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Apologies for cross posting.

 

Joanne O'Brien

www.joanneobrien.co.uk

 

From: Cultural Memory studies [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On
Behalf Of [log in to unmask]
Sent: 20 October 2011 15:28
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Call for Papers: Conference on The Irish Troubles in Britain

 

Conference: The Northern Ireland Troubles in Britain: Impacts, Engagements,
Legacies and Memories, University of Brighton, England, 11-13 July 2012     

Call for Papers

The Centre for Research in Memory, Narrative and Histories at the University
of Brighton, the Department of Politics and International Relations at the
University of Leicester, and the Tim Parry Johnathan Ball Foundation for
Peace are organising an inter-disciplinary conference which will consider
the impact and lasting effects of the Northern Ireland 'Troubles' in
Britain, and responses to the conflict from Britain. Little research exists
on the legacies and memories of the Irish Troubles in Britain, and
initiatives here towards post-conflict remembering, critical and empathic
understanding, and peace-building have been piecemeal. This is in sharp
contrast to the situation in Northern Ireland, where since the peace process
began in 1993-94, the academy, civil society organisations, community groups
and other stakeholders have been engaged in wide-ranging debates about the
social, cultural and psychological legacies of violence; the importance of
memory, storytelling and commemoration in acknowledging, understanding and
transforming these legacies in the context of peace-building; societal
responsibilities and strategies for 'dealing with the past'; and profound
questions of representation, truth-recovery, justice, healing, and
reconciliation.

This conference aims to examine the impact of the Troubles since 1968 upon
individual lives, social relationships, communities and culture in Britain;
to investigate the history of responses to, engagements with, and memories
of the Irish conflict in Britain; to explore absences and  weaknesses in
peace-building and conflict transformation related to the Troubles in
Britain; and to contribute to wider academic and public debate about Britain
as a post-conflict culture and what can be learned from the Northern Irish
experience about peace-building and 'dealing with the past'. The organisers
welcome proposals for papers on topics that might include, but are not
limited to:  

.      The effect of the Troubles on British politics and state policy (eg
counter-terrorism, policing)

.      The impact of conflict on particular social groups (eg people in
Britain bereaved and injured as a result of the Troubles, military veterans,
the Irish in Britain, NI Protestants in Britain, NI exiles)

.      British cultural engagement with the conflict in the arts,
literature, media, popular culture

.      Silence, amnesia and denial: refusing to engage with the NI conflict

.      GB public opinion and the Troubles

.      Solidarity movements, support networks, political links between
organisations in Britain and NI

.      Memory, commemoration, memorials

.      Oral histories, life histories, memoirs and testimonies

.      Peace-building and conflict transformation: local and national
initiatives in Britain

.      The impact of the IRA's campaign on places and communities in Britain

.      Post-conflict demobilisation

.      Justice, miscarriages of justice, prisons and prisoners

.      State discourse, ideology, representation, censorship, the contesting
of dominant meanings

.      National and international comparative dimensions (current/past
conflicts, Britain's colonial wars)

.      Inter-generational legacies of the Troubles (including family
memories, Irish/British identities)

.      Re-membering the Irish conflict in the 'war on terror'

.      The impact of the Irish peace process in Britain

 

The organisers encourage papers by both established and early career
researchers that consider theoretical perspectives and historical,
contemporary and comparative case studies from the full range of humanities
and social science disciplines and interdisciplinarities, as well as
practitioner approaches, and personal experiences of those directly
affected. Proposals, including contact details, affiliation and 100-word
biography, a title, and 500-word abstract, should be sent by email to the
conference administrator, Dr Sam Carroll, at
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
by 16th January 2012. Please send as Word documents or in Rich Text Format
with unformated text (no alignment or underlining etc.) The organisers
intend to publish a selection of conference papers in an edited volume.

 

Organisers: Centre for Research in Memory, Narrative & Histories, University
of Brighton   <http://arts.brighton.ac.uk/mnh>
http://arts.brighton.ac.uk/mnh; Department of Politics and International
Relations, University of Leicester  <http://www.le.ac.uk/po/>
http://www.le.ac.uk/po/; The Tim Parry Johnathan Ball Foundation for Peace
<http://www.foundation4peace.org/> http://www.foundation4peace.org/

 

 

 

 


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