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The Curious Case of Cú Chulainn: Nationalism, Culture, and Meaning‐Making in the Contested Symbols of Northern Ireland
Author(s) -
Goalwin Gregory J.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
studies in ethnicity and nationalism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.204
H-Index - 8
eISSN - 1754-9469
pISSN - 1473-8481
DOI - 10.1111/sena.12304
Subject(s) - ideology , mythology , narrative , symbol (formal) , nationalism , politics , hero , meaning (existential) , sociology , irish , aesthetics , gender studies , media studies , literature , law , epistemology , political science , linguistics , philosophy , art
This article examines the ways that political movements utilize contested imagery to further ideological goals. While scholars have long recognized the importance of symbols for nationalism, most analyses rely on national symbols being relatively unambiguous. I seek to understand how such processes function when this is not the case, examining how organizations on both sides of the conflict in Northern Ireland deployed the same symbol – representations of the Irish hero Cú Chulainn – to support diametrically opposed political programmes. I argue that the different movements in Northern Ireland imbued symbols such as Cú Chulainn with their own meaning by emplotting them within their ideological narratives. These narratives shaped and gave significance to visual symbols, producing myths that sought to structure the ways members of society viewed the world. In return, these symbols and myths provided evidence which reciprocally strengthened and supported the ideological narratives of the movements that produced them, serving as potent reminders of the ideological worldview such narratives advocate.