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
in part as an expression of desire. Such desire can be seen in the work of Erin
McGraw, who legally changed her fi rst name from Susan to Erin to better
refl ect the infl uence of her Irish heritage (McGraw 2003), or in the fi ction
by Mary McCarthy, Mary Gordon, and Eileen Myles, whose works high-
light their Irish Catholic heritage. Conversely, the New Irish—emigrants
born in Ireland in the 1950s and 1960s who emigrated en masse during the
1980s—tend to view themselves as commuters between Ireland and America
rather than as Irish Americans per se. As Helena Mulkerns explains, “The
fact that I’ve been living here for ten years doesn’t necessarily mean I get to
call myself Irish American” (quoted in Wall 1999, 67). This refusal to self-
identify therefore precludes their writing from this study.
The term “Irish American” can be defi ned by geography as well as birth.
Maeve Brennan, for example, was born in Ireland and then moved to Amer-
ica (Bourke 2004), whereas other authors can trace their lineage through
their forebears. This ethnic doubleness allows the authors to draw on what
Vincent Buckley calls their “source-country,” whether that be names, myths,
speech, or slant—traits William Kennedy terms a “psychological inheritance”
(Quinn 1985, 24, 78). As Irish Americans assimilated into the United States,
measuring these traits became more diffi cult; nevertheless, these writers’ lit-
erary works remain recognizably Irish. Thematically, they can be identifi ed
by the presence of stylistic or cultural language patterns or customs. Many of
these traits can be traced to James T. Farrell, whose “regional realis[m] cre-
ated a solid base of Irish-American fi ction” (Fanning 2001, 359). Through-
out the twentieth century and into the twenty-fi rst, writers such as Maureen
3. See Vivian Mercier,
The Irish Comic Tradition
(New York: Oxford, 1969), and
David Krause,
The Profane Book of Irish Comedy (
Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press, 1982).
Barr Ebest 1st pages.indd 11
Barr Ebest 1st pages.indd 11
7/3/2013 4:10:27 PM
7/3/2013 4:10:27 PM
12 | T H E B A N S H E E S
Howard and Elizabeth Cullinan continued this approach as they wrote
about women’s roles and the impact of the church on their psyche.
After the fi rst generations of emigrants, some writers chose not to self-
identify. Nevertheless, they too may be characterized as Irish American
if their work contains the following traits: “The dominant mother in her
fortress house; the fi rst son marching off to the priesthood; the convent-
educated daughter playing the piano in the parlor; parochial schoolmates
turning into leaders of the Young Men’s Sodality or incorrigible criminals;
lives affected by extremes of dissipation, abstinence, profl igacy, and piety;
lives organized around ideas of religion, family, nationhood for Ireland, hard
work, homeownership, the rise to respectability; tableaus of ritual gathering
at deathbeds and christenings, weddings and wakes; the gift of humor and
invective in public speech joined to an inability to express love and compas-
sion in private; a penchant stylistically for formal experimentation, linguistic
exuberance, and satiric modes” (Fanning 2001, 3).
Alice McDermott’s family preferred assimilation to self-identifi cation
(McDermott 2000). However, her novel
At Weddings and Wakes
not only
takes its title from the above defi nition, but also includes many of its iden-
tifying traits. So does her award-winning novel
Charming Billy
, whose plot
emanates from Billy’s death from alcoholism—an Irish and Irish American
trait touched on by Mary McCarthy and running throughout the works
of Joyce Carol Oates, Tess Gallagher, and Eileen Myles. Similarly, the
works of other “non-identifi ers”—Mary McGarry Morris, Jean McGarry,
and Tess Gallagher—exhibit clear-cut “regional realism” in their settings;
possess explicit names such as Fiona Range and Martha Horgan, Peggy
Curran and Joe Keefe, Mr. Gallivan and Bernadine, respectively; and are
propelled by plots hinging on fatalism, forgiveness, and redemption. Irish
American women writers represent an amalgamation of these traits. In
this, they are unique among their race. “Having made the trajectory from
rejection to acceptance to success in the United States by ‘passing,’ many
Irish never developed a sense of ethnicity extant their religious identity
that wasn’t sentimental or superfi cial” (Dezell 2001, 84). Not so with Irish
American women.
Self-deprecation and social anxiety are ubiquitous among these descen-
dants of immigrants (Dezell 2001, 65), often expressed through satire, an
Barr Ebest 1st pages.indd 12
Barr Ebest 1st pages.indd 12
7/3/2013 4:10:27 PM
7/3/2013 4:10:27 PM
I N T R O D U C T I O N | 1 3
Irish habit traceable to Gaelic poets, essayists, and playwrights.4 In the twen-
tieth century, Mary McCarthy broke tradition by using satire to take on
the Catholic Church. Jeanna del Rosso argues that satire “allow[ed] women
writers of Catholic literature to demonstrate how the girls in their narra-
tives push the paradoxes of their religion with an irreverence that lessens the
severity, although not always the sincerity, of their belief” (149). Addressing
issues previously excluded from Catholic girls’ lives, topics might include
erotic pleasure, egalitarian marriage, homosexuality, engrossing careers, or
political activity. Irish American women used their fi ction to construct an
inner life and assert women’s dignity so as to overcome, if not deny, tradi-
tional roles. Yet the role of the Catholic Church in women’s literature has
been widely ignored (Del Rosso 2005).
Stony fathers and distant mothers are almost universal characters; Eliz-
abeth Cullinan and Mary Gordon showcase them well. But Irish Ameri-
can women are also “formidable and tenacious,” and they make sure their
daughters are too (McGoldrick 1998, 172–73). Whereas early works fea-
tured convent-educated daughters, twentieth- and twenty-fi rst-century her-
oines generally hold college degrees. The Irish maintain “this very nice mix
of being intellectual without being pretentious, this love of literature and
writing . . . this commitment to thinking” (Dezell 2001, 70), traits that can
be observed throughout the works of Maureen Howard, Joyce Carol Oates,
and Kathleen Hill. Moreover, as Lisa Carey has shown, female characters are
quite often responsible and independent, for they believe they cannot rely on
men to take care of them; consequently the mothers may express a sense of
martyrdom when they are not accorded the status commensurate with their
responsibilities (McGoldrick 1995, 176).
Such attitudes contribute to male characters’ ambivalent relationships
with their female peers. “From a distance they admire [women’s] fi re,
strength, and martyrdom, but up close they are often tense, scornful, and
4. As Charles Fanning writes in
The Irish Voice in America
, “writers of Irish
background who have chosen not to consider Irish ethnic themes—Flannery
O’Connor, for example—will not appear” (4). Similarly, Mary McCarthy merits a
single sentence (301).
Barr Ebest 1st pages.indd 13
Barr Ebest 1st pages.indd 13
7/3/2013 4:10:27 PM
7/3/2013 4:10:27 PM
14 | T H E B A N S H E E S
hostile and underneath deeply frightened of their [partner’s] power”—char-
acteristics that break down only when mixed with alcohol (McGoldrick
1995, 173). Remarkably, Ann Beattie’s male characters have retained these
traits over the past four decades. Married couples often appear to live sepa-
rate lives—when the women deign to tie the knot—for they are still among
the latest and most reluctant to marry, traits illustrated early on by Maeve
Brennan and most recently by Jacqueline Carey. These innate beliefs stem
from how Irish American male and female siblings are raised: the boys are
pampered while the girls are forced to be self-suffi cient (McGoldrick 1995,
175–76). Nevertheless, relationships between brothers and sisters are often
strong, growing into friendships as they mature, although as Diane O’Hehir
has demonstrated, bonds between sisters are even stronger.
Mary McCarthy earned the moniker “Contrary Mary” because of her
oppositional stances, not least her dismissal of feminism while developing
feminist themes in her early novels. In this, McCarthy refl ected her Irish
roots, for contradiction is a constant among Irish Americans. McCarthy’s
heroines, like those depicted by Jean McGarry and Mary McGarry Mor-
ris, are both persevering and prone to depression, witty but cold, brave yet
fatalistic, loyal and thus quick to drop disloyal friends (Dezell 2001, 71).
Although the Irish love the drink, drunkenness is followed by guilt and
depression. They forgive the male alcoholic but condemn the female (Dezell
2001,133); they value loyalty then ask why a wife stays with a drunken
spouse. Hence the plot of
Charming Billy
. The Irish “bottle up” their grief
until it explodes into “alcoholism, addiction, risk-taking, and self-destruc-
tion” (Walsh quoted in Dezell 114).
Like feminism and Irishness, women’s Catholic fi ction can be viewed
along a continuum. A novel may be considered Catholic even if it does
not make religion its primary focus or include explicitly Catholic themes.
Catholicism intersects with a range of other “isms”: racism, classism, sex-
ism, and heterosexism—which allows these authors to write from multiple
perspectives. Non-Catholics, usually Southern Scots-Irish Protestants such
as Carson McCullers, Blanche McCrary Boyd, Dorothy Allison, and Bobbie
Ann Mason, may also be considered members of this genre if elements of
their fi ction include interactions with the religion. Like Judaism, Catholi-
cism is cultural as well as religious. As Jeanna del Rosso notes, “One does
Barr Ebest 1st pages.indd 14
Barr Ebest 1st pages.indd 14
7/3/2013 4:10:27 PM
7/3/2013 4:10:27 PM
I N T R O D U C T I O N | 1 5
not need to practice Catholicism—or even consider oneself Catholic—to
experience it” (2005, 17).
The Banshees
To illustrate the growth and contribution of Irish American women’s writ-
ing, this study is organized chronologically by decade. Each chapter details
the progress and setbacks of Irish American women during that period
by examining key themes within their novels and memoirs contextualized
within a discussion of contemporary feminism, Catholicism, American
politics and society, and Irish American history. Chapter 1, “1900-1960:
Ahead of Their Time,” provides the background. Historically, Irish Ameri-
can women have long constituted the single largest ethnic group of working
women. Contrary to popular lore, not all were in low-status occupations;
they also comprised the majority of teachers and professional women writers.
This chapter examines the factors that helped form and differentiate these
women from their peers and predecessors: the Irish American work ethic,
education and religion, and an instinctive feminism. In the process, it intro-
duces the foremothers of Irish American women’s writing and the themes
characterizing their works as well as those that followed. These women laid
the groundwork, not just for Irish American fi ction, but also for contempo-
rary feminist novels.
Chapter 2, “The 1960s: The Rise of Feminism,”
juxtaposes the political
movements in society and the church with the appearance of the feminist
novel. Although women of other ethnicities were writing novels during that
decade, Irish Americans stand out not only for their productivity, but also
for their distinct characterizations representing women’s fi ghts to gain per-
sonal identity, independence, and respect not just from their husbands or
lovers, but also from the non-Irish American community as well. Manifestly
autobiographical, these characters’ struggles catch our attention because of
their realistic insider’s view. Irish American women’s writing opened the
doors on American marriage and motherhood and put a human face on the
women Betty Friedan revealed in
The Feminine Mystique
. At the same time
these works are uniquely Irish American, for their stories are inextricably
interwoven with the Catholic Church. Hence the themes of guilt and repres-
sion, anger and rejection, depression and disappointment.
Barr Ebest 1st pages.indd 15
Barr Ebest 1st pages.indd 15
7/3/2013 4:10:27 PM
7/3/2013 4:10:27 PM
16 | T H E B A N S H E E S
Chapter 3, “The 1970s: A State of Upheaval,” refl ects the attitudes and
at times the animosity generated by the feminist movement and the church’s
intransigence. While Americans demonstrated against the war in Vietnam,
the feminist movement warred within itself even as Irish American women
revolted against the strictures of the church. Assimilation played a major