Abstract / Description of output
If all national identity is performative, the Northern Irish national identity offers a particularly pronounced model of this performative instability. Such precarity was emphasised when the 2016 UK-EU ‘Brexit’ referendum raised contentious questions over Northern Irish citizenship. This article explores how two recent Northern Irish performance pieces, David Ireland’s Cyprus Avenue (2016) and Clare Dwyer Hogg’s Hard Border (2018), probe the unsettled plurality of Northern Irish national identity through the casting of actor Stephen Rea in their respective central roles. Rea’s own personal and professional history, as a figure inflected in the public mind with an extreme range of potential ‘Northern Irish identities’, encapsulates the shifting boundaries of an unstable, performative spectrum of ethno-national selfhood. This article explores how the lingering memories of Rea’s on- and offstage past offer a fittingly multi-layered, even contradictory, representation of contemporary Northern Irish identity.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 307-321 |
Journal | New theatre quarterly |
Volume | 39 |
Issue number | 4 |
Early online date | 8 Nov 2023 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 15 Nov 2023 |
Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)
- Northern Irish
- nationality
- nation
- politics
- celebrity
- ghosting
- theatre
- performance-poem