Graham Dawson

Afterlives of the Troubles

Life Stories, Culture and Conflict Transformation in Northern Ireland. Sprache: Englisch.
gebunden , 344 Seiten
ISBN 1526146495
EAN 9781526146496
Veröffentlicht 10. Februar 2026
Verlag/Hersteller Manchester University Press
99,00 inkl. MwSt.
vorbestellbar (Versand mit Deutscher Post/DHL)
Teilen
Beschreibung

Afterlives of the Troubles develops a pioneering critical investigation of subjectivity, culture and the
cultural politics of representation as a neglected dimension of conflict transformation in the
Northern Irish peace process. Focusing on experiential life stories across a range of forms and
storytelling practices, from oral history and published memoir to personal narratives of justice
campaigners and collections of community-based storytelling projects, the book investigates the
continuing emotional charge and felt significance of conflict memories at an increasing distance
from the happenings of the Troubles. In this lengthening temporal 'afterlife' of conflict, conflict
experience is not 'past' but haunts the present, and memory carries future-oriented desires for
truth, justice and reconciliation. Through detailed interpretive engagement with selected life stories
set in their cultural, historical and geographical contexts, the book explores the complex temporal
dynamics of 'post-conflict' subjectivities in their endeavour to make sense of remembered
> Researched and written over fifteen years as a series of case studies responding to developments,
obstacles and contestations in the evolving peace process seen through this prism of life-storytelling, Afterlives maps a contested history of legacy policy-making and cultural practices engaged in 'dealing with the past', from the establishment of devolution in 2005-7 through to the Legacy and Reconciliation Act of 2023. It is the first book-length investigation into conflict transformation in Northern Ireland from interdisciplinary critical perspectives rooted in historical cultural studies, oral history and popular memory theory.

Portrait

Graham Dawson is a Reader in Cultural History at the University of Brighton. His research has focused on the inter-relations between cultural memory, narrative and identity, and on the memory of war in modern times. He is author of Soldier Heroes: Briti