Browsing School of English and Creative Arts by Title
Now showing items 223-242 of 329
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Persepolis: the story of a childhood
(Cambridge University Students Union, 2005-06)Review of Marjane Satrapi's graphic novel 'Persepolis'. -
The Pitfalls of Journo-Fiction
(The Irish Times, 2006-10-14) -
Poems, by J.D. (1635) and the Creation of John Donne's Literary Biography
(John Donne Journal, 2013)When, in 1619, John Donne urged Sir Robert Ker to remind readers of Biathanatos that it was "a Book written by jack Donne, and not by D. Donne," he probably did not expect this brief, personal message to become a ... -
Poetry by the Book, Poetry by Numbers
(2013)The mass digitisation of our literary heritage has resulted in both possibilities and problems for the literary scholar. With the availability large-scale literary corpora comes the implicit perception that digital ... -
The Politics of Landscape and Region in 19th-Century Poetry
(Four Courts Press, 2000)[no abstract available] -
Portrait of a Schoolboy
(The Irish Times, 2001-08-25) -
A portrait of the citizen as artist: Community arts, devising and contemporary Irish theatre practice
(Carysfort Press, 2015)[No abstract available] -
Pressing pause: Critical reflections from the history of media studies
(TripleC, 2018-02-26)This article examines the history of the fraught relationship between the fields of media and journalism studies and the media industries in the US and UK contexts. In the US, journalism programmes were built on instituting ... -
Psychotherapy Cases of Art Imitating Life and Death
(The Irish Times, 2008-04-19) -
Puritans, Politics, Passion, Plainness
(The Irish Times, 2004-08-28) -
Queer notions: new plays and performances from Ireland by Fintan Walsh
(Irish Theatre Magazine, 2011-01-30)Fintan Walsh’s new anthology begins with a line that seems in danger of subverting the rest of the book. “There is strength in numbers, so they say,” writes Frank McGuinness in his foreword – before adding “I’ve never ... -
The Quiet Man and Beyond: An Introduction
(Liffey Press, 2009)In 1996, The Quiet Man topped an Irish Times poll for the best Irish film of all time. Almost ten years later, with many more Irish (and Irish-themed) films made, The Quiet Man still occupied number four in a poll of 10,000 ... -
Re-imagining Ireland, occupying Iraq: Colin Teevan's How Many Miles to Basra
(Debrecen University Press, 2011)[No abstract available] -
Re-imagining Shakespeare: A tender thing directed by Selina Cartmell: programme note for Siren Productions
(Siren Productions, 2013)[No abstract available] -
Reading Lessons: Famine and The Nation 1845-49
(Irish Academic Press, 1996)[no abstract available] -
Reading Nations, Debating Identities: New Approaches to Macpherson's Ossian
(2014)Ossian Online is a project which will harness social media and new reading technologies to crowdsource annotations to the sequence of eighteenth-century works known collectively as the Ossian poems. The project will ... -
Regionalisation and Globalization in Irish Drama since 1990
(Érudit, 2006-09)The impact of globalisation on Irish theatre since the early 1990s has been considerable. A study of four recent Irish plays, all produced by "regional" theatre companies, suggests that contemporary Irish theatre is dominated ... -
Reimagining an Irish City: I am Belfast
(Asociación Española de Estudios Irlandeses, Spanish Association for Irish Studies (AEDEI), 2017-03)An early shot in Mark Cousin's I am Belfast lingers on a very unusual and unexpected landscape, what appears to be an icy vista reflected in water, with clouds drifting by in the distance. Where s this our narrator asks. ... -
Resurrecting Shakespeare's ghost plays
(Oxford University Press, 2018-09-04)This article draws attention to a group of remarkably similar novels published between 2003 and 2009: William Martin s Harvard Yard, Jennifer Lee Carrell s The Shakespeare Secret (also known as Interred with Their Bones), ... -
Review of "Hunger"
(2008)Review of Steve McQueen's 2008 British-Irish historical drama film Hunger, starring Michael Fassbender (as Republican leader Bobby Sands), Liam Cunningham, and Liam McMahon. The film is concerned with the 1981 Irish hunger strike.