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
takes what might be viewed as sentimental artifacts and turns them into
something that will “force observation, destroy nostalgia” (11), knowing
that such backward looking can only conceal the truth and contaminate life
(Durso 2008, 73). Yet Howard herself includes instances of her own artistic
awakening (Fanning 2001): listening to Wagner’s
Ring
cycle on the radio
and later, commenting on the infl uences of Twain, Hawthorne, and Cather:
“
sentences, whole paragraphs . . . which I knew to be grand
, la vrai chose,
even
when I did not understand the jokes, the parables, the writers’ passion for words
or their passions
” (Howard 1998, 224).
Like many traditional novels, Artie and Louise eventually reunite; in
fact, as the novel comes to a close, Louise is nursing their newborn infant.
But once he falls asleep, she returns to her fi rst love. Walking home from the
art supply house, baby in tow, she escapes the present to dream of future
artistic endeavors wondering—like Howard—“what will it come to?” (270).
Sexual Anarchy
Feminist waters were further muddied with the 1992 arrival of Hillary Clin-
ton as First Lady. Hillary’s activism elicited both “boiling resentment and
. . . adoring worship . . . symptoms of contemporary feelings about feminist
intellectuals” (Showalter 2009, 322). When she asserted that women in the
1990s wanted not only “a right to have control over our own destinies,
and to defi ne ourselves as individuals; but where we also acknowledge that,
whether it’s biological or social, women want to be part of relationships as
well,” conventional wisdom might have agreed. Instead—in yet another
example of fi n de siècle misogyny—Hillary was viciously castigated. Like the
1990s, the 1890s were believed to be a period of “sexual anarchy.” In Eng-
land and France, women called for equality via movements that “challenged
the traditional institutions of marriage, work, and the family.” As a result,
many men viewed women as maddening aliens, while the women consid-
ered such males self-pitying conservatives trying to defend an “indefensible
order” (Showalter 2009, 7).
Mary McGarry Morris’s novel,
A Dangerous Woman
(1991), paints a
picture of alienation with the story of Martha Horgan, or “marthorgan” as
the local children call her. Martha has never fi t in. Apparently suffering from
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Asperger’s or Tourette’s Syndrome, “all her tics and rituals were only parts of
other things, engine-revving incantations against fear and failure” (Morris
1991, 50–51). With Martha, as with all her fl awed heroines, Morris points
out the misunderstandings and indignities women—especially women who
speak out or refuse to conform—must endure. Martha’s life is hell, often of
her own making, but also the result of victimization by men. As a teenager,
local boys trick her into the woods, where they tear off her clothes and
threaten to rape her. Yet in a fi ne display of the double standard, when the
incident is reported, the story is reversed. “Martha had somehow asked for it,
. . . she had brought it on herself with her attractive fi gure and her peculiar
ways” (Morris 1991, 8).
The novel’s action resumes fi fteen years later, but the victimization con-
tinues. First Martha is fi red after her accusation of stealing is used against
her. Next her sister’s handyman seduces and impregnates her. When she goes
to tell her girlfriend, the woman’s boyfriend will not let her in. Mistaking his
manhandling for a sexual advance, Martha grabs a knife, stabs him to death,
and blood-covered, staggers down the street. When her pregnancy begins
to show, the authorities try to force her to admit she was raped. Finally her
seducer confesses that he was drunk and took advantage of her. “But Mar-
tha won’t call it that,” he says. “She thought it was love. And maybe it was”
(Morris 1991, 357). That is all she needs.
Martha survives. Moreover, like Maureen Howard’s Mary Agnes Keely,
she does so with the realization that “it was no great sin to be, at last, alone”
(Howard 1961, 309). Morris’s Marie Fermoyle is another oddity—a divorced
woman in a Catholic community rife with sexual anarchy. Adultery, extra-
marital sex, teenage sex, and worst of all, sex with a priest fl ourish among
the many characters in
Songs in Ordinary Time
(1995). Daughter Alice is the
neediest. Lacking her mother’s approval and her father’s presence, she looks
for love from other outcasts and fi nally fi nds it with the family priest. But like
Martha Horgan, Alice is strong. Despite the priest’s weepy pleas, she breaks
off the affair and goes away to college. Like all of Morris’s female characters,
these women are survivors.
It is probably no coincidence that this novel emerged during the revela-
tion of widespread sexual abuse among priests. Although the Pope expressed
dismay about the damage done to children, he was equally worried about the
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impact of these revelations on the church. Similarly, many bishops responded
either by sending the miscreants to be “rehabilitated,” blaming the media, or
absolving themselves, since priests were considered “independent operators.”
Despite conservative estimates revealing that abuse had occurred at the rate
of 375 minors per year over the previous forty years (that’s 15,000 victims),
only 10 percent of priests considered this a signifi cant problem. Likewise,
although parishioners found the practice deplorable, they did not leave the
church; rather, they blamed the Vatican for not dealing with the problem
more forcefully (Dezell 2001, 180–81).
Mary Jo Weaver’s edited collection,
What’s Left?
(1999), addresses
these and other social issues. In “Resisting Traditional Catholic Sexual
Teaching,” she points out that unlike its weak-kneed stance on priestly ped-
erasty, the church has had no problem laying down the law to gays and
women about sexuality, homosexuality, abortion, divorce, and remarriage.
Whereas parishioners generally accepted ecclesiastical mandates regarding
birth control pre-Vatican II, the debacle of
Humana Vitae
led them to
view subsequent encyclicals as patriarchal and paternalistic, denying women
“moral agency.” Yet rather than leave the church, for many dissent became
“a necessary (if not painful) part of their Catholic identity” (91). As a result,
Catholics for Free Choice (CFFC) was formed. CFFC supported the radical
notion that sex was not just for procreation, questioned whether a celibate
clergy could or should speak knowledgeably about sexual matters, and—
as in Weaver’s 1985
Catholic Women
—faulted the church for ignoring the
rights and needs of women, particularly sexual freedom and freedom of
choice (, 92).
But Anna Quindlen’s 1994 novel,
One True Thing
, suggests that the
church was not the only institution punishing sexually independent women.
When the novel opens, Ellen Gulden, an outspoken, goal-oriented feminist,
is working in New York; however, she is soon coerced by her father into
moving home to care for her cancer-ridden mother. Ellen leaves the job she
loves because her father, whom she emulates and adores, demands it—even
though he refuses to ask his sons to come home from college, to hire a nurse,
or to participate in his wife’s care- giving. When Ellen objects, he has the
nerve to accuse her of being heartless, “something many people said George
Gulden had never had at all” (30).
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Initially, the novel juxtaposes Ellen’s efforts to continue her job while
working in and from the home. She begins to respect the mother she once
dismissed, to realize how selfi sh and unfeeling her father is, and to recognize
these same traits in herself. This coming of age comprises the fi rst half of
the novel. After her mother dies, Ellen is arrested for her murder. In practi-
cally every case, men view women as the enemy: Ellen’s father refuses to visit
her in jail or to post bail; her boyfriend tells prosecutors Ellen wished her
mother were dead; the prosecutor does his best to damn her. Women are her
primary supporters. While awaiting the grand jury hearing, a former teacher
posts bail, gives her a home, and loans her money for a lawyer. For this the
teacher is rumored to be a lesbian. But ultimately, women persevere. As the
novel closes, Ellen remarks, “someday I will tell my father [what caused her
mother’s death] although there is a great temptation to leave the man I once
thought the smartest person on earth in utter ignorance” (385).
The anti-feminist backlash was furthered by the very people who
most loudly proclaimed their patriotism—the white male members of the
Heritage Foundation. Whereas the 1980s saw this cohort claiming reverse
discrimination (against themselves), in the 1990s their targets were Others—
“immigrants, gays and lesbians . . . women and children” (Faludi 1991, 52).
Unfortunately, these attitudes were not limited to the Heritage Foundation.
In 1992, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (who went on to become Pope
Benedict XVI) issued
Some Considerations concerning the Catholic Response
to Legislative Proposals on the Non-Discrimination of Homosexual Persons
,
which essentially
supported
discrimination. This missive, which reaffi rmed
his 1986 letter suggesting that homosexuals possessed “a more or less strong
tendency ordered toward an intrinsic moral evil,” resulted in some priests
refusing communion to homosexuals (Weaver 1999, 99–101). In Boston,
as late as 1999, women were still excluded from Boston’s Clover Club and
the annual St. Patrick’s Day parade was “off-limits” to gays and minorities
(Dezell 2001, 40). Likewise, in New York City, members of the Ancient
Order of Hibernians, with the support of the Catholic Church, barred LGBT
people from the parade—a move resulting in the establishment of the Irish
Lesbian and Gay Organization—whose members rejected the conception of
Irishness as white, male, Catholic heterosexuals (Cochrane 2010, 117–18).
Not coincidentally, the 1990s saw the beginning of research on the sexual
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harassment of homosexuals in the academy, which revealed multiple exam-
ples of homophobia throughout the decade. To fi ght back, lesbians began to
come out, speak out, and publish stories of their harassment.
Lesbian novels also refl ected the fi n de siècle mindset. In late nine-
teenth-century art, female lovers were depicted as mirror images of each
other (Dijkstra 1986). In literature, the “divided self of the fi n-de-siecle
narrative . . . solved [homosexuals’] social and sexual problems by neatly
separating mind and body, good and evil, upstairs and downstairs” (Show-
alter 1990, 118). Likewise, late twentieth-century lesbian writers defended
themselves by exiting the closet via metaphorical side doors, following their
foremothers’ footsteps by devising “aesthetic strategies” to underscore their
alienation from traditional literary genres (Gilbert and Gubar 1989, 218). In
Eileen Myles’s case, this division is literally represented through the fi ctional
character of “Eileen Myles.”
In
Chelsea Girls
(1994), Myles’s persona is an alcoholic. Her alcoholism
is a result of a genetic predisposition inherited from her father as well as a
common “side effect” arising from confl icts about her sexual orientation.1
In no particular order, Myles describes her bouts of drinking supplemented
with a range of drugs; her lifelong feelings of displacement and inferior-
ity; and warring feelings of homophobia and lesbianism. With discussions
of tampons (“crammers”) and menstruation, sexual liaisons and orgasms,
Myles embodies sexual anarchy. But she leavens these rants with vignettes
describing her father’s death, shopping with her mother, or the little things
you do when you’re in love. Although the harsher stories are compelling (like
watching a train wreck), the soft ones make you like her.
Myles’s descriptions of sex are graphic, too graphic to report here. In
“Popponesset,” she describes being gang-raped but blames herself for being
drunk. She often seems self conscious, guilty, or apologetic—and vulner-
able: “I only know in the midst of passion she would always betray me like
pleasure was a hook she used to throw me. I was just a poor fi sh” (Myles