Title: A cultural approach to understanding Northern Ireland
Source document: Brno studies in English. 2002, vol. 28, iss. 1, pp. [161]-169
Extent
[161]-169
-
ISSN1211-1791
Stable URL (handle): https://hdl.handle.net/11222.digilib/104071
Type: Article
Language
License: Not specified license
Notice: These citations are automatically created and might not follow citation rules properly.
References
[1] Ardagh, John (1995). Ireland and the Irish: Portrait of a Changing Society (London: Penguin Books, c 1994, rev. 1995).
[2] Barton, Brian (1996). A Pocket History of Ulster (Dublin: The O'Brien Press).
[3] Belfrage, Sally (1988). Living with War: A Belfast Year (London: Penguin Books, c 1987).
[4] Bell, Desmond (1990). Acts of Union: Youth Culture and Sectarianism in Northern Ireland (Houndsmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire and London: MacMillan Education Ltd).
[5] Boyce, George (1991). "Northern Ireland: a place apart?" in Hughes, Eamonn, ed. (1991).
[6] Connolly, S. J. (1997). "Culture, Identity and Tradition: Changing definitions of Irishness" in Graham, Brian, ed. (1997).
[7] Douglas, Neville (1997). "Political Structures, Social Interaction and Identity Change in Northern Ireland" in Graham, Brian, ed. (1997).
[8] Duffy, Patrick J. (1997). "Writing Ireland: Literature and art in the representation of Irish place" in Graham, Brian, ed. (1997).
[9] Fulton, John (1991). The Tragedy of Belief: Division, Politics, and Religion in Ireland (Oxford, New York: Clarendon Press).
[10] Graham, Brian, ed. (1997). In Search of Ireland: a cultural geography (London, New York: Routledge).
[11] Grant, Linda (1998). "Where Hard Men Face Hard Choices" in Guardian Weekly (April 26: 32).
[12] Hughes, Eamonn, ed. (1991). Culture and Politics in Northern Ireland (Buckingham: Open University Press).
[13] Kearney, Richard (1997). Postnationalist Ireland: Politics, culture, philosophy (London, New York: Routledge).
[14] Kee, Robert (1997). Ireland: A History (Abacus, c 1980, revised edit. 1995).
[15] Murphy, Dervla (1979). A Place Apart (London: Penguin Books, c 1978).
[16] Nash, Catherine (1997). "Embodied Irishness: Gender, sexuality and Irish identities" in Graham, Brian, ed. (1997).
[17] Osmond, John (1988). The Divided Kingdom (London: Constable).
[18] Poole, Michael A. (1997). "In Search of Ethnicity in Ireland" in Graham, Brian, ed. (1997).
[19] Ruane, Joseph and Jennifer Todd (1991). "'Why can't you get along with each other': culture, structure and the Northern Ireland conflict" in Hughes, Eamonn, ed. (1991).
[20] Smyth, William J. (1997). "A Plurality of Irelands: Regions, societies and mentalities" in Graham, Brian, ed. (1997).
[21] Whyte, John (1990). Interpreting Northern Ireland (Oxford University: Clarendon Press).
[22] Žižek, Slavoj (1992). Enjoy Your Symptom! (London, New York: Routledge).
[2] Barton, Brian (1996). A Pocket History of Ulster (Dublin: The O'Brien Press).
[3] Belfrage, Sally (1988). Living with War: A Belfast Year (London: Penguin Books, c 1987).
[4] Bell, Desmond (1990). Acts of Union: Youth Culture and Sectarianism in Northern Ireland (Houndsmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire and London: MacMillan Education Ltd).
[5] Boyce, George (1991). "Northern Ireland: a place apart?" in Hughes, Eamonn, ed. (1991).
[6] Connolly, S. J. (1997). "Culture, Identity and Tradition: Changing definitions of Irishness" in Graham, Brian, ed. (1997).
[7] Douglas, Neville (1997). "Political Structures, Social Interaction and Identity Change in Northern Ireland" in Graham, Brian, ed. (1997).
[8] Duffy, Patrick J. (1997). "Writing Ireland: Literature and art in the representation of Irish place" in Graham, Brian, ed. (1997).
[9] Fulton, John (1991). The Tragedy of Belief: Division, Politics, and Religion in Ireland (Oxford, New York: Clarendon Press).
[10] Graham, Brian, ed. (1997). In Search of Ireland: a cultural geography (London, New York: Routledge).
[11] Grant, Linda (1998). "Where Hard Men Face Hard Choices" in Guardian Weekly (April 26: 32).
[12] Hughes, Eamonn, ed. (1991). Culture and Politics in Northern Ireland (Buckingham: Open University Press).
[13] Kearney, Richard (1997). Postnationalist Ireland: Politics, culture, philosophy (London, New York: Routledge).
[14] Kee, Robert (1997). Ireland: A History (Abacus, c 1980, revised edit. 1995).
[15] Murphy, Dervla (1979). A Place Apart (London: Penguin Books, c 1978).
[16] Nash, Catherine (1997). "Embodied Irishness: Gender, sexuality and Irish identities" in Graham, Brian, ed. (1997).
[17] Osmond, John (1988). The Divided Kingdom (London: Constable).
[18] Poole, Michael A. (1997). "In Search of Ethnicity in Ireland" in Graham, Brian, ed. (1997).
[19] Ruane, Joseph and Jennifer Todd (1991). "'Why can't you get along with each other': culture, structure and the Northern Ireland conflict" in Hughes, Eamonn, ed. (1991).
[20] Smyth, William J. (1997). "A Plurality of Irelands: Regions, societies and mentalities" in Graham, Brian, ed. (1997).
[21] Whyte, John (1990). Interpreting Northern Ireland (Oxford University: Clarendon Press).
[22] Žižek, Slavoj (1992). Enjoy Your Symptom! (London, New York: Routledge).