Browsing School of English and Creative Arts by Title
Now showing items 141-160 of 329
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Locative reverb: Artistic practice, sound technology, and the grammatization of the listener in the city
(Springer International Publishing, 2021)There are various ways that artists use technology in exploring the relation of sound to the urban environment, which has different impacts on the listener in relation to place. The rising prominence of these works is ... -
Locke's species: Money and philosophy in the 1690s
(Taylor and Francis, 2013-10-15)John Locke intervened in two major debates in which the issue of species featured: (1) the question of whether species designations are based on real essences or only nominal essences (discussed in the Essay), and (2) the ... -
A Long Way with Trips, if Airy
(The Irish Times, 2001-03-31) -
The Longue durée of Brexit: Politics, literature and the British past
(Brill, 2021-05-20)The complex proposition posed by Brexit challenges us to reinvestigate British reflections on identity from an historical point of view. This contribution considers a range of precedents, beginning with the English ... -
Looking Down the Barrel of History. Review of The Dead Eight, by Carlo Gébler
(The Irish Times, 2011) -
The (lost) tune of ‘Raging Love’ and its reverberations in Isabella Whitney’s Copy of a Letter
(SAGE Publications, 2020-03-30)This article argues that Isabella Whitney s verse epistles To Her Unconstant Lover and The Admonition in The Copy of a Letter (c. 1566 67) are enmeshed more thoroughly in the early modern English soundscape than previous ... -
Louise Hollandine and the Art of Arachnean Critique
(Amsterdam University Press, 2019-07-22)Louise Hollandine was an artist and student of internationally renowned Dutch painter Gerard van Honthorst. Though relatively few works now survive that can be authoritatively ascribed to her, Louise Hollandine s artistic ... -
A Loyalist on Holiday
(The Irish Times, 2001-09-22) -
Mad, Mad Carry-On Entirely
(The Irish Times, 1999-08-21) -
The Maid's Metamorphosis or The Metamorphoses of the Maid?
(Edward's Boys, King Edward VI School, 2024)Essay included in the 2024 theatre programme for The Maid's Metamorphosis performed by Edward's Boys, King Edward VI School. -
Male Autobiography and Cultural Nationalism: John Mitchel and James Clarence Mangan
(Cork University Press, 1992)[no abstract available] -
Mantra for the Future Subopolis
(The Irish Times, 2003-05-24) -
Manuscript Transcription: the Habits of Crowds
(2013)Paper describes author's involvement in Transcribe Bentham, a project established to crowdsource transcriptions of the manuscripts of Jeremy Bentham, and reflects more generally on the issues at stake in crowdsourcing ... -
Masks of Refinement: Pseudonym, Paratext, and Authorship in the Early Poetry of Thomas Moore
(Taylor and Francis, 2014-08-05)Thomas Moore adopted the pseudonymous persona of Thomas Little in order to place his early amorous poetry within distinct literary, historical, and generic contexts. He was motivated by a desire to provoke a favorable ... -
The Match Box by Frank McGuinness: programme note for Galway International Arts Festival
(Galway International Arts Festival, 2015)[No abstract available] -
A May Day Manifesto
(2010)"A map of the world that does not include Utopia is not worth even glancing at..." - Oscar Wilde,The Soul of man under socialism, 1891 -
McGahern's Memory Lane
(The Irish Times, 2007-10-06) -
Measure for Measure by William Shakespeare, Rattlebag Theatre Company, Civic Theatre Tallaght and Henry IV – Part One by William Shakespeare, Peacock Theatre
(Irish Theatre Magazine, 2003)Almost every European country that gained independence after the First World War had one thing in common: with only one exception, they all tried to stimulate the growth of a national literature by commissioning translations ... -
“Memory Cheats”: deception, recollection, and the problem of reading in The Captain And The Enemy
(Nighthawks Open Institutional Repository, University of North Georgia, 2017)The Captain and the Enemy is one of Greene’s least well-known and least loved novels. It has received little critical attention, but that is hardly any wonder: it is a frustrating, perplexing, and ultimately unfulfilling ...