Irish University Review
@irishunireview.bsky.social
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Irish University Review | Editor: Lucy Collins, UCD | Assoc. Ed: Emma Radley, UCD | Books Ed: Julie Bates, TCD | Affiliated to IASIL | Publisher: @EdinburghUP
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irishunireview.bsky.social
The essay explores how choreographic movements & the dancers’ embodiment foster a kinaesthetically empathetic co-presence between the performers and audience, and injects liveness into the archive.
irishunireview.bsky.social
Yang examines how the narrative episodes create contact zones between the historical and the contemporary. Motifs of gender, religion, emigration/immigration & social class, among others, oscillate intersectionally via the dancers’ bodies, which disturb cultural inscriptions & generate new meanings
irishunireview.bsky.social
Huayu Yang argues that Palimpsest, CoisCéim Dance Theatre's performance that took place during Dublin's 2024 St Patrick's Day celebration, stages the 'iterative' contemporaneity of Ireland, where the past continues to frame present experiences and the present is incessantly conflated with the past
irishunireview.bsky.social
Gillett also points to one of the currach's current places in ecocritical art practice: as a mediator between human and sea, and a locus for an embodied experience – not of heroism, but of powerlessness.
irishunireview.bsky.social
Gillett considers the currach's transition from a symbol of 'authentic' Irish identity and masculine heroism to a tool for the critique of essentialised Irish identity as well as gendered and environmental issues in the Irish context
irishunireview.bsky.social
In the latest issue of the IUR, Molly-Claire Gillett charts the symbol of the 'currach', a small boat traditionally made of skin or canvas and stretched over wood ribs, in Irish art practice, from the early-twentieth century to the present day.
irishunireview.bsky.social
Torres-Fernández analyses the role of intimacy in the company's dance theatre piece, Party Scene: Chemsex, Community & Crisis (2022), created by Philip Connaughton & Phillip McMahon, arguing that it plays a fundamental role in the production's reconceptualisation of social norms
irishunireview.bsky.social
In the latest issue of the IUR, J. Javier Torres-Fernández explores the contemporary landscape of Irish queer theatre and performance, focusing particularly on the landmark theatre company THISISPOPBABY, who have won awards for their
productions RIOT (2016), Wake (2022), more
irishunireview.bsky.social
Sarah Churchill's blog post "Will the Housing Crisis Kill the Irish Art Scene?" is now live on EUP's website. Churchill asks contemporary Irish artists Aideen Barry and Spicebag for their thoughts on how Ireland's housing crisis is shaping Irish art today.

euppublishingblog.com/2025/07/31/w...
Will Housing Crisis Kill the Irish Art Scene? - Edinburgh University Press Blog
How is Ireland’s housing crisis shaping Irish art today? Sarah Churchill asks contemporary Irish artists Aideen Barry and Spicebag for their thoughts.
euppublishingblog.com
irishunireview.bsky.social
Today's keynote at #IASIL2025 was provided by Prof Breandán Mac Suibhne, who produced a 'micro history', exploring the real-life people and Marconi radio (which, he notes, is almost a character in its own right) that inspired Brian Friel’s 'Dancing at Lughnasa'.
irishunireview.bsky.social
Morales-Ladrón argues that Emma Donoghue's Haven explores a colonial appropriation of mind & land in the name of God, with characters ultimately disturbing the 'haven' of biodiversity on Skellig Michael. She argues that Haven critiques the Anthropocene & anticipates a post-Anthropocene Earth
irishunireview.bsky.social
Lonergan conceptualises the Covid-19 pandemic as an allegory for future ecological crises, with Irish drama acting as a dress rehearsal for climate change. He points to how artistic responses accelerated their thematic preoccupations during this period, focusing on the non-human #IASIL2025
irishunireview.bsky.social
One of the final panels today, titled 'Ecology, History, and
Historiography', is currently kicking off at the University of Galway, with Patrick Lonergan & Marisol Morales-Ladrón as speakers #IASIL2025
irishunireview.bsky.social
Little interrogates carceral memory, tracing efforts to screen coercive confinement in Ireland (1971–1999) & arguing that historical accounts must consider its remediation across technologies. He ends by noting the importance of accounting for this history to prevent modern Irish carceral abuses
irishunireview.bsky.social
Haughton spoke about performance as technology, with her paper exploring how 'Anu', the production company, told stories that were previously side-lined or overlooked during the Decade of Centenaries by 'unfolding the body' and peeling back layers of sedimented signification in the Irish context
Reposted by Irish University Review
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Looking forward to presenting at IASIL 2025 in Galway, Ireland, this week!

#DigitalHumanities #IASIL #IASIL2025
irishunireview.bsky.social
Wallace presents on gender at the Abbey Theatre since Waking the Feminists, arguing that the movement made gender equality a public & policy issue - and despite some issues, has shifted programming with more adaptations/revivals by women writers & projects that highlight historical gender injustice
irishunireview.bsky.social
The panel "Remediation, Revolution, and Resistance in Irish Theatre and Performance" is currently underway at #IASIL2025, with speakers Clare Wallace, Miriam Haughton, and James Little
irishunireview.bsky.social
Meaney explored the nervous system of empire - the cables, the telegraph systems & the material apparatus of the 'cloud', which is not as ephemeral or abstract as marketing would have us think ...
irishunireview.bsky.social
IASIL 2025, "Technology & Ireland" kicked off yesterday with a brilliant keynote from Prof Gerardine Meaney on “Migration & Narration: Data, Archives, Nations”.
irishunireview.bsky.social
📢Great news!📢 Our May 2024 special issue on Éilís Ní Dhuibhne is now an open-access special feature on EUP's website! Read all of our amazing articles about Ní Dhuibhne's contributions to Irish literature and culture at the following link: www.euppublishing.com/toc/iur/54/1