The Northern Ireland Troubles in Britain: Impacts, engagements, legacies and memories
The Northern Ireland Troubles in Britain: Impacts, engagements, legacies and memories
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Abstract
For the three decades of the Northern Ireland ‘Troubles’ (1968–98), the United Kingdom experienced within its borders a profound and polarizing conflict. Yet relatively little research has addressed the complex effects, legacies and memories of this conflict in Britain. It occupies a marginal position in British social, cultural and political history, and the experiences and understandings of those in or from Britain who fought in it, were injured or harmed 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 impacts of the conflict upon individual lives, political and social relationships, communities and culture in Britain; and explores how the people of Britain (including its Irish communities) have responded to, and engaged with the conflict, in the context of contested political narratives produced by the State and its opponents.Setting an agenda for further research and public debate, the book demonstrates that ‘unfinished business’ from the conflicted past persists unaddressed in Britain; and advocates the importance of acknowledging legacies, understanding histories, and engaging with memories in the context of peace-building and reconciliation. Contributors include scholars from a wide range of disciplines (social, political and cultural history; politics; media, film and cultural studies; law; literature; performing arts; sociology; peace studies); activists, artists, writers and peace-builders; and people with direct personal experience of the conflict.
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Front Matter
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Introduction: The Northern Ireland Troubles in Britain: impacts, engagements, legacies and memories
Graham Dawson andStephen Hopkins
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Part I Perspectives from the British State, politics and the military
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1
‘The truth, the whole truth…’: some British political and military memoirs of the Troubles
John Newsinger
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2
‘I got shot through the head with an Armalite round’1
Ted Aubertin
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3
‘A real stirring in the nation’: military families, British public opinion and withdrawal from Northern Ireland
Paul Dixon
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4
The memoir writing of the Wilson and Callaghan governments: the Labour Party and constitutional policy in Northern Ireland
Stephen Hopkins
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5
British questions
Geoffrey Bell
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6
‘The coach never arrived back at its destination’1
Jenny McMahon
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7
Serving in troubled times: British military personnel’s memories and accounts of service in Northern Ireland
K. Neil Jenkings andRachel Woodward
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1
‘The truth, the whole truth…’: some British political and military memoirs of the Troubles
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Part II Anti-state activisms
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8
Something in the air: the rise of the Troops Out Movement
Aly Renwick
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9
Memories of Sinn Féin Britain, 1975–85
Susan O’Halloran
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10
Policing the Irish community in Britain
Nadine Finch
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11
‘Not our cup of tea’: Irish and British feminist encounters in London during the Troubles
Ann Rossiter
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12
Political delegations of women from Britain to the North of Ireland and the campaign against strip searching in the 1980s
Di Parkin
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8
Something in the air: the rise of the Troops Out Movement
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Part III Culture and the representation of the Troubles
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13
‘Every man an emperor’: the British press, Bloody Sunday and the image of the British Army1
Greg McLaughlin andStephen Baker
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14
Suspect stories: William Trevor’s portrayals of the Irish in London during the Troubles
Tony Murray
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15
Writing as survival
Maude Casey
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16
The ‘oxygen of publicity’ and the suffocation of censorship: national newspaper representations of the British broadcasting ban (1988–94)
Max Pettigrew
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17
‘The Troubles we’ve seen’: film, television drama and the Northern Irish conflict in Britain
John Hill
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13
‘Every man an emperor’: the British press, Bloody Sunday and the image of the British Army1
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Part IV Memory, peace building and ‘dealing with the past’
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18
Responding to the IRA bombing campaign in mainland Britain: the case of Warrington
Lesley Lelourec
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19
‘There’s no way out but through’
Annie Bowman
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20
The Birmingham pub bombings, the Irish as a ‘suspect community’ and the memories of the O’Reilly family
Laura O’Reilly
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21
‘Truth recovery’ and the role of the security forces in the Northern Ireland Troubles
Aaron Edwards
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22
Commemorating bonds of Union: remembering the Ulster Special Constabulary at the National Memorial Arboretum
L. J. Armstrong
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23
‘I’d find a way to contribute to peace’
Jo Berry
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24
Performance practices and conflict resolution: Jo Berry and Patrick Magee’s Facing the Enemy
Verity Combe
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18
Responding to the IRA bombing campaign in mainland Britain: the case of Warrington
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End Matter
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