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
opposites, with the female possessing the lesser or negative traits. But after
Eliot’s death, fi n de siècle narratives discarded their traditional structure,
particularly closure ending in marriage (Showalter 1990, 17–18). This trend
is especially evident in the works of Irish American women, for practically
every 1990s novel dwells on unhappy marriages or bitter divorcees. Anna
Quindlen looks at the Scanlan family’s marriages in her fi rst novel,
Object
Lessons
(1991), while also inscribing the end of insular, ethnic communities
in the early 1960s. In fact, this cultural breakdown is one factor in the fam-
ily’s ongoing squabbles. Quindlen reinforces this message in Connie Scan-
lan’s closing advice to her daughter about marriage: “it’s not just a man. It’s
your house, your kids, your family, your time, everything. Everything in
your life is who you marry” (318). Ann T. Jones underscores this message in
A Country Divorce
(1992). Set in Ireland during the 1930s, Jones tells the
story of confi rmed bachelor Morgan Riley’s marriage to Minnie Vaughn,
who neglects to tell him she is pregnant by another man. Needless to say,
when the truth is revealed, the marriage is over. Susanna Moore’s third
Hawaiian novel,
Sleeping Beauties
(1993), which includes scenes of domestic
violence, reiterates these messages: marry your own kind.
Even in the 1990s, attitudes toward marriage and divorce refl ected
Irish American women’s confl icted relationship with the Catholic Church.
Despite reservations about the church’s dictums, 85 percent of American
Catholics continued to attend Mass regularly and millions were outraged
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at Sinead O’Connor’s symbolic shredding of the Pope’s picture on
Satur-
day Night Live
—even though she did it to protest the Irish prohibitions on
contraceptives, abortion, and divorce (Almeida 2001). At the same time,
90 percent of American Catholics refused to support the ban on artifi cial
contraception and the majority disagreed with the bar on divorce (Dezell
2001, 163). Thus it is somewhat surprising that in novels describing abusive
spouses and unhappy marriages, many characters remain unhappily married;
less surprising is the fact that among those who divorce, the children suffer.
In Jean McGarry’s
The Courage of Girls
(1994), Loretta Costello St. Cyr
is married to the domineering Daniel. Although he swears he loves her, Dan-
iel continually demeans her, then is surprised that she remains “like a corpse”
when they have sex (17). Although Loretta leaves him for awhile, she eventu-
ally returns. There is no hint that their lives will be different, but Loretta will
persevere, for—in a line echoing Maureen Howard’s
Facts of Life
—she has
decided “just to resign myself to nothing” (81). Susan Minot’s novels con-
tinue this sad song. In her second novel,
Folly
(1992), Lilian Eliot Finch (like
Edna Pontillier in the
The Awakening
) is confi ned by the strictures proscrib-
ing women’s behavior. Since
Folly
is set amidst World War I, just eighteen
years after
The Awakening
, these mores are not surprising, especially in staid
Boston society. Like Mrs. Pontillier, Lilian awakens when she experiences
sexual desire for the enigmatic Walter Vail. But after Walter goes off to war
without a word, Lilian marries Gilbert Finch. Lilian’s folly is in holding on
to her infatuation with Vail throughout her marriage until fi nally, at middle
age, she sees the man for what he is.
In developing her style, Minot appears to draw on Mary McCarthy’s
The
Group
. Although Minot is not primarily concerned with skewering her char-
acters, she too exposes the emptiness of lifestyles centered around childcare
and homemaking. As in
The Group
, Minot’s novel traces the lives of Lilian
and her girlfriends as they fall in love, marry, fl ourish or fail, with Lilian (like
McCarthy’s Kay Petersen) at the center. Since only one of Lilian’s friends
has attended college, their aspirations are not so high as McCarthy’s Vassar
graduates; nevertheless, over the course of the novel Minot exposes simi-
lar themes: alcoholism, depression, adultery, and man’s inconstancy. Lilian
has learned to tolerate it, but her friend Irene cannot. Increasingly drunk,
she (again, like Kay Peterson) appears to commit suicide. In a conclusion
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refl ecting the fi n de siècle tendency away from the closure of a happy mar-
riage, the novel’s fi nal pages fi nd Lilian vowing to stay with Gilbert. Never-
theless, she says: “I don’t have to like it, and if you come right down to it, I
won’t. But at least I won’t moon after things. My parents did not raise me to
behave like a fool” (278).
This message is echoed in Eileen Fitzgerald’s
You’re So Beautiful
(1996).
Throughout, Fitzgerald’s characters refl ect on their past and present lives,
conjure violent revenge scenarios, and fantasize about escape. All are realis-
tic, for none reach satisfactory conclusions; they simply end, a strategy that
reinforces the sense that they are trapped, their only escape through death
or dreams. In
Lies of the Saints
(1996), Erin McGraw similarly deconstructs
marital relationships. In “Blue Skies,” for example, Ray and Constance strug-
gle with the aftermath of alcoholism—sobriety and distrust, respectively—
taking a realistic look at the damage a suspicious spouse can wreak on a
relationship as well as the diffi culties of letting go and rebuilding. In
House
Work
(1994), Kristina MacGrath underscores the impact of the church on
unhappy marriages. The schizophrenic Guy Hallissey cannot cope with his
wife, his three children, or even his furniture, which he believes is moving.
When Guy’s illness escalates into carousing, wife Anna takes the children
and leaves—an unsanctioned act in the days before divorce and working
wives. “‘Mrs.,’ said Father Rawley. He would consider excommunication.
‘Your place is with him,’ he told her, ‘He’s a good man’” (74).
Bobbie Ann Mason’s 1990’s books also focus on marriage. Her mem-
oir,
Clear Springs
(1998), pays homage to her mother, an orphan raised by
her aunt’s family. Details from this work appear in practically every novel.
Feather Crowns
(1993) is set in the rural Kentucky of Mason’s grandpar-
ents and extended family, thus reminding readers of the harsh, hard scrabble
lifestyle of tobacco farmers.
Spence + Lila
is a fi ctional version of Mason’s
parents’ marriage, set (like Maeve Brennan’s) in the same house—a four-
square, built by her father—outside Mayfi eld, Kentucky, where Mason grew
up. Again like Brennan, the novel includes specifi c factual details, such as her
mother’s decision to work outside the home as well as the characters’ super-
stitions and unschooled patois refl ecting a “lowland Scots” heritage (Mason
1998, 38). In these settings she pursues timeless feminist themes: the guilt
of sexual desire, the community of women, the demands of motherhood, the
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burden of grief (and concomitant guilt) on a relationship, the need for com-
munication, and the effort necessary to make a marriage work.
Motherhood and, more subtly, abortion are addressed in Ann Patchett’s
The Patron Saint of Liars
(1992). In a 2011 interview with
The Guardian
,
Patchett mentioned that she had no desire to have children. “I never wanted
children, never, not for one minute, and it has been the greatest gift of my
life that even as a young person I knew. . . . Children are wonderful but
they’re not for everybody” (Rustin 2011).
The Patron Saint of Liars
explores
this conundrum. Rose Clinton is married to a man she does not love, so
when she becomes pregnant she leaves him because she believes she would
not be a good mother, traveling to St. Elizabeth’s Home for Unwed Moth-
ers to put her child up for adoption—which does not trouble her as much
as the prospect of leaving once she has given birth. Fortuitously, the home’s
groundskeeper proposes and agrees to raise the child as his own. The novel’s
last section describes the impact of Rose’s unmaternal feelings on her daugh-
ter, Sissy. “We’d never gotten along,” Sissy notes. “It wasn’t that we fought,
exactly. We hadn’t even progressed that far. . . . The unspoken pact was that
we ignored each other” (249). Although this is uttered casually, it is clear
that Sissy misses her mother’s love. Using multiple points of view, Patchett
explores both the physical and psychological sides of maternity. Jacqueline
Carey’s second novel,
The Other Family
(1996), similarly reinforces the edict
against divorce by looking at its effects—anger, depression, and drugs—on
the children. As the abandoned daughter Joan Toolan says, “Once upon a
time the center of my life had been fi rm. . . . All this came unmoored when
our mother left us” (Carey 1996, 12–13). When her cousins’ family similarly
disintegrates, they echo her anger: “‘How did you stand it when your parents
split up?’ Budge asks. ‘I wish they would both die’” (185). Although this is
a novel with a strong comic sense, its message about marriage and mothers
comes through strongly.
Alice McDermott’s
At Weddings and Wakes
(1992) and
Charming Billy
(1999) offer up more unhappy marriages. In the former, she uses a member
of the third or fourth generation of Irish immigrants to deconstruct her
family members’ unhappiness. The narrator is one of the Dailey children—a
daughter, like most of McDermott’s narrators—who listens to her mother,
aunts, and step-grandmother and observes their angry, eventually tearful
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interactions. As in her previous novels, McDermott fractures timelines, mov-
ing between present and past to develop a fuller picture, but also “to support
more largely thematic concerns regarding the impact of time on memory and
the story-making that is not only memory’s key function but also a hallmark
of the Irish American literary tradition” (Jacobson 2008, 123).
These images emerge throughout the course of the Dailey children’s
biweekly, day-long summer treks with their mother from the suburbs into
New York City, highly detailed reversals of the Irish emigration as they move
“west to east” (McDermott 1992, 55), from the New World back to the Old
as personifi ed by their aunts and grandmother. Behind each woman lies a sad
story. Their grandmother, Momma Towne, married the aunts’ father only to
have him die within the year, so she “quickly became not merely a stranger to
resent and accommodate but the only living adult to whom they were of any
value” (27). Capitalizing upon these circumstances, Momma Towne quickly
takes on the characteristics of the “martyred, manipulative Irish mother”
(Dezell 2001, 104). Aunt May, a former nun, fi nally marries and then dies
four days later. Aunt Agnes is an executive secretary who, lacking a husband
or a vocation, has devoted herself to studying “the fi ner things” and “in her
misanthropy . . . found all else, all the soiled, dull, and tasteless things about
humankind, somehow appalling” (McDermott 1992, 111). A spinster, Aunt
Veronica has descended into alcoholism.
But the children’s mother—the only married sister—suffers the most.
Each visit begins with her usual laments. “But who thinks of me?” (25).
“He’s not the man I married. . . . I’m not having the kind of life I wanted”
(34–35). The plaints escalate until, mixed with late afternoon cocktails, the
arguing begins, each woman believing her life the worst, and ends with sob-
bing. “Too many women in too small a place, they would say later . . . or,
later still, too much repression, too much pity, too much bad luck. And then
fi nally, convinced they’d hit the mark at last, too much drink” (124). The
enervating Old World ends with the husband’s arrival. Although he has been
the object of scorn throughout the day, only he can save them—a dynamic
that clearly parallels the housewife’s malaise described by Friedan in
The
Feminine Mystique
.
This novel marks the last of McDermott’s explicitly feminist works.
Henceforth—perhaps as she moved into middle age, perhaps in a refl ection
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