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The Kindertransport, a rescue operation during the Second World War, is the subject of this study of memoirs and autobiographical fiction by survivors and recent fiction by authors with no experience of the Kindertransport. Genre is shown to influence the nature of the representation, which has repercussions for studies of Holocaust remembering.
Addresses the silence in current literature on the perspective of African asylum-seeking families in Ireland. The book allows the voices of those on society's margins to be heard and the author employs a progressive approach to develop understanding of child protection issues within the context of asylum-seeking communities.
Paulo Freire's work is always animated by a strong and fundamental affirmative spirit which calls on people to join together to make change, as opposed to simply waiting around for it to happen. This text on his contemporary importance includes essays by established and new thinkers in the Critical Pedagogy perspective.
Over the last twenty years Deirdre Kinahan has emerged as a significant and original female voice in Irish theatre, with her plays produced in Ireland, the UK, the USA and across mainland Europe. Her work explores issues of personal and communal identity, bringing forward the difficulties that arise for individuals when accepted narratives of identity diverge from contemporary experience. In this collection of ten original essays, and an interview with the playwright, the authors address the ways in which Kinahan¿s plays interrogate and seek to renegotiate value systems of family, class, ethnicity, age and gender in the 21st century neoliberal, secular state, with an emphasis on experimental forms and the renewal of the genre of the family play. Theoretical frameworks rely on feminism, intersectionality, genre studies, and age studies, among other approaches, by authors from Ireland, the UK, Hungary, the USA, Nigeria, Canada and Taiwan.
Otto Dix (1891-1969) was a leading figure of the Neue Sachlichkeit, or New Objectivity, movement in painting in 1920s Germany. This groundbreaking study analyses for the first time the relationship between Dix's verist-realist portrait paintings and the rapidly expanding mass media culture of the Weimar era that surrounded it.
This book explores how the Chilean "transition to democracy" has been narrated in film, focusing on the imaginative afterlives of anticapitalist and antidictatorship resistance. Documentary and fiction films which explore "haunting" in the present past are analysed, contributing to a field of research on post-conflict transitions.
This book traces the theoretical beginnings of Afropolitanism and then explores Afropolitan practices in London and Berlin. Afropolitan practices are here read against German and British colonial histories and structures of racism, the histories of Black Europeans, and contemporary right-wing resurgence in Germany and England, respectively.
This book is a study of a significant nexus in contemporary Catholic thought and is peculiarly relevant to the turbulent conditions of the Modern Church, especially in relation to Vatican II. It is a portrayal of Ratzinger's discerning grasp of Vatican II Mariology and ecclesiology as a peritus of note during the Council's sessions.
This new critical edition collects together for the first time in one volume selected original arrangements of the world-famous Irish Melodies for solo voice and duet along with other successful English-language songs to texts by Moore and foreign-language settings by Schumann, Mendelssohn, Berlioz and Duparc.
This book lists all the similes in the Bible in three different versions (Greek, Latin and English), noting especially the variation in the use of introductory words (protheses). There are over 1000 examples, not counting the predicate and genitive versions, a significant collection.
This book includes two previously unpublished works that offer insights into the Pre-Raphaelites and the cult of spiritualism. William Michael Rossetti's seance diary, a recording of twenty seances he attended in the 1860s, and a letter to Dante Gabriel Rossetti from spiritualist medium Anna Mary Howitt are presented with extensive introductions.
Brings together academic and independent scholars from various disciplines and nationalities to take a critical look at the implementation of the Good Friday Agreement, from the collaboration between Dublin and London to the new political configurations in Northern Ireland, as well as interfaith, cultural, social and economic developments.
This collection examines different themes and offers novel interpretations of Hegel's political philosophy. It sheds new light on what has been perhaps the most controversial area of Hegelian scholarship. Its distinctive contribution is that it explores both Hegel's early and mature political philosophy.
With a comprehensive review of the relevant factors that first- and second-language morphological processing researchers need to take into consideration, including material- and procedure-related factors and participant differences, this book is a useful theoretical reference book for morphological processing researchers.
Drawing on his decades of experience working with young people with challenging behaviours, his PhD research and interviews, the author shares a very different methodology to that used in mainstream music education, a methodology that values the child more than the curriculum and puts equal emphasis on musical, personal and social development.
This study offers an unconventional reading of modern and postmodern German memorials from a medievalist perspective. Including but not limited to memorials for the victims of the Nazis in Germany, the book offers a medieval prism through which to view these works of art and understand their contribution to German memory culture.
Anna of Denmark has been castigated as frivolous, vain, stupid, and more interested in pleasure than politics. This study aims to contextualise her not as a woman of minor significance in relation to the queens regnant of the sixteenth century, but as an inheritor of the bloody legacies of previous consorts north and south of the border.
Voices from the Margins explores how women writers of Troubles short fiction have rewritten the " official story " of the conflict and the peace process by placing thematic emphasis on gender and the everyday and by foregrounding the personal histories behind the public History of the Troubles.
This collection of essays is about the lived experience of the 'second generation' of the Holocaust. Each piece tells a different story about growing up in the shadow of the Holocaust and making a journey into the past to find the 'home' of one's ancestors. It contributes to discussions on memorialization, commemoration and the refugee crisis.
What happens when a small group of educators get together? What could they do, what could they make, what could they become? Not necessarily what you might think.
The Salley Gardens presents reflections from seventy-three heterosexual young women on growing up, forming sexual relationships and some becoming mothers in the last years of the 'Celtic Tiger'.
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