Domingo 14 de julio - Cierre excepcional del Fort Saint-Jean a las 16h

El 14 de julio le informamos que el fuerte San Juan y el acceso a la exposición «Hazañas, obras maestras» se cerrarán excepcionalmente a partir de las 16h.
El museo y las exposiciones «Paraísos naturistas», «Mediterráneos», «Pasiones compartidas» y «¿Populares?» permanecerán abiertos a los horarios habituales.

Livre - The Black Irish onscreen

791.43 ASA

Description

Livre

Peter Lang

Asava Zélie

Presentation materielle : 1 vol. (ix-203 p.)

Dimensions : 23 cm

This book examines the position of black and mixed-race characters in Irish film culture. By exploring key film and television productions from the 1990s to the present day, the author uncovers and interrogates concepts of Irish identity, history and nation. In 2009, Ireland had the highest birth rate in Europe, with almost 24 per cent of births attributed to the ‘new Irish’. By 2013, 17 per cent of the nation was foreign-born. Ireland has always been a culturally diverse space and has produced a series of high-profile mixed-race stars, including Phil Lynott, Ruth Negga and Simon Zebo, among others. Through an analysis of screen visualizations of the black Irish, this study uncovers forgotten histories, challenges the perceived homogeneity of the nation, evaluates integration, and considers the future of the new Ireland. It makes a creative and significant theoretical contribution to scholarly work on the relationship between representation and identity in Irish cinema. Zélie Asava is Programme Director of Video and Film at Dundalk Institute of Technology, where she teaches courses on film and media theory and national cinemas. She has published journal articles and essays on questions of race, gender and representation in Irish, French, American and African cinema.

Acknowledgements, p. ix Introduction: Positioning the Black Irish: Theoretical, Historical and Visual Contexts, p. 1 Chapter One: ‘No Blacks, No Dogs, No Irish’: Being Black and Irish in Neil Jordan’s The Crying Game (1992) and Breakfast on Pluto (2005), p. 41 Chapter Two: Gendering the Other: Raced Women in Irish Television (Prosperity (RTE, 2007), Love is The Drug (RTE, 2004) and Fair City (RTE, 1989–present)), p. 65 Chapter Three: New Identities in the Irish Horror Film: Isolation (O’Brien, 2005) and Boy Eats Girl (Bradley, 2005), p. 85 Chapter Four: Black and Mixed Masculinities in Irish Cinema: The Nephew (Brady, 1998), Irish Jam (Eyres, 2006) and The Front Line (Gleeson, 2006), p. 101 Chapter Five: Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me: Traf Ficked (O’Connor, 2010) and the Multicultural Irish Thriller, p. 123 Chapter Six: The Raced Stranger in Contemporary Cinema: Between the Canals (O’Connor, 2011), Sensation (Hall, 2010), The Good Man (Harrison, 2012) and The Guard (McDonagh, 2011), p. 141 Conclusion: Framing the Future of the Black Irish Onscreen, p. 171 Bibliography, p. 187 Index, p. 195

This book was the winner of the 2011 Peter Lang Young Scholars Competition in Irish Studies. Index, bibliogr.