An Fód Dúchais: Home, Heritage and Origins
The 8th International Flann O’Brien Conference
Alley Arts & Conference Centre, Strabane, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland
24-27th June 2025
Following successful conferences in Cluj (2023); Boston (2022); Dublin (2019); Salzburg (2017); Prague (2015); Rome (2013); Vienna (2011), The 8th International Flann O’Brien Conference will convene in Strabane, Tyrone, Northern Ireland. Hosted by the International Flann O’Brien Society, the Strabane Historical Society and the University of Notre Dame delegates will meet to discuss and debate the latest research, trends and topics in the growing discipline of Flann O’Brien studies while also celebrating the life and work of one of Ireland greatest 20th-century prose writers
On the border between the Republic of Ireland and the North of Ireland, between the Lagan and Donegal, and at the confluence of the Rivers Mourne and Finn as they merge to form the River Foyle, Strabane served as a “second home” for The O’Nolans/Na Nuallánaigh. An Srath Bán (The white river-holm) conveys notions of flooded plains, submerged levels, hidden spaces and liminal zones as well as contested and divided places and hybridity. “Home” is a key concept, a place of emotional and physical refuge to which the fortunate among us frequently long to return. Ideas of home are often expressions of a “nostalgia for the past”, alerting us to the present’s faults and fault lines.
In addition to Flann O’Brien and Ciarán Ó Nualláin, Strabane is home to the hymn writer Cecil Frances Alexander of All Things Bright and Beautiful fame; and John Dunlap, printer of the American Declaration of Independence. An Fód Dúchais: Home, Heritage and Origins invites participants to address a variety of topics, including but not limited to the following:
- Flann and concepts of home/return
- Flann and liminality
- Flann and the uncanny
- Flann and language
- Flann and war/violence
- Flann agus an Ghaeilge
- Flann and topography
- Strabane's influence on Flann
- Flann and ideas of absence
- Flann and hybridity
- Flann and politics
- Flann and gender
- Flann and science
- Figures of duality & division in Flann
- The Irish language in Tyrone
- Flann’s fiction and non-fiction
The conference will be an in-person event (i.e., there are no plans for online or hybrid components).
The conference registration fee is £50 for graduate students, and £80 for those in full time employment. The registration fee covers admission, regular coffee breaks, and lunch. A subsidised conference banquet is available for an additional £20. Please forward paper proposals (20-minute papers, max 200 words abstracts and 5-line biographical note) to the organizing committee by 1 December 2024.
Email brianoconchubhair@yahoo.com
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