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
he and Elizabeth had lived together; however, her lack of maturity doomed
their relationship. Recalling this, Elizabeth realizes the myth on which her
beliefs were based: “Love will come to you, love beyond everything. It will
change your life forever” (274). Almost simultaneously, she realizes that she
does not love Tupper. Knowing he will smile at this and tell her she’s sim-
ply afraid of falling in love, she says nothing. Instead, as the novel closes,
she boards a train at Penn Station for an extended business trip and “looks
around the car. In a little while, she’ll get up to get a small bottle of wine.
Maybe even meet someone on the way, invite him back to her seat. He’ll see
her manuscript bag and ask, What are you, a musician? A doctor? A traveling
saleswoman? . . . If she likes him, she knows she’ll lie” (290).
Although
A Bigamist’s Daughter
was published in 1982, its conclusion
(and its heroine) echo Mary McCarthy’s “The Man in the Brooks Brothers
Shirt,” published four decades earlier. Despite the desire to be strong and
independent, both sets of female characters are doomed by society’s mes-
sages. Just as McCarthy’s pre-feminist women are gradually transformed into
compliant wives and mothers because neither their husbands nor postwar
America would tolerate their independence, McDermott’s confl icted femi-
nist characters refl ect the Heritage Foundation’s efforts “to turn the clock
back to 1954 in this country” (Faludi 1991, 230), a time when notions of
true love prevailed.
While the Heritage Foundation promoted motherhood, it simultane-
ously targeted the Women’s Educational Equity Act (WEEA) in the belief
that it represented a “money machine for a network of openly radical femi-
nist groups” (quoted in Davis 1981, 442). Reagan obliged by gutting its
budget (Faludi 1991, 260). When GOP Congresswoman Margaret Heckler
succeeded in restoring 40 percent of these cuts, members of Phyllis Schlafl y’s
Eagle Forum were appointed to the WEEA board to ensure that its “femi-
nist agenda” was curbed. They did so largely by rejecting grant proposals
aimed to counter sex discrimination, justifying their decisions by denying
that discrimination existed (Faludi 1991, 262). After the WEEA was demol-
ished and its female staff dismissed, the Reagan administration installed men
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in many of the formerly pro-woman agencies. Gary Bauer was appointed to
head the “family policy” arm of the Education Department. He is perhaps
best known for “The Family: Preserving America’s Future,” in which he
attacked women who worked, used day care, divorced, bore illegitimate chil-
dren, or lived in poverty as a “result from personal choices.” His proposed
solutions: “bar young single mothers from public housing; revive old divorce
laws to make it harder for women to break the wedding bonds; deny contra-
ceptives to young women”; and give tax breaks to women who stay home and
have babies. Married women, of course (Faludi 1991, 264).
Mary Gordon takes on this mindset in
Men and Angels
(1985). The pro-
tagonist, Anne Foster, is a mother of two who holds a doctorate in art his-
tory. Her husband, also a PhD, is a professor at tiny Selby College. Anne is a
stay-at-home mom, but not by choice: “if the college didn’t quite know what
to do with women students and faculty, it knew even less what to do with
faculty wives” (14). When she is commissioned to write the catalogue for an
upcoming exhibition of a female artist’s works, Anne hires Laura to care for
her children. Some critics maintain that the plot explores “confl icts between
materialism and spirituality,” calls for ecumenism, and sympathetically por-
trays Laura to indirectly underscore this need (Watanabe 2010, 200–201).
But given the overbearing infl uence of the Heritage Foundation during this
decade, it could also be argued that rather than representing the evangelistic
arm of the Apostolic Church, Laura personifi es the rightwing, for she is an
ignorant, self-centered, hypocritical, born-again Christian who believes she
is “the chosen of the Lord” (8).
As the story opens, Laura is fl ying home from London after being dis-
missed from an au pair position because her religious fervor disturbed her
employers’ children. When Helene, a fellow passenger, begins sharing stories
of her own faith, “Laura stopped listening but looked as if she was listening
with love. She knew the woman was a fool. But perhaps the woman could
help her” (Gordon 1985, 8). After she tells Helene she has nowhere to go,
Helene suggests Laura accompany her to Selby: “In America the women
do not want to take care of their children,” she tells Laura. “They say they
want to fi nd themselves. I did not know that they were lost.” The woman
laughs and Laura laughs with her, “pretending that she understood” (10).
Not surprisingly, when Laura’s religious machinations fail to convert Anne
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or her children, she takes her own life—an idealized end to the New Right’s
crusaders.
Gordon’s 1989 novel,
The Other Side
, takes another swing at the pro-
motherhood faction. Although it has been called “mean-spirited” and “a blan-
ket indictment of a people” (Fanning 2001), it is not so much an indictment as
it is “a rather long-winded exploration of the sort of unhappy family that has
long been in the forefront of Irish and Irish American writing” (Wall 1999, 37).
This multigenerational novel traces the lives of elderly fi rst-generation Irish
American parents Ellen and Vincent MacNamara, their children, grandchil-
dren, and great-grandchildren—all of whom have been psychically damaged
by cruel, absent, or neglectful mothers. The title, a phrase used by immigrants
referring to Ireland, suggests that this tale of neglect stems from Ellen’s physi-
cally and psychologically absent Irish mother, who hid herself away because
she kept having miscarriages: “She was nearly always pregnant, or getting over
the loss of a child. But she was never whole with child” (Gordon 1989, 90).
Her mother’s absence contributes to Ellen’s inability to nurture her own chil-
dren, Magdalene, Theresa, and John, who perpetuate this behavior.
To frame the story, Gordon uses a familiar Irish trope: the gathering of
the clan to await the death of the matriarch, Ellen. In developing the plot
and exploring the mother’s infl uence on her children and subsequent gen-
erations, Gordon expands on Elizabeth Cullinan’s
House of Gold
, both in
number of characters and by alternating points of view. However, in playing
with the phrase “the other side,” Gordon not only allows it to suggest the
children’s points of view but she also slyly develops the characters by pick-
ing from her own family tree. Practically every character exhibits traits of
Gordon’s maternal aunts described in her memoirs,
The Shadow Man
(1996)
and
Circling My Mother
(2007). In other words, rather than indicting the
Irish, Gordon is mostly damning the Italians while perpetuating the Irish
penchant for family feuds.
In detailing the many characters peopling her life, Mary Gordon gets to
tell “the other side”—her side—of the story. She is able to revenge the slights
against her mother and herself and preserve happy memories of her bigoted
father. At the same time, Gordon extracts “revenge” by refuting every ste-
reotype perpetuated by the Heritage Foundation: in this novel, there are no
successful marriages, no smooth courtships, no happy mothers. As such, this
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novel serves as the perfect illustration of Rebecca du Plessis’s (1985) theory
that twentieth-century feminists examined and then delegitimized every sex-
gender trope invented by man.
Despite these successes, some women felt that feminism had overplayed
its hand. In 1984, Germaine Greer published
Sex and Destiny
, an unfortu-
nate tome lamenting that feminism had superseded childbearing, a wholly
unintended interpretation that led to subsequent “feminist complaints of
the 1980s—involuntary singlehood, involuntary childlessness, loneliness”
(Showalter 2009, 298). In 1985, Betty Friedan reiterated what she had fi rst
reported in
The Feminine Mystique
: young women once again felt guilty and
alone, pressured to be superwomen on the job and in the home (Greene
1993, 12). The feminist Nancy Miller summed up these feelings when she
wrote, “Choosing motherhood or refusing it has proven to be more complex
than we feminists had bravely imagined in our consciousness-raising groups
of the early seventies” (quoted in Showalter 2009, 299).
Such feelings are explored in Ellen Currie’s
Available Light
(1986). The
main character, Kitty, assumes that her lover, Jacques Rambeau, will des-
ert her, and he does not disappoint. Currie advances the plot by presenting
Kitty and Rambeau’s points of view in alternating chapters where additional
characters are introduced: Mick, Kitty’s Irish mother; Eileen, Kitty’s sister;
and Dorinda, a pregnant wild child who tries to sleep with every man she
encounters. Each character refl ects a different side of motherhood. The ste-
reotypical Irish mother, Mick constantly criticizes her daughters but loves
them fi ercely. When Kitty calls to bemoan Rambeau’s absence, Mick con-
soles her, saying, “there’s nothing to roar and cry about, no nothing, you’ll
do rightly.” Longing for comfort, Kitty asks, “I will?” to which her mother
replies, “Och aye . . . you little hooer, you wasn’t new when he got you”—
and hangs up the phone (15). Eileen so badly wants a child that she tolerates
Gordon, her philandering husband, and eventually succumbs to hysterical
pregnancy, stuffi ng her clothes to appear with child. Dorinda, the only char-
acter who
can
become pregnant, shows neither interest in motherhood nor
concern for the fetus. She drinks, takes drugs, and sleeps around while seek-
ing a buyer for her baby.
Available Light
earned rave reviews. Maureen Howard called it “an
extraordinary book, truly a fi ne work.” It is all that. But it is also a thematic
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mess. Simultaneously, it refl ects anti-feminist propaganda, which claimed
that feminists could not be happy in a relationship, by tracing Kitty’s worry
before and misery after Rambeau leaves, yet questions the pro-motherhood
stance promoted by the Reagan administration by illustrating various unfi t
mothers as well as concerned potential fathers. At the same time, Kitty is
portrayed as an independent career woman who gradually grows stronger
and happier without Rambeau. Then the plot comes full circle by providing
a decidedly post-feminist conclusion: Kitty and Rambeau reunite and live
happily ever after.
Conversely, Maureen Howard’s
Grace Abounding
(1982) explodes 1980s
propaganda about sexuality, education, and mother-daughter relationships,
while
Expensive Habits
(1986) sends forth potent political messages regard-
ing marriage, motherhood, and women’s work. In
Grace Abounding
, How-
ard’s decidedly unmerry widow, Maude Dowd, is horny. She so wants a man
that she deliberately takes dark and dangerous back roads in the hopes that
she will be stopped for speeding or her car will break down and she will be
ravaged by a stranger. The plot periodically switches from straightforward
narrative to fantasies such as seduction by a policeman, a “truck driver jack-
ing me up” (4), sweaty teenage hitchhikers, gas station attendants, and a gift
shop proprietor—who eventually becomes Maude’s lover. But despite her
plans for the future and pleas that he divorce, he abandons Maude, sneaking
out of town without even a goodbye note.
Throughout this interlude, Maude and her teenage daughter Elizabeth
essentially trade places. While Maude excitedly hides her affair, Elizabeth
remains calm and responsible, doing her homework and practicing her sing-
ing each night. However, as Maude recovers her equilibrium and discovers
her daughter’s talent, Howard shows us how Irish American women survive:
not with a man, but with education. Mother and daughter move to New
York, where Maude attends Columbia to become a counseling psychologist
while Elizabeth studies voice at Juilliard. In this environment they do not
revert to their traditional roles; rather, they are “living like roommates” (90).