(Un)settlement: political parody and the northern Irish peace process

Ilha Do Desterro

Endereço:
Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina - UFSC Centro de Comunicação e Expressão - CCE Departamento de Pós-graduação em Língua Inglesa e Literatura Cor
Florianópolis / SC
0
Site: http://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/desterro/issue/current
Telefone: (48) 3721-9288
ISSN: 1014846
Editor Chefe: Daniela Fany Hess
Início Publicação: 28/02/1979
Periodicidade: Semestral
Área de Estudo: Letras

(Un)settlement: political parody and the northern Irish peace process

Ano: 2010 | Volume: 0 | Número: 58
Autores: Mark Phelan
Autor Correspondente: Mark Phelan | [email protected]

Palavras-chave: tim loane, northern ireland, peace process, post-conflict theatre, comedy, historiography, media, sinn fein, dup

Resumos Cadastrados

Resumo Inglês:

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.