Salis, Loredana
Loredana Salis is a former graduate from the University of Ulster, where she obtained an MA in Irish Literature in English (2001) and a PhD in Comparative Literatures with a thesis on the reworking of classical theatre in contemporary Irish drama (2005). Between 2006 and 2008 she began a co-financed research project between the Arts Faculty, Università di Sassari (Italy) and the Academy for Irish Cultural Heritages at the University of Ulster, Derry. While in Northern Ireland she worked as Research Associate in literary heritages and conducted research into the migrant communities of Ireland and their representations on the Irish stage, part of which has formed the basis for the present volume. She has also researched and published articles on the Irish Travellers, the Polish and Lithuanian communities in Northern Ireland, the Antigone myth in Italy, and patterns of pilgrimage in Ireland between tradition and globalisation. She moved back to Italy in 2008 where she began teaching English language. In 2009 she published Miti antichi, storie d’oggi (Pellegrini Editore) based on her doctoral research. She is now a part-time lecturer at the Università di Sassari.
Loredana Salis is a former graduate from the University of Ulster, where she obtained an MA in Irish Literature in English (2001) and a PhD in Comparative Literatures with a thesis on the reworking of classical theatre in contemporary Irish drama (2005). Between 2006 and 2008 she began a co-financed research project between the Arts Faculty, Università di Sassari (Italy) and the Academy for Irish Cultural Heritages at the University of Ulster, Derry. While in Northern Ireland she worked as Research Associate in literary heritages and conducted research into the migrant communities of Ireland and their representations on the Irish stage, part of which has formed the basis for the present volume. She has also researched and published articles on the Irish Travellers, the Polish and Lithuanian communities in Northern Ireland, the Antigone myth in Italy, and patterns of pilgrimage in Ireland between tradition and globalisation. She moved back to Italy in 2008 where she began teaching English language. In 2009 she published Miti antichi, storie d’oggi (Pellegrini Editore) based on her doctoral research. She is now a part-time lecturer at the Università di Sassari.