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Trellising the girders: poetry and the imagining of place in Northern Ireland1
Authors:Bryonie Reid
Institution:School of Environmental Sciences , University of Ulster , Cromore Road, Coleraine, Co, Londonderry, BT5 2SA, UK E-mail: b.reid@ulster.ac.uk
Abstract:Imaginings and uses of place in Northern Ireland are characterised frequently by sectarianism, leading to the strict territorialisation of space along cultural, political and religious dividing lines. It is argued that such geographies underpin the six counties' ongoing intercommunal conflict. Extrapolating from the work of feminist economic geographers J. K. Gibson-Graham, this paper suggests that in order to fracture the monolith of spatial sectarianism, attention must be paid to imaginings and uses of place which sidestep or move beyond the tendency to exclude. Here I examine poetry by Michael Longley and Sinéad Morrissey for its alternative envisaging of place, and argue that these particular instances of opening out a spatial imaginary are of import both in a Northern Irish context, and further afield.
Keywords:place  belonging  identity  poetry  Northern Ireland
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