1st Edition

Partitioned Lives: The Irish Borderlands

By Catherine Nash, Bryonie Reid Copyright 2013
    170 Pages
    by Routledge

    170 Pages
    by Routledge

    Partitioned Lives: The Irish Borderlands explores everyday life and senses of identity and belonging along a contested border whose official functions and local impacts have shifted across the twentieth century. It does so through the accounts of contemporary borderland residents in Ireland and Northern Ireland who shared with us their reflections on and experiences of the border from the 1950s to the present day. Since the border is the product of the partition of the island and the creation of Northern Ireland, its meaning has been deeply entangled with the radically and often violently opposed perspectives on the legitimacy of Northern Ireland and the political reunification of the island. Yet the intensely political symbolism of the border has meant that relatively little attention has been paid to the lived experience of the border, its material presence in the landscape and in people’s lives, and its materialisation through the practices and policies of the states on either side. Drawing on recent approaches within historical, political and cultural geography and the cross-disciplinary field of border studies, this book redresses this neglect by exploring the Irish border in terms of its meanings (from the political to the personal) but also, and importantly, through the objects (from tables of custom regulations and travel permits to road blocks and military watch towers) and practices (from official efforts to regulate the movement of people and objects across it to the strategies and experiences of those subject to those state policies) through which it was effectively constituted. The focus is on the Irish border as practised, experienced and materially present in the borderlands.

    Chapter 1 Introduction; Chapter 2 Part Ition: Political Origins, Historical Geographies, and the Making of the Irish Border; Chapter 3 Relative Calm: Borderland Life in the 1950s and 1960s; Chapter 4 The Troubles, the Border and Borderlands, 1969-1995; Chapter 5 After the Troubles: Reconfiguring the Border and Border Identities; Chapter 6 Afterword;

    Biography

    Catherine Nash, Bryonie Reid

    ’The authors succeed in blending stories of the everyday lives of ordinary people living along the Irish border with a broader political and social analysis of borderlands more generally. Borderlands are always peripheral economically and politically, in this case complicated by contested narratives of identity and memory, and the violence of the past forty years. Partitioned Lives juxtaposes the everyday experience of border crossings, customs regulations, and smuggling ingenuity with enduring contradictions of cultural identity and political allegiances that subvert or bolster the existence of the frontier,' Patrick Duffy, National University of Ireland Maynooth, Ireland