Cage Eleven By Gerry Adams
Gerry Adams' account of interment without trial in the 1970s in Long Kesh prison. Written while Adams was a prisoner, the pieces were originally smuggled out for publication. Updated, with a new introduction.
Long before he became President of Sinn Féin, Gerry Adams was a civil rights activist who took part in sit-ins, marches and protests in Northern Ireland. Along with hundreds of other men, Adams was interned on the Maidstone prison ship and in Long Kesh prison – without charge or trial – during the 1970s for his political activities. Women were interned also, in Armagh Women’s Prison. Cage Eleven is his own account – sometimes passionate, often humorous – of life in Long Kesh. Written while Adams was a prisoner, the pieces were smuggled out for publication.
This updated edition includes a new introduction and sketches drawn in Cage Eleven by another prisoner at the time, Danny Devenny.
‘Offers a unique insight into … the experience of internment … an unrivalled representation of the resilience and humour that were as much a part of the life of the political prisoner as the adherence to a set of political ideals.’ Irish Herald
- Shipping:
- Calculated at Checkout
Related Products
- Shop
- An Phoblacht
- Badges/Pins
- Beanies/Hats/Caps
- Bobby Sands/Hunger Strikers
- Books/Calendars
-
CD/DVD
- CD/DVD
- All CD/DVD
- DVD's
- Easter/Lilies
- FLAGS
- FRIDGE MAGNETS/STICKERS
- Historical photographs
- Jackets
- Jerseys
- Jewellery/Coins
- Leather Craft
- Martin McGuinness
- MUGS
- Palestine
- Postcards
- Prints/Posters/Postcards
- SALE
- T-Shirts
- Fundraising