It is with great pleasure – and with grave reservation at having to resort to the use of clichés – that I introduce this issue’s Poet in Profile as ‘No Stranger to Controversy’. It is maybe a little too cheap […]
Read more →Censored, a series of free lectures, is currently being held at the National Print Museum. The lectures deal with the ways in which the press was censored in Ireland, from the arrival of printing in 1551 to the late 20th […]
Read more →“The Windows to the World” is the description by Erik de Kruijf from World Press for the planet’s most prestigious photo contest, which visits Dublin at the chq Building on the Irish leg of its world tour. Spanning almost six […]
Read more →We’re all anticipating it, it’s in the air. The Zombie Apocalypse. It’s not just the Walking Dead on TV, it’s not just the kids growing up on Left for Dead and Resident Evil, it’s that feeling that life is just […]
Read more →Combined Residents Against Incineration (CRAI) have called on the government to change the Waste Management Act 2001, to return decision making authority over waste management issues to the locally elected councillors in Dublin City Council. The Waste Management Act 2001 […]
Read more →Monday Cat Rescued from Tree The headline above is one you might expect to see in a local newspaper. It has long been used as a comedy foil in film and television when a regional or local paper is shown. […]
Read more →