Description

Book Synopsis

During the three decades of the Northern Ireland Troubles (1968–98), the United Kingdom experienced within its borders a profound and polarising conflict. Yet relatively little research has addressed the complex effects, legacies and memories of this conflict in Britain. The experiences and understandings of those in or from Britain who fought in it, were injured by it or campaigned against it have been neglected both in wider scholarship and in public policy. In the peace process since 1994, British initiatives towards 'post-conflict' remembering have been limited and fragmented. 

This ground-breaking book provides the first comprehensive investigation of the history and memory of the Troubles in Britain. It examines the impact on individual lives, political and social relationships, communities and culture, and explores how the people of Britain – including its Irish communities – have responded to and engaged with the conflict in the cont

Trade Review

‘This is an important book academically but one that challenges all activists involved in Irish politics to get together and produce their own history.’
Bernadette Hyland, Morning Star 13/02/2017

‘This is a collection of essays by academics discussing the usually neglected topic of the impact of the Troubles on Britain.’
Books Ireland Magazine May/June 2017

‘This volume constitutes a useful addition to the series Manchester University Press has constituted in Irish Studies, as well as a valuable contribution to a better understanding of the repercussions of the Troubles on the mainland.’
Christophe Gillissen, Université de Caen Normandie, Cercles

-- .

Table of Contents

Introduction - Graham Dawson and Stephen Hopkins
Part I: Perspectives from the British State, politics and the military
1. 'The truth, the whole truth...': some British political and military memoirs of the Troubles - John Newsinger
2. 'I got shot through the head with an Armalite round' - Ted Aubertin
3. 'A real stirring in the nation': military families, British public opinion and withdrawal from Northern Ireland - Paul Dixon
4. The memoir-writing of the Wilson and Callaghan governments: the Labour Party and constitutional policy in Northern Ireland - Stephen Hopkins
5. British questions - Geoffrey Bell
6. 'The coach never arrived back at its destination' - Jenny McMahon
7. Serving in troubled times: British military personnel's memories and accounts of service in Northern Ireland - K. Neil Jenkings and Rachel Woodward
Part II: Anti-state activisms
8. Something in the air: the rise of the Troops Out Movement - Aly Renwick
9. Memories of Sinn Féin Britain, 1975-85 - Susan O'Halloran
10. Policing the Irish community in Britain - Nadine Finch
11. 'Not our cup of tea': Irish and British feminist encounters in London during the Troubles - Ann Rossiter
12. Political delegations of women from Britain to the North of Ireland and the campaign against strip searching in the 1980s - Di Parkin
Part III: Culture and the representation of the Troubles
13. 'Every man an emperor': the British press, Bloody Sunday and the image of the British Army - Greg McLaughlin and Stephen Baker
14. Suspect stories: William Trevor's portrayals of the Irish in London during the Troubles - Tony Murray
15. Writing as survival - Maude Casey
16. The 'oxygen of publicity' and the suffocation of censorship: British newspaper representations of the British broadcasting ban (1988-94) - Max Pettigrew
17. 'The Troubles we've seen': film, television drama and the Northern Irish conflict in Britain - John Hill
Part IV: Memory, peace-building and 'dealing with the past'
18. Responding to the IRA bombing campaign in mainland Britain: the case of Warrington - Lesley Lelourec
19. 'There's no way out but through' - Annie Bowman
20. The Birmingham pub bombings, the Irish as a 'suspect community' and the memories of the O'Reilly family - Laura O'Reilly
21. 'Truth recovery' and the role of the security forces in the Northern Ireland Troubles - Aaron Edwards
22. Commemorating bonds of Union: remembering the Ulster Special Constabulary at the National Memorial Arboretum - L. J. Armstrong
23. 'I'd find a way to contribute to peace' - Jo Berry
24. Performance practices and conflict resolution: Jo Berry and Patrick Magee's Facing the Enemy - Verity Combe
Index

The Northern Ireland Troubles in Britain

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    A Hardback by Graham Dawson, Jo Dover, Stephen Hopkins

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      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 11/28/2016 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780719096310, 978-0719096310
      ISBN10: 0719096316

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      During the three decades of the Northern Ireland Troubles (1968–98), the United Kingdom experienced within its borders a profound and polarising conflict. Yet relatively little research has addressed the complex effects, legacies and memories of this conflict in Britain. The experiences and understandings of those in or from Britain who fought in it, were injured by it or campaigned against it have been neglected both in wider scholarship and in public policy. In the peace process since 1994, British initiatives towards 'post-conflict' remembering have been limited and fragmented. 

      This ground-breaking book provides the first comprehensive investigation of the history and memory of the Troubles in Britain. It examines the impact on individual lives, political and social relationships, communities and culture, and explores how the people of Britain – including its Irish communities – have responded to and engaged with the conflict in the cont

      Trade Review

      ‘This is an important book academically but one that challenges all activists involved in Irish politics to get together and produce their own history.’
      Bernadette Hyland, Morning Star 13/02/2017

      ‘This is a collection of essays by academics discussing the usually neglected topic of the impact of the Troubles on Britain.’
      Books Ireland Magazine May/June 2017

      ‘This volume constitutes a useful addition to the series Manchester University Press has constituted in Irish Studies, as well as a valuable contribution to a better understanding of the repercussions of the Troubles on the mainland.’
      Christophe Gillissen, Université de Caen Normandie, Cercles

      -- .

      Table of Contents

      Introduction - Graham Dawson and Stephen Hopkins
      Part I: Perspectives from the British State, politics and the military
      1. 'The truth, the whole truth...': some British political and military memoirs of the Troubles - John Newsinger
      2. 'I got shot through the head with an Armalite round' - Ted Aubertin
      3. 'A real stirring in the nation': military families, British public opinion and withdrawal from Northern Ireland - Paul Dixon
      4. The memoir-writing of the Wilson and Callaghan governments: the Labour Party and constitutional policy in Northern Ireland - Stephen Hopkins
      5. British questions - Geoffrey Bell
      6. 'The coach never arrived back at its destination' - Jenny McMahon
      7. Serving in troubled times: British military personnel's memories and accounts of service in Northern Ireland - K. Neil Jenkings and Rachel Woodward
      Part II: Anti-state activisms
      8. Something in the air: the rise of the Troops Out Movement - Aly Renwick
      9. Memories of Sinn Féin Britain, 1975-85 - Susan O'Halloran
      10. Policing the Irish community in Britain - Nadine Finch
      11. 'Not our cup of tea': Irish and British feminist encounters in London during the Troubles - Ann Rossiter
      12. Political delegations of women from Britain to the North of Ireland and the campaign against strip searching in the 1980s - Di Parkin
      Part III: Culture and the representation of the Troubles
      13. 'Every man an emperor': the British press, Bloody Sunday and the image of the British Army - Greg McLaughlin and Stephen Baker
      14. Suspect stories: William Trevor's portrayals of the Irish in London during the Troubles - Tony Murray
      15. Writing as survival - Maude Casey
      16. The 'oxygen of publicity' and the suffocation of censorship: British newspaper representations of the British broadcasting ban (1988-94) - Max Pettigrew
      17. 'The Troubles we've seen': film, television drama and the Northern Irish conflict in Britain - John Hill
      Part IV: Memory, peace-building and 'dealing with the past'
      18. Responding to the IRA bombing campaign in mainland Britain: the case of Warrington - Lesley Lelourec
      19. 'There's no way out but through' - Annie Bowman
      20. The Birmingham pub bombings, the Irish as a 'suspect community' and the memories of the O'Reilly family - Laura O'Reilly
      21. 'Truth recovery' and the role of the security forces in the Northern Ireland Troubles - Aaron Edwards
      22. Commemorating bonds of Union: remembering the Ulster Special Constabulary at the National Memorial Arboretum - L. J. Armstrong
      23. 'I'd find a way to contribute to peace' - Jo Berry
      24. Performance practices and conflict resolution: Jo Berry and Patrick Magee's Facing the Enemy - Verity Combe
      Index

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