<b>(Un)settlement: political parody and the Northern Irish peace process</b><br>

Autores

  • Mark Phelan Queen's University Belfast

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5007/2175-8026.2010n58p191

Resumo

This essay examines Tim Loane's political comedies, Caught Red-Handed and To Be Sure, and their critique of the Northern Irish peace process. As "parodies of esteem", both plays challenge the ultimate electoral victors of the peace process (the Democratic Unionist Party and Sinn Féin) as well as critiquing the cant, chicanery and cynicism that have characterised their political rhetoric and the peace process as a whole. This essay argues that Loane's transformation of these comedic pantomime horses into Trojan ones loaded with a ruthless polemical critique of our ruling political elites is all the more important in the context of a self-censoring media that has stifled dissent and debate by protecting the peace process from inconvenient truths. From these close and contextual readings of Loane's plays, wider issues relating to the political efficacy of comedy and its canonical relegation below 'higher forms' in Irish theatre historiography will also be considered.

Biografia do Autor

Mark Phelan, Queen's University Belfast

Mark Phelan has been a Lecturer in Drama at Queen's University Belfast since 2001. Mark's research focuses on Irish Theatre, specializing in theatre and performance in the North of Ireland. He has published a number of articles on Irish theatre and photography and is currently working on three book projects: a monograph on the Northern Revival and the Ulster Literary Theatre; a commissioned collection of essays on Stewart Parker; and a collection of Stewart Parker's unpublished stage & radio plays.

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Publicado

2010-01-01

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