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DTSTART:20150329T010000
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DTSTART:20151025T010000
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150424T103000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150424T103000
DTSTAMP:20260413T142630
CREATED:20160824T134708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134708Z
UID:2187-1429871400-1429871400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:'A Peculiar Society'? Ireland\, 1970s-1990s - April 24th and 25th 2015
DESCRIPTION:A Peculiar Society? Ireland\, 1970s-1990s\nProgramme\nPROGRAMME \n‰Û÷A peculiar society’? Ireland\, 1970s-1990s\nMoore Institute\, Hardiman Research Building\,National University of Ireland Galway24-25 April 2015 \n‰Û÷Ireland is a peculiar society in the sense that it was a nineteenth century society up to about 1970 and then it almost bypassed the twentieth century’ (John McGahern) \n24 April 201510.30 – Registration \n11.15 – Welcome and Introductory Remarks: A Peculiar Society? \n11.30 – Parallel Sessions 11a. Urban VoicesErika Hanna (University of Edinburgh)Discovering ghosts in Dublin’s derelict spaces: the Urban Folklore Project\, 1979-80 \nElizabeth DeYoung (University of Liverpool)Belfast in the 1970s: deindustrialisation\, development\, and ‰Û÷the Troubles’ \nMarina NÌ_ DhubhÌÁin (NUI Galway)Performing oral history: some methodological challenges in staging the real \n1b. The International ContextCiarÌÁn O’Driscoll (University College Dublin)Accession into troubled waters: Ireland and the Common Fisheries Policy of the EU \nMarie-Violaine Louvet (Toulouse 1\, Capitole University)The Ireland-Israel Friendship League: Israel supporters in Irish civil society\, 1970s-1990s \nGerald Power (Metropolitan University Prague)Irish newspaper reporting on the Falklands War \n13.00 – Lunch \n13.45 – Parallel Sessions 22a. Managing Political ChangeJohn Mulqueen (Trinity College Dublin)The rhetoric of class politics and the Cold War: from Sinn F̩in to Workers’ Party \nTomÌÁs Finn (NUI Galway)The praxis of power: Patrick Lynch and the Irish state \nElaine Byrne (Global Irish Studies Centre)1970s-1990s: an era of delayed accountability. Why? \n2b. Theatréine Phillips (Burren College of Art\, NUI Galway)Performance art in Ireland: a history \nBarry Houlihan (NUI Galway)Citizens\, streets and stages: Irish theatre in the 1970s \nPatrick Lonergan (NUI Galway)From Rolo to Anglo: advertising at the Abbey Theatre from the 1970s to the 1990s \n15.15 – Break \n15.45 – Parallel Sessions 33a. MovementsKevin Ryan (NUI Galway)‰Û÷The revolution is us’: art and politics in Ireland\, 1974-1993 \nConnal Parr (University of Oxford)Filling the void left by politics: the Field Day Theatre movement \nKevin O’Sullivan (NUI Galway)Global citizens? Humanitarianism\, belonging\, and the Dunnes Stores strike\, 1984-87 \n3b. Northern Ireland: The Political ContextSeÌÁn McKillen (University of Limerick)The rise of constitutional nationalism and the fracturing of the Unionist political orthodoxy\, 1970-1998 \nJames Greer (Queen’s University\, Belfast)Northern Ireland and the 1975 EEC referendum \nStuart Aveyard (Queen’s University\, Belfast)Social policy in Northern Ireland and the Labour government\, 1974-79 \n17.15 – Close of Day 1 \n20.00 – History Ireland Hedge School: Ireland in the 1970sMechanics Institute\, Middle Street\, GalwayParticipants: Sarah-Anne Buckley\, Brian Hanley\, Tom Inglis\, Mary KennyChair: Tommy Graham \n25 April 201509.00 – Parallel Sessions 44a. New FearsBarry Sheppard (Queen’s University\, Belfast)Fearing a social explosion? The Church\, the media and ‰Û÷satanic cults’ in Ireland \nCian Anthony Manning (University College Cork)Carnsore Point: the birthplace of environmentalism and popular protest in Ireland \nMaeve Casserly (National Library of Ireland)Radharc: a television history \n4b. Youth and the TroublesGareth Mulvenna (Queen’s University\, Belfast)‰Û÷Our boys of tomorrow’: Tartan gangs and Loyalist paramilitarism in early 1970s Belfast \nAngela Stephanie Mazzetti (Queen’s University\, Belfast)The long-term impact of ‰Û÷growing-up’ during ‰Û÷the Troubles’ on coping behaviours \nPaddy McMenamin (Independent Scholar)Armed struggle and the ‰Û÷beautiful game’\, Belfast 1970 \n10.30 – Break \n10.45 – Parallel Sessions 55a. MusicM̩abh NÌ_ FhuarthÌÁin (NUI Galway)‰Û÷Lisdoonvarna’: A model of festivity for a ‰Û÷peculiar society’ \nVerena Commins (NUI Galway)‰Û÷Blurring and erasure’? De-nationalising Irish traditional music practices\, 1970s-1990s \nSeÌÁn Shanagher (Ballyfermot College of Further Education)Clubbing\, dance music and Ireland in the 1990s \n5b. Public HistoryDominic Bryan (Queen’s University\, Belfast)Parades and the decline of the civic in 1970s Belfast \nMargaret O’Callaghan (Queen’s University\, Belfast)Commemoration during conflict: commemorating 1916 in 1976 \nGillian McIntosh (Queen’s University\, Belfast)When is a jubilee not a jubilee: the creation of Ulster ’71 \n12.15 – Lunch \n13.00 – Parallel Sessions 66a. Gender and SexualityNina Holmes (Kingston University\, London)Representations of women in Irish government health pamphlets\, 1970s-1980s \nOrla Egan (University College Cork)Cork’s LGBT community\, 1970s to 1990s \n6b. Northern Ireland: The View from the SouthGerard Madden (NUI Galway)Responses in the west of Ireland to civil rights protest in Northern Ireland\, 1968-72 \nBrian Hanley (Independent Scholar)‰Û÷Are we trying to create a new Chile here?’ The Sunday World versus the National Coalition \nStephen Kelly (Liverpool Hope University)A peculiar peacemaker: Charles J. Haughey and the early stages of the peace process\, 1986-1992 \n14.30 – Break \n15.00 – Parallel Sessions 77a. MulticulturalismMichael Kennedy (Royal Irish Academy)‰Û÷All the Raj’: how the Indian restaurant went mainstream in 1980s and 1990s Ireland \nVukaÁin Nedeljkovic (Dublin Institute of Technology)A peculiar society: asylum seekers in Ireland \n7b. Culture and the Early TroublesMartin McCleery (Independent Scholar)The evolution of the early Troubles outside of Belfast and Derry \nJonathan Hannon (NUI Galway)Punk and Northern Ireland in the 1970s \nDaithÌ_ ÌÒ CorrÌÁin (St Patrick’s College\, Dublin City University)‰Û÷Negotiating the non-negotiable’: the Northern Ireland Troubles and the development of inter-church relations in Ireland \n16.30 – RoundtableTom Inglis (University College Dublin)Mary KennyGearÌ_id ÌÒ Tuathaigh (NUI Galway) \n17.30 – Close of Conference \n****** \nRegistration: ‰âÂ20 (‰âÂ10 students & unwaged). \nFor further details\, please contact the conference organisers Sarah-Anne Buckley\, TomÌÁs Finn\, & Kevin O’Sullivan (Discipline of History\, National University of Ireland\, Galway). \nA pdf version of this programme is available here.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/a-peculiar-society-ireland-1970s-1990s-april-24th-and-25th-2015/
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150424T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150424T120000
DTSTAMP:20260413T142630
CREATED:20160824T134704Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134704Z
UID:2124-1429876800-1429876800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:CAMPS lab: Dr Kim LoPrete\, History\, NUIG - 'War\, Monastic Conversion\, and the Politics of Ecclesiastical Reform in 1070s' France'
DESCRIPTION:Dr Kim LoPrete\, History\, NUIG‘War\, Monastic Conversion\, and the Politics of Ecclesiastical Reform in 1070s’ France’\nFollowed by discussion & light lunch\nEveryone welcome – FÌÁilte roimh chÌÁch\nFor more information please contact mairin.nidhonnchadha@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/camps-lab-dr-kim-loprete-history-nuig-war-monastic-conversion-and-the-politics-of-ecclesiastical-reform-in-1070s-france/
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