Rachael A. Young (she/her)

Postdoctoral Fellow and Program Coordinator in Irish Studies

Department

History

Current Research

Rachael's dissertation is a comparative analysis of community murals painted in Belfast and Brixton during the 1980s. She examines murals painted in Belfast after the 1981 hunger strike in the nationalist/republican community and murals painted in Brixton after the 1981 anti-police uprisings in the Black community. She argues that after these very public clashes with representatives of Thatcher's government, the nationalist/republican community in Belfast and the Black community in Brixton used murals as a less violent, but no less visible tool to protest, what they believed to be, injustices committed by the British government. Each community used murals as a visual tool to challenge the law-and-order narrative of the Thatcher government, instead presenting a counter-narrative to tell their own story and better their communities.

Fellowships and Awards
  • Larkin Dissertation Research Fellowship, American Conference for Irish Studies, 2021
  • North American Conference for British Studies Dissertation Fellowship runner-up, 2020
  • Donald J. White Teaching Excellence Award for Graduate Teaching, Boston College, 2020
  • Joint Recipient of the O’Reilly Finley Fellowship, Boston College, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021
  • Boston College Irish Studies Fellow, Boston College, 2017
    Temple University Achievement Scholarship, Temple University, 2009-2013
  • Adele Dalsimer Fellow, Boston College, 2022-2023

Publications

“‘We can’t keep painting over our problems’: Murals, Social Media, and Feminist Activism in Ireland”, Éire-Ireland, 56, no. 3 & 4 (Fall/Winter 2021): 320-345