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Everyday narratives, personalized memories and the remaking of national boundaries
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Todd, full paper no highlights.docx | 72.32 KB |
Author(s)
Date Issued
19 September 2018
Date Available
30T15:20:05Z January 2019
Abstract
In this article I explore some of the interrelations of individual reflexivity, personalized memory and national boundaries through an empirical and inductive analysis of the ways ordinary citizens remember their personal national past. I show how these personalized narratives stretch the conventional boundaries of nation and group. Of a sample of over 220 ordinary citizens in each part of Ireland, over half, and two-thirds in the still conflict-ridden region of Northern Ireland, narrated memories that could not be brought under conventional oppositional categories, and that produced in the respondents further reflection and rethinking. What is significant is how many of them did so. Since identities and traditions are said to be persistent and long-lasting in each part of Ireland, and in particular in Northern Ireland, the findings are unexpected. The article concludes that there is everyday potential for quite radical revision of conventional constructions of the nation.
Sponsorship
Higher Education Authority
Irish Research Council
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Journal
Innovation: The European Journal of Social Science Research
Copyright (Published Version)
2018 The European Association for the Advancement of the Social Sciences
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1469-8412
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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