Zobrazeno 1 - 8
of 8
pro vyhledávání: '"Fearghus Roulston"'
Publikováno v:
Societies, Vol 14, Iss 6, p 86 (2024)
Recent scholarship has highlighted the heterogeneity of second-generation Irish identities in Great Britain, yet the varieties of self-identification espoused by the English-raised children of Northern Irish parents remain almost wholly unexplored. T
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/d9717805822f444e97ef99b672b314de
Autor:
Fearghus Roulston
Belfast punk and the Troubles is an oral history of the punk scene in Belfast from the mid-1970s to the mid-80s. The book explores what it was like to be a punk in a city shaped by the violence of the Troubles, and how this differed from being a punk
Publikováno v:
Harte, L, Crangle, J, Roulston, F, Dawson, G & Hazley, B 2022, ' ‘Somewhere Bigger and Brighter? Ambivalence and Desire in Memories of Leaving the North of Ireland during the Troubles’ ', Irish Studies Review, vol. 30, no. 3, 10.1080/09670882.2022.2101882, pp. 259-279 . https://doi.org/10.1080/09670882.2022.2101882
This article examines oral history interviews of migrants from Northern Ireland to Britain, specifically a group of ten people who left the North during the Troubles. It reads their interviews for, on the one hand, accounts of migration as liberatory
Publikováno v:
Journal of War & Culture Studies. 14:25-44
The Divis and Rossville Flats in Derry and Belfast were high-rise housing projects built as part of Terence O’Neill’s modernizing 1960s vision for Northern Ireland. They became notorious during the...
Autor:
Fearghus Roulston
Publikováno v:
Nationalism and Ethnic Politics. 27:516-517
Autor:
Fearghus Roulston
Publikováno v:
National Identities. 21:544-546
Cult Belfast synthpop duo The Vichy Government, in an abrasive satire of representations of Northern Irish Unionists, The Protestant Work Ethic II, put it well with the following lyrics. Protestant...
Autor:
Fearghus Roulston
Publikováno v:
Contemporary British History. 34:493-494
Northern Irish culture, in George Legg’s engaging new book, is characterised by a politics of boredom that emerges from the confluence between capitalism and conflict. While this confluence is typi...