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Making 1916: Material and Visual Culture of the Easter Rising [Kietas viršelis]

4.40/5 (10 ratings by Goodreads)
Edited by (Department of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Bristol (United Kingdom)), Edited by (National College of Art and Design Dublin (Ireland))
  • Formatas: Hardback, 320 pages, aukštis x plotis: 239x163 mm, 65 Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 14-Sep-2015
  • Leidėjas: Liverpool University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1781381224
  • ISBN-13: 9781781381229
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 320 pages, aukštis x plotis: 239x163 mm, 65 Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 14-Sep-2015
  • Leidėjas: Liverpool University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1781381224
  • ISBN-13: 9781781381229
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
The 1916 Rising is the pivotal yet highly contested moment in Irish history when militant republicans sought to seize political power from Britain, and declared - though unsuccessfully in the short term - an independent state. Credited with inspiring independence movements in other former colonies, the Rising has been the subject of histories from the political to the literary. Yet, the rich variety of objects and images associated with the Rising - from buttons and medals to souvenir postcards - have not formed a focus of academic research. This volume of essays will examine the material and visual culture of the Rising to consider how these illuminate changing ways of engaging with and understanding this iconic event. Family keepsakes such as autograph books from Frongoch internment camp, informal souvenirs such as pieces of rubble from Dublin's General Post Office, and 'official' souvenirs such as photo booklets each played a significant role in the construction of individual and collective memory. In placing material and visual culture centre stage, this book will examine how the spaces, objects and images associated with the Rising are caught up in processes of identity production in both public and private space as changing socio-political conditions generated new understandings of 1916 and its aftermath. It addresses the 'things' of 1916 not as mere illustrations of history, but as having agency and effect on material practices central to contested concepts of identity and the creation of social memory.

Recenzijos

Reviews 'This important book explores the material and visual culture around the Rising. Lisa Godson and Joanna Brück have assembled essays from 23 contributors to comment on a plethora of objects, clothes, photographs, paintings, documents and buildings that provide us with a new set of angles on the events that convulsed Ireland 100 years ago.'

Catriona Crowe, The Irish Times 'This is an insightful and well-edited anthology, which offers material and ideas not available elsewhere.'

Oxford Journals 'A short review cannot do justice to the variety of topics in and quality of contributors to Making 1916. The decision to have short case studies gives the volume a lively energy and it bursts with ideas and insights...it is a real achievement to have created a book of essays of such substance and originality.' Australasian Journal of Irish Studies

List of figures
ix
List of tables
xv
List of contributors
xvii
Approaching the material and visual culture of the 1916 Rising: an introduction 1(13)
Joanna Bruck
Lisa Godson
I The fabric of the Rising
Introduction
14(2)
1 The fabric of a deathless dream: a short introduction to the origins and meanings of the 1916 tricolour flag
16(9)
Brian Hand
2 The unmilitary appearance of the 1916 rebels
25(9)
Jane Tynan
3 Beating the retreat: the final hours of the Easter Rising
34(15)
Franc Myles
4 The constitution of a state yet to come: the unbroken promise of the `Half-Proclamation'
49(8)
Daniel Jewesbury
5 What is a forgery or a catalyst? The so-called `Castle Document' of Holy Week, 1916
57(13)
W.J. McCormack
6 The `aftermath' of the Rising in cinema newsreels
70(10)
Ciara Chambers
II The affective bonds of the Rising
Introduction
80(2)
7 Portraits and propaganda: photographs of the widows and children of the 1916 leaders in the Catholic Bulletin
82(9)
Orla Fitzpatrick
8 `After I am hanged my portrait will be interesting but not before': ephemera and the construction of personal responses to the Easter Rising
91(8)
Jack Elliott
9 Nationalism, gender and memory: internment camp craftwork, 1916--1923
99(9)
Joanna Bruck
10 Female prison autograph books: (re)remembering the Easter Rising through the experiences of Irish Civil War imprisonment
108(9)
Laura McAtackney
11 Pearse's profile: the making of an icon
117(19)
Brian Crowley
III Revivalism and the Rising
Introduction
136(2)
12 Dublin Civic Week and the materialisation of history
138(8)
Elaine Sisson
13 Redesigning the Rising: typographic commemorations of 1916
146(8)
Mary Ann Bolger
14 The Capuchin Annual: visual art and the legacy of 1916, one generation on
154(10)
Roisin Kennedy
15 Dressing rebellion: national revival dress and 1916
164(14)
Hilary O'Kelly
IV Remembering the Rising
Introduction
178(2)
16 Displaying the nation: the 1916 Exhibition at the National Museum of Ireland, 1932--1991
180(14)
Lar Joye
Brenda Malone
17 A story of absence and recovery: the Easter Rising in museums in Northern Ireland
194(9)
Elizabeth Crooke
18 History, materiality and the myth of 1916
203(14)
Pat Cooke
19 Place versus memory: forgetting Ireland's sites of independence?
217(9)
Damian Shiels
20 `Of all the trials not to paint ...': Sir John Lavery's painting High Treason, Court of Criminal Appeal: the Trial of Roger Casement 1916
226(9)
Catherine Marshall
21 `Dusty fingers of time': photography, materials memory and 1916
235(14)
Justin Carville
22 Ritual, religion and the performance of memory in the Irish Free State
249(6)
Lisa Godson
Afterword Lost city of the archipelago: Dublin at the end of empire 255(11)
Nicholas Allen
References 266(19)
Index 285
Lisa Godson is Lecturer at the National College of Art and Design, Dublin. Joanna Brück is Reader in the Department of Archaeology and Anthropology at the University of Bristol.