Description

Book Synopsis

The last two centuries of Irish history have seen great traumas that continue to affect Irish society. Through constructing cultural trauma, Irish society can recognize human pain and its source/s and become receptive to the idea of taking significant and responsible measures to remedy it. The intention of this volume is to show the mediating role of the literature and film scholar, the archivist, the social media professional, the historian, the musician, the artist and the poet in identifying Irish cultural trauma past and present, in illuminating Irish national identity (which is shifting so much today), in paying tribute to the memory and suffering of others, in showing how to do things with words and, thus, how concrete action might be taken.

Trauma and Identity in Contemporary Irish Culture makes a case for the value of trauma and memory studies as a means of casting new light on the meaning of Irish identity in a number of contemporary Irish cultural practices, and of illuminating present-day attitudes to the past. The critical approaches herein are of a very interdisciplinary nature, since they combine aspects of sociology, philosophy and anthropology, among other fields. This collection is intended to lead readers to reconsider the connections between trauma, Irish cultural memory, identity, famine, diaspora, gender, history, revolution, the Troubles, digital media, literature, film, music and art.



Table of Contents

Introduction Melania Terrazas Gallego

Part Literature and Film

1. From Undoing: Silence and the Challenge of Individual Trauma in John Boyne’s The Heart’s Invisible Furies (2017) Asier Altuna-García de Salazar

2. Trauma and Irish Female Migration through Literature and Ethnography María Amor Barros-del Río

3. Avenging the Famine: Lance Daly’s Black ’47, Genre and History Ruth Barton

Part II Memory and Digital Archives

4. Reflection of Trauma in the Prisons Memory Archive: How Information Literacy, Human Experience and Place Are Impacted by Conflict Lorraine Dennis

5. From the Maze to Social Media: Articulating the Trauma of "the Blanket Protest" in the Digital Space Patrick J. Mahoney

Part III History

6. "The Women Who Had Been Straining Every Nerve": Gender-Specific Medical Management of Trauma in the Irish Revolution (1916–1923) Síobhra Aiken

7. Personal Loss and the "Trauma of Internal War": The Cases of W. T. Cosgrave and Seán Lemass Eunan O’Halpin

Part IV Music

8. Di-rum-ditherum-dan-dee: Trauma and Prejudice, Conflict and Change as Reflections of Societal Transformation in the Modern-Day Consolidation of Irish Traditional Music Fintan Vallely

9. Traumatic Childhood Memories and the Adult Political Visions of Sinéad O’Connor, Bono and Phil Lynott David Clare

Part V Creative Writing

10. Hungry Ghosts: Trauma and Addiction in Irish Literature Emer Martin

11. Fellow Travellers Pat Boran

12. Identity Issues in Pat Boran’s Work: An Interview Melania Terrazas Gallego

Trauma and Identity in Contemporary Irish Culture

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A Paperback / softback by Eamon Maher, Melania Gallego

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    View other formats and editions of Trauma and Identity in Contemporary Irish Culture by Eamon Maher

    Publisher: Peter Lang International Academic Publishers
    Publication Date: 22/01/2020
    ISBN13: 9781789975574, 978-1789975574
    ISBN10: 1789975573

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    The last two centuries of Irish history have seen great traumas that continue to affect Irish society. Through constructing cultural trauma, Irish society can recognize human pain and its source/s and become receptive to the idea of taking significant and responsible measures to remedy it. The intention of this volume is to show the mediating role of the literature and film scholar, the archivist, the social media professional, the historian, the musician, the artist and the poet in identifying Irish cultural trauma past and present, in illuminating Irish national identity (which is shifting so much today), in paying tribute to the memory and suffering of others, in showing how to do things with words and, thus, how concrete action might be taken.

    Trauma and Identity in Contemporary Irish Culture makes a case for the value of trauma and memory studies as a means of casting new light on the meaning of Irish identity in a number of contemporary Irish cultural practices, and of illuminating present-day attitudes to the past. The critical approaches herein are of a very interdisciplinary nature, since they combine aspects of sociology, philosophy and anthropology, among other fields. This collection is intended to lead readers to reconsider the connections between trauma, Irish cultural memory, identity, famine, diaspora, gender, history, revolution, the Troubles, digital media, literature, film, music and art.



    Table of Contents

    Introduction Melania Terrazas Gallego

    Part Literature and Film

    1. From Undoing: Silence and the Challenge of Individual Trauma in John Boyne’s The Heart’s Invisible Furies (2017) Asier Altuna-García de Salazar

    2. Trauma and Irish Female Migration through Literature and Ethnography María Amor Barros-del Río

    3. Avenging the Famine: Lance Daly’s Black ’47, Genre and History Ruth Barton

    Part II Memory and Digital Archives

    4. Reflection of Trauma in the Prisons Memory Archive: How Information Literacy, Human Experience and Place Are Impacted by Conflict Lorraine Dennis

    5. From the Maze to Social Media: Articulating the Trauma of "the Blanket Protest" in the Digital Space Patrick J. Mahoney

    Part III History

    6. "The Women Who Had Been Straining Every Nerve": Gender-Specific Medical Management of Trauma in the Irish Revolution (1916–1923) Síobhra Aiken

    7. Personal Loss and the "Trauma of Internal War": The Cases of W. T. Cosgrave and Seán Lemass Eunan O’Halpin

    Part IV Music

    8. Di-rum-ditherum-dan-dee: Trauma and Prejudice, Conflict and Change as Reflections of Societal Transformation in the Modern-Day Consolidation of Irish Traditional Music Fintan Vallely

    9. Traumatic Childhood Memories and the Adult Political Visions of Sinéad O’Connor, Bono and Phil Lynott David Clare

    Part V Creative Writing

    10. Hungry Ghosts: Trauma and Addiction in Irish Literature Emer Martin

    11. Fellow Travellers Pat Boran

    12. Identity Issues in Pat Boran’s Work: An Interview Melania Terrazas Gallego

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