Knihobot

Stephen Rowley

    Kindling Ashes
    The Woman from the Other Side
    Movie Towns and Sitcom Suburbs
    • Movie Towns and Sitcom Suburbs

      Building Hollywood's Ideal Communities

      • 272 stránek
      • 10 hodin čtení

      Examining Hollywood films and television, this study analyzes how media representations of ideal communities shape public perceptions and aspirations for real-life living environments. Rowley delves into the consequences of trying to recreate these fictional communities, highlighting the disconnect between media portrayals and the complexities of real-world community building. Through this exploration, the book offers insights into the impact of popular culture on societal expectations and the pursuit of community ideals.

      Movie Towns and Sitcom Suburbs
    • This collection of short stories focuses on the lives of ordinary working-class people from Northern Ireland. It is set against the backdrop of the 'Troubles' and the province's more recent history. Strong female characters often carry the narrative, and the story which gives its title to the collection is that of a Catholic woman from the South who marries a staunch Northern Protestant, and they settle in Belfast. The strife which ensues reflects the divided communities which the rest of the book can testify to. In their depiction of everyday violence and intimidation, the stories bring to light more latent themes of homosexuality, sexism, and prejudice. A strong focus on family bonds means that the collection provokes a profound resonance with a large number of us who have grown up in tight family circles. In many ways, the 'Troubles' serve to underline the tensions inherent in these bonds.

      The Woman from the Other Side
    • Kindling Ashes

      • 206 stránek
      • 8 hodin čtení

      Spanning fifty pivotal years of the Northern Ireland Troubles, this novel weaves personal histories with national events-from the 1969 torching of Bombay Street to the 2019 commemoration of that fateful day. Through an intimate lens, the Dunmurry Train bombing, Omagh attack, and other harrowing milestones unfold. As the final instalment in a trilogy of poetry and prose about the Troubles, this work captures their tragic yet humorous essence with wider scope and more conclusive understanding. Sombre yet insightful, the novel traces one family's journey through the violence as they try to make sense of Northern Ireland's bloody history. From the uneasy beginnings in 1969 to the reflective memorials decades later, their story confronts the past while moving uncertainly toward peace.

      Kindling Ashes