Photographer Nicole Mullan is the Edge of Humanity Magazine contributor of this photo essay. From the ongoing project ‘North with the Spring ’. To see Nicole’s body of work, click on any image.
‘North with the Spring’ explores the fundamental questions surrounding Irish Diaspora and losing your identity after migration. It looks at the familiar through a new perspective, one that changes and alters over time but is always present and never forgotten. It often results in feelings of placelessness; living in-between worlds, neither existing fully in Ireland or in England, reflecting a constant shift or movement between places we call home. It highlights religion and borders as both physical and emotional boundaries, a reflection of my own identity, a constant search for belonging.
All images and text © Nicole Mullan
See also:
By Nicole Mullan
Edge of Humanity Magazine’s
FREE Projects & Other Services
To Promote Works From Artists,
Photographers, Poets & Writers

CONTRACT FREE
online platform for artists to sell their creations

Photo Curator
PHOTOGRAPHY BOOK, SHORT STORIES & MUSIC Recommendations FREE Platform For Artists NO MIDDLEMAN ART GALLERY In The Mind Of An Artist Open Submissions for Writers & Poets Photo Curator PRESS RELEASE On Edge of Humanity Magazine Photography Articles
Edge of Humanity Magazine is an independent nondiscriminatory platform that has no religious, political, financial, or social affiliations.
We are committed to publishing the human condition, the raw diverse global entanglement, with total impartiality.

Poetry BLOG By Edge of Humanity Magazine

By Edge of Humanity Magazine
Support This Small Independent Magazine
Please
DONATE
Follow Edge of Humanity Magazine
Email Subscriptions
WordPress Bloggers
Follow Edge of Humanity Magazine on WordPress.com
Not on WordPress?
Don’t Forget to add
to your reader or bookmarks
Thank you!
A really interesting and thought provoking piece that I think makes sense of the reasons why people may feel.
Losing your home and identity is quite a difficult thing to overcome but can also lead to feelings of hopelessness and despair as well as anger and resentment.