title: The Irish Theatrical Diaspora Conference 2010: Ireland’s Drama in British Cities
type of event: conference
location:
name of institution/
location:
Manchester Metropolitan University
street 1:
street 2 (if applicable):
street 3 (if applicable):
city: Manchester
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country (in English): UK
start date: 15/04/2010
end date: 16/04/2010
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abstract/call for papers: The Irish Theatrical Diaspora Conference 2010

Ireland’s Drama in British Cities,
Manchester Metropolitan University, April 15-16, 2010.

Organisers: Aidan Arrowsmith, Manchester Metropolitan University (A.Arrowsmith@mmu.ac.uk), and Emilie Pine, University College Dublin (Emilie.Pine@ucd.ie)

The 2010 Irish Theatrical Diaspora Conference will consider the history and context of performing Irish plays and characters on British stages, as well as the more general performance of Irish diasporic identity in an urban British context. Some of the areas that the conference will address are: the role of festivals in performing Irish identity, the role of British theatres in performing Irish plays, the significance of geographical variations, and the impact of globalisation on the position of Irish theatre in Britain

Keynote speakers:
Mary Hickman, Professor of Irish Studies and Sociology, London Metropolitan University

Patrick Mason, Director, Adjunct Professor, University College Dublin, and Visiting Professor, Liverpool Hope University

Confirmed speakers:
Claire Connolly
Mike Cronin
Karen Fricker
Nicholas Grene
Patrick Lonergan
Holly Maples
Victor Merriman
Aoife Monks
Jim Moran
Catherine Rees
Shaun Richards


This conference will examine performances of Irish identity in the urban centres of Britain since the beginning of the 19th century. The idea of performance is intended to include events staged in the theatres and on the streets, for example parades, musical performances and political demonstrations.

By discussing such performances and their reception by various audiences, speakers and delegates will examine the ways that 'Irishness' has changed in meaning and association in Britain, pressurised by contexts such as colonialism and nationalism, modernisation and economic change in Ireland, the Troubles and the Peace Process, and many others.

In particular, the conference is concerned to examine the changing status of Irish, and Irish descended, people in Britain. Since 1995, the diaspora has arguably become more recognised in Ireland, after President Mary Robinson urged the Irish nation to the ‘moral act’ of remembering and commemorating their sacrifices. In Britain, the Irish arguably became more visible after recognition of their ‘ethnic minority’ status in the 2001 UK census; and, more recently, interest in Britain’s oldest and largest ethnic minority has been renewed amidst a more general concern with immigration and the ways in which the case of the Irish in Britain might be seen to foreshadow and intersect with the experience of many other immigrant groups.

Delegates will be able to reflect on questions including:
· What different versions of Irishness have been suggested by theatrical and other performances in Britain, and how have these been received and understood by their audiences?
· In what ways have Irish cultural festivals affected perceptions?
· How have notions of second-generation Irishness changed?
· What significance do performances of Irishness abroad have for the Irish nation ‘at home’?
· Have visible assertions and performances of Irish identity impacted on ideas of Britishness?
· How have the Irish enacted and interacted with ideas of nation and identity in a British context, and how has this been affected by changes in Ireland and key events in Irish-British relations?
· To what extent are the Irish in Britain an ‘acceptable’ ethnic minority?
· To what extent are the Irish in Britain ‘post-nationalist’ now?

CONFERENCE INFORMATION & TRAVEL BURSARIES
This conference will examine performances of Irish identity in the urbancentres of Britain since thebeginning of the 19th
century. The idea of performance is intended to includeevents staged in the theatres and on the streets, for example parades,
musical performances and political demonstrations.

By discussing such performances and their reception by variousaudiences, speakers and delegates will examine the ways that
'Irishness' has changed in meaning and association in Britain, pressurised by contexts such ascolonialism and nationalism,
modernisation and economic change in Ireland, theTroubles and the Peace Process, and others.

Keynote speakers: Mary Hickman, Professor of Irish Studies and Sociology, London Metropolitan University, and 2010 visiting
Senior Research Fellow at the UCD John Hume Institute,
and Patrick Mason, Director, Adjunct Professor, University College Dublin, and Visiting Professor, Liverpool Hope University.

Other speakers include: Claire Connolly, Mike Cronin, Karen Fricker, Nicholas Grene, Richard Kirkland, Patrick Lonergan, Holly
Maples, Victor Merriman, Aoife Monks, Jim Moran, Catherine Rees, Shaun Richards.

Organisers: Aidan Arrowsmith, Manchester Metropolitan University & Emilie Pine, University College Dublin.

For further information on the conference, please see the website www.irishtheatricaldiaspora.org
or contact: ITDConference2010@gmail.com.

GRADUATE TRAVEL BURSARIES
There are a limited number of Graduate Travel Bursaries available for this conference. These have been provided by the UCD John
Hume Institute.

PhDstudents and post-doctoral researchers who wish to apply for a travel bursaryshould submit a 300-word statement outlining how
attendance will be valuable totheir own research. Priority considerationwill be given to those applicants who do not otherwise
have access toinstitutional support.

Applications for bursaries should be sent to: Dr Emilie Pine, School of English, Drama andFilm, UCD (Emilie.Pine@ucd.ie) by
March
14th.



________________
Dr Aidan Arrowsmith
Senior Lecturer in English
Department of English
Manchester Metropolitan University
Manchester M15 6LL
UK
0161 247 2000 x3723
URL: http://www.irishtheatricaldiaspora.org