Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category

Kudos to the North Inner City Action Group for their involvement in the 16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence Campaign which began on November 25, the International Day Against Violence Against Women, and ends on December 10, International Human Rights Day. These dates “symbolically link violence against women and human rights, and emphasize that such violence is a human rights violation.” (From the 16 Days Facebook.)

Breaking the Silence... Banner on Mountjoy Square railings.

More:  http://www.womensaid.ie/16daysblog/2011/11/10/north-inner-city-domestic-violence-action-group-pu-1/

Read Full Post »

A fantastic, well made, moving biopics on one of the most important Irish republican socialists of the last fifty years.

From a Dublin perspective, it is worth going along just to see the amazing footage of anti- HBlock demonstrators on O’Connell St. in the early 1980s and the half depressing/half comic footage of republicans throwing chairs at each other at a meeting in the Mansion House called to build irish republican socialist unity. I think this meeting was held in the run up to the formation of the Irish Republican Socialist Party (IRSP) in late 1974 but am not sure.

Film times at IFI.

Read Full Post »

Student Revolt! by Carol Coulter. Click here for PDF

Blast from the past time, and with last weeks USI walkabout in the city centre I thought I’d scan up an article dealing with the Irish student movement from Workers Republic, published by The League for a Workers Republic.

The article was written by Carol Coulter and she writes of the various student groupings active in Irish colleges and univiersites at the time, for example The Internationalists who sprung up at Trinity College Dublin and the Students For Democratic Action which emerged out of University College Dublin.

There is great information on the League for a Workers Republic to be found on Cedar Lounge, while Conor McCabe of Dublin Opinion has written a wonderful piece on The Internationalists including some great scanned publications.

What was the Irish student movement like before Gary Redmond? Read it and see.

Read Full Post »

  • Click here for PDF File.

    Here’s a fascinating article from a 1973 edition of Social Studies, the Irish Journal of Sociology, which looks at the economic backgrounds of participants in the 1916 rebellion. “An analysis of those who made the 1916 revolution in Ireland”, it was compiled by Stein Ugelvik Larsen of Bergan University and Oliver Snoddy of the National Museum of Ireland.

    A link to the scanned article was first posted on The Irish Republic, website of Tom Stokes, himself the grandson of a participant in the insurrection. The site aims to spark debate around the idea of the ‘Republic’, and is timely considering the decade of centenaries we are now in!

    Below is a screenshot from the PDF to give you an idea whats inside. If you missed the link it’s at the top of this post.

    (more…)

  • Read Full Post »

    One of the most interesting aspects of the global #Occupy movement in my eyes has been the propaganda produced. The imagery of Occupy Wall Street has already become iconic, the Adbusters poster depicting the Wall Street bull and the question ‘What is our one demand?’ has been copied by international occupations that have sprung up. I visited Occupy London last week and noticed that there, many of the posters took aim at the coalition government there and utilised London landmarks for visual purposes.

    Here at home, Occupy Dame Street has produced a number of posters which have appeared both around the city and online. Below are a number of my favourites.

    ‘Keep Calm And Carry On’ gets a very Irish reworking, while the physical scale of the building itself features too. With Occupy Dame Street being an ongoing event, more posters and leaflets are surely ahead.

    Read Full Post »

    NAMAland.

    Today sees the repayment of an unsecured Anglo Irish Bank bond of E700,000,000, which the state has no obligation to pay but will. It seems a more than fitting day to post these great images from a recent action highlighting a very peculiar aspect of the baNAMA republic in the form of buildings in the city which sit empty, boarded-up and out of our hands.

    Read Full Post »

    Spotted this morning on Amien’s Street…

    Kangaroo Courts ahead!

    Good stuff… Silly billies must not have read stipulations with regard putting up posters on O’Connell Street though… Walking down this morning circa 8:00 there were twenty or so attached to traffic lights on the main strip; no sign of them at 12:30!

    Read Full Post »

    Here is the audio recording of the recent History Ireland Hedge School which I took part in. You can find a series of audio recordings from various Hedge Schools on the History Ireland site. Stick the kettle on…..

    Read Full Post »

    This is a great one, and a nice bit of labour history. This leaflet comes from the 1988 Dublin Fire Brigade dispute, from the Sinn Féin Trade Union Department. Details of the dispute are found on the reverse side of the leaflet below. Who is the brave fella on the front of the leaflet? Scroll down to see!

    (more…)

    Read Full Post »

    Rabble (Issue 1) out now

    rabble
    noun
    a disorderly crowd; a mob : “he was met by a rabble of noisy, angry youths.”
    • ( the rabble) ordinary people, esp. when regarded as socially inferior or uncouth.


    Last weekend, the poor unsuspecting population of our fair city were greeted with a new agit-prop free magazine Rabble. Think The Slate meets Red Pepper with a dash of Mad Magazine.

    5,000 copies were printed and over half, in a very short period of time, were distributed right around the city – cafes, pubs, dole queues and shops.

    Rabble’s manifesto (call to arms!) is loud and clear:

    Those behind this effort know each other from alternative media and street mobilisations, from raves, gigs and the football terraces, or by just living in the village that is Dublin. We range from people raising their families in the city, to community and political activists, to artists, messers and mischief-makers.
    With this paper we will  do something more than join the ad rags and mouthpieces for power that comprise most of the city’s freebies. We want to draw stories from the harsh realities of the city and sketch paths towards building Dublin as we’d prefer it. Consider this an effort to breathe new life into journalism in the city, as well as a space for emerging writers. Down the line, expect original story-telling and explorations of the boundaries between photography, new fiction, journalism and art.

    rabble stands within, and with, Dublin as it struggles from below against the ghost of the Celtic Tiger and the state it left us in. We support those who fight with a new world in their hearts and encourage those who create cultures that seed hope in bleak times. Try to imagine a newspaper acting like a melting pot of connections, not just between emergent cultural scenes and everyday life, but also between social movements and power structures.

    Yours truly has an interview with Garry O’Neill (author of the upcoming Where Were You? – photographic history of Dublin youth culture) on page three, which can be read here.

    Find a copy of the newspaper in real life.

    Write for us.

    Comment on any of the articles.

    Give us money.

    Like us on Facebook.

    Advertise.

    Read Full Post »

    I absolutely love this, a recent pick-up. It is a copy of J’ai Vu (I Saw) magazine from just after rebellion in Dublin, dated May sixth. Of course at that point in time executions were still taking place.

    Great info on J’ai Vu is available here:

    ‘J’ai Vu’ (‘I Saw’ or ‘I Was an Eyewitness’) was somewhat similar to ‘Le Miroir’. It consisted mainly of war-related photos with a few articles. The first weekly issue appeared in November 1914, when it became obvious the war would not be over with for some time to come yet. Between August and October of 1914, publication of many French magazines was interrupted by the outbreak of war. Around the same time, new magazines, publishing almost exclusively war news started to appear.

    The frontpage shows General Maxwell who supressed the rebellon in Ireland. Notice the ‘Sinn Féiner’ shown (!), and the reference to Sir. Roger Casement is interesting. Enjoy.

    Read Full Post »

    Much more where these came from friends, but consider this the first in a series of posts on Punch cartoons from London in 1920, detailing Irish political affairs. I came into posession of a good sized collection of originals recently and intend to scan them up here to the site. They deal with a wide range of issues, ranging from Sinn Féin to munitions strikes, Home Rule to policing in Ireland.

    (more…)

    Read Full Post »

    « Newer Posts - Older Posts »