Book now for the Geoff Egan Memorial Lecture and AGM 2024!
This year’s Geoff Egan Memorial Lecture will be given by Professor Laura McAtackney on 15 December. SPMA welcome’s you to Bournemouth University Talbot Campus. The lecture and drinks reception are free of charge but places must be booked. The lecture will be at 17:00 in the Inspire Lecture Hall, Fusion Building, Talbot Campus.
Our AGM will be held during the afternoon of 15 December. The lecture is scheduled for 16:30. Venue details will be sent to booked attendees.
Professor Laura McAtackney: The potentials and limits of conducting archaeologies of the Northern Ireland Troubles and peace process: reflections over 20 years
The question that has haunted me through my research career has been what are the potentials and limits of material culture in revealing unresolved aspects of difficult recent pasts, most specifically in the conflict and peace in the North of Ireland? It is a question I have been trying to answer for over twenty years and one that has involved engaging with various material forms that have constantly been in motion and in flux. My first inclination was to turn to an ‘icon’ of the conflict, Long Kesh / Maze prison, as a monumental and materially rich site that was largely off-limits to researchers. The politics of its inaccessible dereliction meant I had to consider it in an expansive way as a place with ‘distributed self’ (2014) that materially and psychically reached far beyond its confines and deep into communities. It was in those communities that I eventually started traversing streets and noting their ever changing configurations of murals, graffiti, and grassroots memorials creating memoryscapes alongside enduringly materialized segregation, so-called ‘peace walls’. More recently, I have thought on how my understandings of the conflict has been shaped not only by presences but also absences; a place with a desire for peace but also fear of forgetting injustices. Ultimately, my faith and despair in material answers to loaded questions has evolved in ways that I could never have foreseen at the start and so this lecture will consider what under-explored pasts have been revealed and what are the limits of the material in knowing the contemporary.