constructed, reconstructed, understood and commemorated, but also the ways in which the key themes that emerge are harnessed and mobilised to political and social effect in the present. The book draws deeply on a wide range of expert opinion and viewpoints to add significantly to existing knowledge surrounding the debates over memory and the ways it is used in Northern Irish society.
İçerik tablosu
Introduction: through a single lens? Understanding the Troubles of the past, present and future – James W. Mc Auley, Máire Braniff and Graham Spencer
1 Agonistic remembering and Northern Ireland’s 1968 @ 50 – Chris Reynolds
2 Pogroms, presence, myth and memory: August 1969 and the outbreak of the Northern Ireland conflict – Shaun Mc Daid
3 ‘Touching the third rail?’ The problems of dealing with the past in Northern Ireland – Eamonn O’Kane
4 On notions of dealing with the past in Northern Ireland and the place of historians – Stuart Aveyard
5 Collective memory, ethno-national forgetting and the limits of history in misremembering the past – Aaron Edwards
6 Irish republicanisms and radical nostalgia – Stephen Hopkins
7 Irish republican commemoration and narratives of legitimacy – Kris Brown
8 Ulster loyalism, memory and commemoration – James W. Mc Auley and Neil Ferguson
9 Remember the women: memory-making within loyalism – Lisa Faulkner-Byrne, John Bell and Philip Mc Cready
10 Visual memory at sites of troubles past: participatory and collective memories in Croatia and Argentina – Máire Braniff
11 The tears of the mothers: conflict and memory in comparison – Catherine Mc Glynn
12 The problem of legacy and remembering the past in Northern Ireland – Graham Spencer
Index
Yazar hakkında
James Mc Auley is Professor of Sociology and Irish Studies at the University of Huddersfield