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
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In the novel’s closing chapters the narrator plumbs the depths of her
mother’s depression, describing her as “so wrapped up in her own melan-
choly that she could neither see nor hear me” (Ezekial 1984, 232). Con-
trary to Fanning’s assertion that Ezekiel’s persona converts to Judaism out
of revenge, she writes that she married her Jewish husband because she “was
young and dumb and didn’t know much and . . . partly because he wasn’t
loud or boorish and occasionally dangerous the way [her Irish American
brother] sometimes got when he’d been drinking” (203). Religion is not
the problem. “We seldom fought. Instead, that tedious voice of his wore
me down—abraded the edges of my being, shut me down and caged me in.
Inside, I grew small and lonely and quiet and found it increasingly diffi cult
to breathe” (211). Taking her problems to a psychiatrist, the narrator receives
typical pre-feminist advice: “to the degree that I wasn’t contented with my
life and wanted more, I was rejecting my role as a woman . . . furthermore,
I should learn to derive my pleasure and satisfaction from watching others
grow” (213).
Jean McGarry’s
Airs of Providence
continues in this vein. The characters’
lives are unsatisfactory, inadequate, and unrewarding, their families “eaten
up by the same problems of isolation, loss, and emptiness” (Lee 2008,
221).
Airs of Providence
is divided into two sections. The fi rst features eight
unrelated short stories describing “people who are dead, dying, sick, and
hoping and planning to die” (Lee 2008, 222); the second presents seven
interrelated stories recounting the lives of April and Margaret Flanaghan,
who feel alienated from their environment as well as their religion. Similarly,
McGarry’s
The Very Rich Hours
(1987) details the very unhappy life of Anne
Marie Kane. Divided into eight chapters or “hours,” the book follows Kane
throughout her formative years from child to coed to wife as she grows
increasingly alienated from family and friends.
Unlike these novels, Susan Minot’s
Monkeys
initially seems ostenta-
tiously Catholic. When it appeared in 1986, the
Chicago Tribune
blurb
gushed, “Striking and original. . . . Few novels have so powerfully displayed
the collective unity and joy of family life.” Clearly, the reviewer had not read
many Irish American women’s novels, or closely read this one.
Monkeys
, the
name Rosie Vincent applies to her brood—“seven of them one right after
another” (Minot 1986, 61)—tells the story of the Irish Catholic Vincent
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family’s interactions. Early on, there are hints that Mr. Vincent is an alco-
holic, as he periodically disappears or passes out. When the children fi nally
confront him about his drinking, he agrees to quit, but minutes later pops
open a beer. Mrs. Vincent, “Mum,” says and does nothing about this; her
role is to bear children. This is most tellingly revealed shortly after the birth
of the last child. As Mrs. Vincent prepares to nurse the baby, Caitlin and
Sophie “saw it—that wild look—only this time there was something added.
It was aimed at them and it said: There is nothing in the world compares
with this. The eye was fi erce. The baby stayed fast. There is nothing so thrill-
ing as this. Nothing” (73).
Apart from Mr. Vincent’s alcoholism, marriage and motherhood seem
great. The seven children rarely squabble; when they get into trouble, there
are no consequences. Even Mrs. Vincent’s death is introduced offhandedly:
“Caitlin and Delilah are blabbing away in the kitchen. . . . The girls never
stop talking, worrying about their boyfriends, worrying about Dad, always
having fi ts—especially since their mother died” (Minot 1986, 109). The
fact that the older girls take over their mother’s job of cooking, cleaning,
and caring for their father and brothers does not mean all is well; rather,
it refl ects a continuation of the patriarchal hierarchy. Through this plot,
Minot seems to imply that the Catholic structure perpetuates the tradi-
tional sex-gender system: “the reproduction of these relations in conscious-
ness, in social practice, and in ideology turns especially on the organization
of family, kinship, and marriage, of sexuality, and of the division of all sorts
of labor by gender” (Del Rosso 2005, 1). This message only grows darker
in Minot’s subsequent novels.
The convergence of second-wave feminism with the post-Vatican church
practically ensured the emergence of women’s fi ction about the American
Catholic experience. The result was a second model of the Catholic novel
in the 1980s, “one of personal process” or as Andrew Greeley termed it,
the “personalist movement.” Not surprisingly, in this model personal needs
override religious beliefs (Gandolfo 1992, 157). Elaine Ford’s novels,
The
Playhouse
(1980) and
Missed Connections
(1984), are somber looks at young
women’s attempts to escape the vicissitudes of family life. Likewise, Maura
Stanton’s short stories in
The Country I Come From
(1988) are told from the
point of view of a daughter in a large Irish Catholic family. “The Palace”
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recalls the narrator’s experience at her cousin’s wedding. What is supposed
to be a fairy tale event actually exposes woman’s lot: the narrator is accosted
by an exhibitionist in the basement, stumbles into rooms of hot tired women
doing the hotel laundry, and recoils from her aunts’ envy and exhaustion.
Disillusioned, she realizes, “I knew even less about everything than I ever
had” (Stanton 1988, 57).
“John McCormack” extends disillusion to the church. First the narra-
tor learns that her visiting uncle is a recovering alcoholic; next, she and her
siblings witness the recovery of a drowned body. To comfort the children,
their uncle suggests praying for the dead woman and lighting a candle for
her soul. But when they arrive at the church none of the candles are lit and
the parish priest orders them to leave so he can lock the doors. When they
do fi nally light a candle, the priest tells them to put it out because it’s a fi re
hazard. “‘I know you lit it for a soul. Very nice. But it’s not the candle that
counts, it’s the prayer behind it.’” When the uncle persists, saying, “‘I always
thought it was the candle, Father,’” the priest retorts, “‘It’s only a pretty
custom’” (Stanton 1988, 69).
These Catholic-centered works hint at the role of the church in the late
twentieth century. Although American Catholics were willing to identify
with their faith, they made their own decisions “in matters of conscience”
(Labrie 1997, 268). Such actions suggest that the personalist revolution had
gained ground among American Catholics, no doubt a reaction, in part, to
the church’s intransigence with regard to women’s rights. The result, at least
among women writers, is a sense that “recent American Catholic fi ction writ-
ers have been unable to propose a ‘viable new paradigm’” (277) in which to
reconcile feminism with Catholicism. Instead, the Catholic faith has increas-
ingly been relegated to “a pretty custom,” a remembrance of things past.
•
To paraphrase Mark Twain, the 1980s reports of feminism’s demise
were greatly exaggerated. Despite the heavy-handed attempts of the Reagan
administration, the women’s movement actually expanded in number and
emphasis, moving into mainstream politics, recognizing the need for diver-
sity, and supporting women’s rights. “The second wave maintained enough
headway to avoid death by discouragement, and it was in no danger of expir-
ing from a surfeit of success,” writes the historian Flora Davis. Nevertheless,
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by the end of the 1980s, “it was clear that feminism would be around for a
long time to come” (Davis 1991, 472).
This decade marked the point at which women’s writing began to be
recognized and respected, supported by millions of female readers, explored
by feminist scholars, and refl ecting the impact of feminism (Showalter 2009,
467). Of course, Ronald Reagan helped. Thanks to his war on women, the
banshees once again banded together to refute the administration’s anti-
feminist messages. Not all women should be mothers, nor should lesbians
be denied the right. Teenagers should not be forced to take on motherhood,
but working mothers should not be punished for supporting their families.
Through their novels they argued that women—and mothers—were as mul-
tifaceted as feminism and Catholicism.
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5
The 1990s
Fin de Siècle
“You get set like that with a guy, and happy, and you turn into
one of those little wooden dolls, one of those awful smiling nod-
ding ones with springs for necks.” She began to bounce her head
up and down in imitation. “You turn into a pea brain.”
—Jacqueline Carey,
Good Gossip
Thanks to the tireless efforts of feminist groups, the 1990s began on
fi rm footing. At the national level, Washington, DC, was full of PACs
and women’s coalitions. Internationally, feminists were working toward
peace, welfare rights, and health care for women with AIDS. This decade
saw growth in women’s art shows, women’s studies programs, hotlines for
abortion and domestic abuse, and shelters for the homeless. Females also
made signifi cant inroads into traditionally male careers such as law enforce-
ment, medicine, and the law (Davis 1991, 492–93).
Women were beginning not only to recognize their rights but also, and
more important, to fi ght for them. In September 1991, sexual harassment
entered the national spotlight. First the Tailhook scandal hit the airwaves
after eighty-seven female and seven male Navy retirees complained of sex-
ual assaults and harassment at their annual reunion in Las Vegas. Next, the
country watched Anita Hill testify against Clarence Thomas before Con-
gress. After observing male politicians’ crude questioning of Ms. Hill, the
National Organization for Women was fl ooded with members and women
began running for political offi ce in record numbers). As the nation raised
its consciousness, the number of sexual harassment suits fi led with the
1 5 2
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EEOC doubled—and women actually began to win (Brownmiller 1999,
293). Three years later these issues again dominated the headlines when it
was revealed that President Bill Clinton had had sexual relations with the
twenty-two-year-old intern Monica Lewinsky. Subsequently, even women’s
magazines, the barometers of popular culture, began featuring articles on
sexual harassment.
Women were making advances in other arenas as well. In 1992, the
“Year of the Woman,” Hillary Rodham Clinton became the fi rst, First Lady
to have a career to put on hold during her husband’s presidency. The Clinton
cabinet included Janet Reno, the fi rst female attorney general; Madeleine
Albright, the fi rst female secretary of state; and Ruth Bader Ginsberg, the
second woman to join the Supreme Court. As of 1993, women were allowed
in combat. In sports, women’s softball debuted at the 1996 Olympics, and
in 1999 the U.S. women’s soccer team won the World Cup. Refl ecting Irish
Americans’ political diversity, the Democrat Patty Murray was one of four
women elected to the United States Senate, followed by the Republican Kay
Bailey Hutchison a year later. From 1993 to 1998, Jean Kennedy Smith
served as U.S. ambassador to Ireland, where she played a major role in the
Good Friday Agreement (Almeida 2006, 561). In
Irish America’s
“Business
100” listing of the most successful Irish Americans in the country, Margaret
Duffy, the audit partner at Arthur Andersen, was the sole woman among
New Yorkers (Almeida 2001, 93).
Within the Kennedy family alone, Kathleen Kennedy Townsend was
elected Maryland’s lieutenant governor, Courtney Kennedy Hill worked as a
human rights activist, Rory Kennedy achieved acclaim for her documentary
fi lms, Carolyn Kennedy Schlossberg became a legal scholar and attorney,