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
and cousin Maria Shriver gained fame as a television personality. Eileen Col-
lins was the fi rst woman to pilot the space shuttle; in 1999, she became
the fi rst woman to command one. That same year, Kathleen Sullivan had
the honor of becoming the fi rst woman to head Stanford Law School. As
increasing numbers of women melded work with philanthropic activities,
Mary Pat O’Connor inaugurated the Brigid Award luncheon to recognize
Chicago’s professional women “whose lives and work refl ect the sense of jus-
tice, generosity, and compassion” exemplifi ed by St. Brigid of Ireland (Dezell
2001, 90).
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Indeed, the 1990s witnessed a burgeoning Irish popularity. In 1993,
Notre Dame and New York Universities established the fi rst endowed cen-
ters for Irish Studies; by 1996, twenty-six universities offered Irish Studies
courses. Such increases refl ected not only the widespread existence of Irish
immigrants, who comprised 18 percent of the U.S. population, but also the
desire of newly suburban Irish Americans to retain their ethnicity (Dolan
2008, 305–6). In keeping with Irish American women’s history of academic
achievement, this decade saw the publication of signifi cant scholarly works.
Doris Kearns Goodwin published a second edition of her biography of Lyn-
don Johnson in 1991; four years later,
No Ordinary Time
(1995), which
described the partnership between Theodore and Eleanor Roosevelt during
World War II, came out, followed a year later by
Character Above All: Ten
President
, and her memoir,
Wait Till Next Year
, in 1998.
The religious theologian Mary Jo Weaver published
Springs of Water in
a Dry Land: Catholic Women and Spiritual Survival Today
and was promptly
awarded the 1993 Midwest Book Achievement Award for “Best Religious
Book.” Two years later, the tenth-anniversary edition of her groundbreak-
ing work,
New Catholic Women: A Contemporary Challenge to Traditional
Religious Authority
, came out. This was followed by two politically oriented
edited collections:
Being Right: Conservative Catholics in America
(1995)
and
What’s Left?: Liberal American Catholics
(1999). Unlike many antholo-
gies, these were collaborative efforts; each section emerged from working
groups and expert critiques before being submitted for publication (Weaver
1994, x). During this period, realizing that “wherever [she] went, the rules
for gender inequality still applied” (McGoldrick 1994, 222), the fourth-
generation Irish American Monica McGoldrick moved from family therapy
per se to a more specifi c focus with
Women in Families
(1991),
You Can Go
Home Again
(1995), and
Re-Visioning Family Therapy: Race, Culture, and
Gender in Clinical Practice
(1998).
In literature, the 1990s were hailed as the “feminization of the liter-
ary market” thanks to an “absolute burgeoning of fi rst-rate women writ-
ers” (Showalter 2009, 495). This area was dominated by Irish American
women. Alice McDermott’s
Charming Billy
(1999) won the National Book
Award for Fiction.
Time Magazine
listed Mary McGarry Morris’s
A Danger-
ous Woman
(1991) as one of the “Five Best Novels of the Year,” as did the
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American Library Association Library Journal. Morris’s
Songs in Ordinary
Time
(1995) was equally popular: it made the
New York Times
“Best Sellers”
list, was featured on Oprah’s Book Club, and became a TV movie. Eileen
Myles’s co-edited book,
The New Fuck You
, won the Lambda award in 1996,
while her poetry won again in 1999. During the 1990s, Anna Quindlen,
Maureen Dowd, and Gail Collins were awarded Pulitzer Prizes for their
columns in the
New York Times
, as was Eileen McNamara for the
Boston
Globe
(Dezell 2001, 115). The memoirist Lucy Grealy won numerous awards
for her poetry as well as the Whiting Writer’s Award in 1995 (University of
Iowa); in 1998, her best friend and biographer, Ann Patchett, was short-
listed for the Booker Award. But no one could top Joyce Carol Oates. Dur-
ing the 1990s alone, Oates earned the PEN/Malamud Award for Excellence
in the Art of the Short Story, the
Boston Book Review’s
Fisk Fiction Prize, the
Bram Stoker Award, and the Rea Award for the Short Story. She was also co-
winner of the Heidemann Award for one-act plays, twice-nominated for the
Pulitzer, and a contender for the PEN/Faulkner Award, the National Book
Critics Circle Award, and the National Book Award.
Irish women were also recognized for their work in drama and tele-
vision. Anna Manahan and Marie Mullen won Best Featured Actress and
Best Actress awards, respectively, for Martin McDonagh’s
Beauty Queen of
Leenane
(1998). On television,
Northern Exposure
had strong-willed Mag-
gie O’Connell,
Murphy Brown
centered around the eponymous single mom
and star reporter,
The X-Files’
co-star was the Irish Catholic FBI agent Dana
Scully, MD, and Emmy-winner Rosie O’Donnell was a favorite daytime talk
show hostess. Considering that as late as 1990, Irish American women out-
numbered their male counterparts by 30 percent, the presence and accom-
plishments of these women should come as no surprise (Dezell 2001, 110).
Roles for women in specifi cally Irish fi lms were more refl ective of their
heritage. In
The Crying Game
(1992), Miranda Richardson played a murder-
ous IR A member.
The Playboys
(1992),
The Snapper
(1993), and
Circle of
Friends
(1995) protested the Irish Catholic law prohibiting extramarital sex
(Almeida 2001, 87). The 1993 fi lm,
In the Name of the Father
, Jim Sheri-
dan’s Oscar-nominated version of the trial of Gerry Conlon and the Guild-
ford Four, starred Emma Thompson as tough-minded Gareth Peirce, the
lawyer who defended them.
Some Mother’s Son
(1996), co-written by Tony
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George and Jim Sheridan, starred Helen Mirren and Fionnula Flanagan as
mothers who try to save their sons’ lives during the 1981 hunger strike in
Northern Ireland’s Maze Prison.
In a decade dominated by action movies starring steroid-fueled muscle
men, a few women’s movies nonetheless stood out.
The Piano
,
The Wide
Sargasso Sea
,
The Age of Innocence
,
Portrait of a Lady
,
Shakespeare in Love
,
The Cider House Rules
, and
Girl, Interrupted
reminded viewers of the rights
women had won regarding marriage, mental health, and abortion. Other
fi lms featured strong women determined to make it in a man’s world. Sigour-
ney Weaver’s Lt. Ripley reappeared as feisty as ever in
Alien 3
, while Frances
McDormand’s portray of the pregnant female cop Marge Gunderson was
one of the bright lights in
Fargo
. Jodie Foster portrayed a valiant FBI agent
in
The Silence of the Lambs
and Cameron Diaz played a doctor in
There’s
Something about Mary
, while Susan Sarandon and Gina Davis shot a would-
be rapist and refused to go quietly in
Thelma and Louise
. The divorcées in
The First Wives Club
got revenge on their philandering husbands, whereas
in
Get Shorty
, Rene Russo was clearly the brains of the outfi t. Of course,
not every movie offered positive images.
Pretty Woman
tried to make pros-
titution look fun, while
Basic Instinct’s
Sharon Stone and Juliette Lewis in
Natural Born Killers
most likely scared every man in the room.
Actually, the dearth of such negative fi lms is somewhat surprising, con-
sidering that every period of feminist success has been followed by a back-
lash. Just as the Reagan administration made it socially acceptable to criticize
feminism in the 1980s, early successes in the 1990s were once again followed
by hostile responses later in the decade. Indeed, the antifeminist backlash
of the 1990s paralleled the strategies of a decade earlier. Critics used “the
very hard-earned
gains
of the feminist movement against women; women’s
successes [were] turned around as the very reasons for women’s
losses
” (Fer-
guson, Katrak, and Miner 1996, 50–51). This backlash was not without
consequence.
Whereas the decades prior to 1990 refl ected a predominantly feminist
stance among Irish American women writers, the 1990s suggest a more
refracted sensibility. Mary Gordon’s memoir,
Shadow Man
(1997), moves
away from women’s issues to describe her search for the truth about her
father; moreover, rather than continue her feminist themes, Gordon uses
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this tract as a way to extract further literary revenge against her maternal
aunts. Although loyal second wavers such as Maureen Howard, Joyce Carol
Oates, and Anna Quindlen continued writing feminist novels, the previ-
ously neutral or uncommitted—like Tess Gallagher, Alice McDermott, Bob-
bie Ann Mason, and Beth Lordan—tended to subsume feminist issues by
featuring both male and female protagonists, a tendency suggesting move-
ment beyond “women’s writing” per se. Overall, this mixture of genres and
messages refl ected the “postmodern concept of hybridity” (Showalter 2009,
501–5)—something Irish Americans have practiced for years.
Equally important, such mixed messages again typifi ed the fi n de siècle.
As in the 1890s, novels of the 1990s suggested the state of mind accompany-
ing the century’s end illustrated through deliberate breaks with literary con-
ventions. Even as most Irish American women’s novels promoted feminist
themes and issues, they could be further categorized by their use of nontra-
ditional structure, nonchronological narratives, and multiple points of view;
nontraditional themes, almost all of them featuring divorced or unhappily
married women rather than traditional conclusions ending in marriage; and
nontraditional mores, usually in the form of violence and/or sexual anarchy.
This chapter illustrates the prevalence of these traits throughout the decade.
Fractured Fairytales
Maureen Howard’s
Natural History
(1992) epitomizes the fi n de siècle prac-
tice of nontraditional themes and structure. Instead of chronological nar-
ratives told from a single point of view, the timeline is fractured, recounted
by multiple narrators. Such strategies exemplify the end of a century, which
in turn has become associated with a “myth of the temporal that affects
our thought about ourselves, our histories, our disciplines.” Thus crisis and
change at the fi n de siècle are “more intensely experienced, more emotionally
fraught, more weighted with symbolic and historical meaning, because we
invest them with the metaphors of death and rebirth that we project onto the
fi nal decades and years of a century” (Showalter 1990, 2).
Of course, Maureen Howard was unconventional long before century’s
end. Like her previous novels,
Natural History
is semi-autobiographical,
nonsequential, and highly experimental. The main characters are fi ctional-
ized versions of Howard’s parents residing in her hometown of Bridgeport,
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Connecticut; their children, James and Catherine Bray, personify Howard
and her brother. Like Eavan Boland, Howard uses cartography to establish a
sense of place. Like absolutely no one else, Howard evokes present and past
through stylistic experimentation.
The heart of the novel, “Museum Pieces,” is bookended with chapters
under “Natural History,” which tell James’s and Catherine’s stories as they
refl ect on their childhoods and the paths of their adult lives. “Museum Pieces”
includes eight chapters: four narratives and four experimental pieces. Among
the latter, “Closet Drama” relies on one of Howard’s favorite tropes—a
play—to round out the story of James’s life. “The Lives of the Saints” recalls
Catherine’s youthful infatuation with the saints as well as James’s travels to
County Mayo while fi lming a movie about the Irish Revolution. Most dar-