Read The Banshees: A Literary History of Irish American Women Online
Authors: Sally Barr Ebest
Tags: #Social Science, #Literary Criticism, #English; Irish; Scottish; Welsh, #Feminism & Feminist Theory, #European
50 | T H E B A N S H E E S
Waters was not alone. America experienced a spike in divorces after
World War II, jumping from approximately 16.7 percent in 1936 to 26.4
percent in 1946 (Day 1964, 511). Despite the Catholic prohibition against
divorce, these fi gures varied little between Catholics and Protestants, averag-
ing 21 and 25 percent, respectively (Robinson 2008). Divorce rates dropped
in the 1950s, when approximately 80 percent of Americans were married.
But it would be a mistake to infer that these statistics refl ect overall marital
satisfaction, for couples in those days separated much more often than they
divorced (Gerson 205–7), and there is enormous anecdotal evidence to sug-
gest countless unhappy marriages. Nor do these statistics suggest a general
acceptance of divorce among Catholics. Mary Gordon notes that her mother,
a legal secretary, explained that her boss did not “‘handle divorce.’ She said
this as if divorce were a particularly nasty, possibly toxic species of effl uvia,
which they very well knew better than to touch” (2007, 23).
Despite their Catholic upbringing, this sampling of midcentury Irish
American women writers greatly exceeded the national average of divorces
long before they became commonplace. Perhaps as a result, they also con-
formed with the fad of seeking psychoanalysis to understand themselves.
Caryl Rivers offers one explanation: “I would love to see the data on how
many female alcoholics and frigid wives evolved out of that crazy indoctrina-
tion” (1973, 185).
Work + Religion + Education = Assimilation
Regardless of their marital or psychological problems, Irish American
women writers at midcentury outperformed their unhyphenated peers. In
1959, while the average American woman was engaged at age seventeen,
married by twenty, and mother of four by twenty-four, Irish Catholic fami-
lies were encouraging their daughters to postpone marriage. Although the
proportion of women attending college dropped from 47 percent in 1920, to
35 percent in 1958—increasing numbers of Irish American women went to
college and worked throughout their lives (Woods 2005). “A century earlier,
women had fought for higher education; now girls went to college to get a
husband” (Friedan 1973, 150). Not so with the Irish Americans.
Just as “Teaching ultimately allowed daughters . . . of immigrants to
leave the working class and enter the educated lower middle class” (Nolan
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2004, 137), education in the postwar years ensured that Irish American
women writers continued to move up. They went to college when other
women were dropping out; they were among the 15 percent who married
and kept working. They established careers that granted them membership
in the top tier of Catholic professionals, the 9 percent of Catholics in the
upper class (Schneider 1952). That they did so long before the advent of
second-wave feminism no doubt accounts for their above-average rates of
marriage, divorce, and psychoanalysis.
The works discussed here confi rm these statistics; more important, they
also relate aspects of Irish America that challenge its conventional portrayal
as a conformist patriarchy in which women were at most housekeepers or
nannies, their parents pious simpletons or atavistic ethnics. This picture of
Irish America not only offers a convincing response to the traditional mono-
lithic view; it also reveals how Irish American women laid the groundwork
for future generations.
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2
The 1960s
The Rise of Feminism
I am as dull as the picture I ripped out of the frame, dull as
the idea of a mirror over the couch. Impersonation of wife and
mother. I have begun to wonder what I am like in real life.
—Maureen Howard,
Facts of Life
The Eisenhower era provided a seedbed for American feminism. Whereas
the war years had encouraged married women to leave their homes
to support the war effort, the postwar years pushed them back. As chapter
1 outlined, a cultural and public relations blitz resulted in a “consolidated
attack on women’s new-found freedom.” Women were urged to stay home,
take advantage of all the new labor saving devices, and view their roles as
wife and mother as embodying “autonomy and responsibility” if not destiny
(Whelehan 1995, 7). Many succumbed. Across America, the average marriage
age fell to twenty, the lowest since the 1900s; overall 70 percent of young
women were married by age twenty-four. Worse, single women over twenty-
four were considered old maids (Davis 1991, 17). But although motherhood
is important it is hardly glamorous, and while vacuum cleaners and washing
machines made housework easier, they could not make it fun. Regardless of
age or ethnicity, many American women felt alienated and dehumanized by
housework (Whelehan 1995, 9). Thus it is not surprising that, apart from the
civil rights movement, the most important and enduring social phenomenon
of this decade was women’s liberation (Woods 2005, 363).
This chapter traces the growth of the women’s movement as portrayed
in Irish American women’s writing in the 1960s. Through their novels and
5 2
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short stories, these authors reminded readers that in love, marriage, work,
and religion, women were second-class citizens and they were not happy
about it—an attitude most often conveyed via satire to illustrate the “femi-
nine mystique.” The 1960s saw Irish American women’s novels lamenting
unhappy marriages, condescending husbands, and domestic abuse, themes
characterizing their status at home, at work, and at church.
Why such a consistent message? Because Irish American writers had an
advantage unavailable to their peers. Whereas many women found it diffi cult
to organize because they lived in different neighborhoods or lacked a central
organizing body and could not build the critical mass necessary to effect
political change (Woods 2005, 364), through the mid-sixties Irish Ameri-
cans were still bound by their religious beliefs and thus possessed a “collec-
tive consciousness” (Cochrane 2010, 2). Most important, as members of the
largest, most enduring, and most literate of American ethnic groups, Irish
American women not only had a long history of voicing displeasure through
their writing but they also anticipated the need for change.
In this they consistently pre-dated their closest literary rivals, Jewish
American women. Whereas Ruth Herschberger’s
Adam’s Rib
(1948), Alva
Myrdal and Viola Klein’s
Women’s Two Roles
(1956), Rona Jaffe’s
The Best of
Everything
(1958), and Alix Kate Shulman’s
Memoirs of an Ex-Prom Queen
(1971) have been cited as the earliest twentieth-century feminist novels
(Brownmiller 1999, 40, 45), Irish American women were actually the fi rst
to raise these issues. Mary McCarthy published
The Company She Keeps
in
1942 and Maeve Brennan’s “Talk of the Town” had been satirizing male
vanity since 1949. During the 1960s, Helen Gurley Brown gained fame for
Sex and the Single Girl
(1962); Maureen Howard put a satirical, feminist spin
on the message in
Bridgeport Bus
(1963); Elizabeth Cullinan criticized the
infl uence of the Catholic Church in her 1960s
New Yorker
stories; and Mary
Daly blew them all away by arguing for women’s equality in
The Church
and the Second Sex
(1968). Given their history, it is not surprising that Irish
American women were ready for the women’s movement, for they had been
fi ghting this battle throughout their adult lives.
During the 1960s, Women’s Liberation movements sprang up all over
the country, among them the New York Radicals, the Chicago Women’s
Liberation Union, and Boston’s Cell 16 of Female Liberation. After the
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54 | T H E B A N S H E E S
New York Radicals grew too unwieldy, the Redstockings formed as a splin-
ter group. WITCH—known variously as Women’s International Terrorist
Conspiracy from Hell, Women Inspired to Tell Their Collective History, or
Women Interested in Toppling Consumer Holidays—was formed to move
from raising consciousness to raising hell, with factions in New York, Wash-
ington, DC, and elsewhere. Angered by Jewish feminists’ assumptions that
their Catholic counterparts were “intellectually inferior” because of their
working-class backgrounds, the Irish American Redstocking Sheila Cro-
nan formed a separate group—the Class Workshop—to discuss how their
upbringing had affected Catholic women’s confi dence and political rheto-
ric (Brownmiller 1999, 65). A radical feminist, Cronan instigated the plan
to hang a banner from the Statue of Liberty reading “Free Abortion on
Demand,” an idea unfortunately scuttled; she was also one of the fi rst to
argue that marriage enslaved women and that to achieve equality, it should
be abolished (Echols 1989, 142).
Irish Jewish friction was clearly a by-product of World War II. Prior to
the war, Irish American women dominated the female sphere of the publish-
ing world, representing the major female ethnic group among the literati.
But after the war, thanks to the infl ux of Jewish immigrants and Americans’
response to the Holocaust, anti-Semitism faded in the face of postwar pros-
perity, necessitating an expanded workforce; consequently, Jews became a
part of the mainstream, entering the white-collar echelons and moving to
the suburbs. Whereas the best-known female Jewish writers (surrounded by
uber males Alfred Kazin, Philip Roth, and Saul Bellow) had been Ayn Rand,
Anzia Yezierska, and Gertrude Stein, the postwar era saw the emergence of
Hannah Arendt, Jane Bowles, Martha Gellhorn, Diana Trilling, Fay Kanin,
Maxine Kumin, Adrienne Rich, and Susan Sontag, to name just a few. And
whereas prewar fi ction by Jewish writers had centered around typical immi-
grant themes, postwar fi ction became generically Jewish. Moreover, to main-
tain their identity, Jewish literature often featured the Jewish intellectual
(Hoberek 2005, 71).
This attitude stood in sharp contrast to that of Irish American writ-
ers, who had been raised with the desire to assimilate. Unlike the Jewish
populace, Irish Americans were often ashamed of overt intellectualism. As
Daniel Patrick Moynihan explained, “Derision of the hifalutin all too easily
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shaded into contempt for intelligence and learning, particularly on the lace-
curtain fringe” (quoted in Dezell 2001, 30). This view was not held by Irish
American women writers, however: highly educated, they wrote to protest
infringement on women’s rights. They did not need to preserve their ethnic-
ity, for Irish American traits were simply a part of their cultural inheritance.
Further evidence of Jewish-Catholic intellectual rivalry was evidenced
in 1963, when the two most popular publications to explore feminist issues
were Mary McCarthy’s novel,
The Group
, and Betty Friedan’s investigative
study,
The Feminine Mystique
.
The Group
spent almost two years atop the
New York Times
best-seller fi ction list and made McCarthy an international
fi gure, selling over 370,000 copies during 1964 and over 5.2 million by
1991 (Brightman 1992, 480, 484, 486). At the same time,
The Feminine
Mystique
spent six weeks at number 1 on the nonfi ction list, selling over 3
million copies in just fi ve years (Menand 2011). Both authors illustrate the
push-pull of feminism for women of their generation who had “made it”
without the benefi t of second-wave feminism (Howard 1997).
Although McCarthy graduated from Vassar and Friedan from Smith,
themselves seedbeds of feminism, both women conveyed mixed messages on
the subject. McCarthy’s motto was taken from Chaucer’s Criseyde—“I am
myn owene woman, wel at ease” (“Brooks Brothers,” 104). Nevertheless, she
was often quoted as saying that feminism “is bad for women. . . . [I]t induces
a very bad emotional state,” fomenting emotions such as “self-pity, covet-
ousness, and greed” by indicting “self-dependency” and emphasizing “male
privilege.” Still, McCarthy admitted she was “sort of an Uncle Tom from