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
Commencement
into a league with . . . that paragon of women’s college nov-
els,
The Group
” (Russo 2009, 8). Indeed,
Commencement’s
failure to inter-
rogate the characters’ behavior or even to question it via satire places it fi rmly
within the post-feminist category.
Recall that post-feminist culture valorizes “female achievement within
traditionally male working environments.” Bree is a lawyer, Celia is a writer,
Sally wants to be a doctor, and April is a lackey for the documentary fi lm-
maker Ronnie. These are upper-middle-class positions unavailable to many
women. Post-feminism values individualism, but “this formulation tends to
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confuse self-interest with individuality”—and everyone but April has her
own interests at heart. Post-feminist culture assumes and promotes equal
educational opportunities, but it also believes in “freedom of choice with
respect to work, domesticity, and parenting; and physical and particularly
sexual empowerment”—again, rights fought for by feminists now taken for
granted. Rather than needing to work, post-feminist women like Sally and
Bree
choose
to work—or not—when prostrate with grief. Finally, post-fem-
inism assumes that feminism is diffi cult, shrill, and restrictive—traits that
characterize April and Ronnie Munro.
Despite her personal disregard for feminism, Mary McCarthy not only
exposed societal inequities but also opened the door for future Irish Ameri-
can feminist novels. In contrast, Sullivan’s novel reveals a complacent femi-
nism, which is just another term for post-feminism. These characters are
more interested in their own lives than those of women in less comfortable
environments; indeed, Sullivan’s women worry more about April’s feminist
activities than the problems she tries to expose. Worse, there is no sense of
satire or irony in Sullivan’s rendering of their concerns. Feminism no longer
merits attention.
With the 2000 election of George W. Bush, a version of this mindset had
already begun to emerge among the conservative Right, but 9/11 somehow
gave it legitimacy. Although most people dismissed Jerry Falwell’s proclama-
tion that “the pagans, and the abortionists, and the feminists, and the gays
and the lesbians helped [9/11] happen,” his message was soon promoted
by mainstream mouthpieces (Faludi 2007, 22; Finlay 2006, 3). Denounce-
ments of feminism might be expected from the Bush administration, but
soon respected pundits such as Jonathan Alter and Jonathan Turley not only
took up the cry but also attacked any women brave enough to offer counter
opinions. Journalists and intellectuals such as Susan Sontag, Katha Pollitt,
Barbara Kingsolver, and Naomi Klein were publicly castigated as Taliban sup-
porters simply for expressing their wish that war be avoided and cooler heads
prevail (Faludi 2007, 29–30). In
George W. Bush and the War on Women
, a
study that demonstrates the many parallels between the Bush and Reagan
administrations, the sociology professor and feminist scholar Barbara Finlay
joins Faludi in calling out Bush for fomenting such behavior, noting that the
mainstream media were so enmeshed in the administration’s jingoism that
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they not only let such comments pass but also failed to “analyse his actions
critically and ignor[ed] contradictory evidence” (Finlay 2006, 3).
Female commentators were not the only targets. By 2004, the nation’s
mindset refl ected the post–World War II antiwoman propaganda reported by
Betty Friedan and Susan Hartmann. First, female writers disappeared from
the nation’s editorial pages. Within a week of 9/11, only 5 of 88 op-ed pieces
in
The New York Times
,
The Washington Post
, and
The Los Angeles Times
car-
ried female bylines. Although women writers had never dominated these
pages, in
The New York Times
their numbers dropped from an average of 22
percent before 9/11 to 9 percent in the weeks following, whereas
The Wash-
ington Post
featured only seven women out of 107 editorials. Even
The Nation
was in league: the October 8, 2001 issue was all-male (Faludi 2007, 35–36).
As the Irish American journalist Caryl Rivers observed, “If you’re a regular
reader of [
The Atlantic
], which I am, you’d think that some sort of plague had
decimated the female population. Between December 2001 and December
2002, for example, I found 38 major articles by men and seven by women. . . .
The essays were even worse. During this period, I found 41 essays by men
and two by women. Or to be precise, two essays by the same woman. For the
Atlantic
, Margaret Talbot represented all of womanhood” (2003).
The “shunning” of women in the media continued for several years.
From January through June 2002, over three-quarters of the Sunday morn-
ing talk shows “featured
no
female guests.” By 2005, women were still miss-
ing on the editorial pages of major newspapers, comprising only 10.4 percent
of the bylines at
The Washington Post
and 16.4 percent at
The New York
Times
(Faludi 2007, 37). As late as 2006, women were still grossly under-
represented. In a
New York Magazine
special issue, “What If 9/11 Never
Happened?” featuring responses from eighteen pundits, only two women
were represented—the Irish American historian Doris Kearns Goodwin and
the Slate correspondent Dahlia Lithwick—and they received considerably
less space than their male counterparts (Heilemann 2006). Just as the Bush
administration had managed to ignore the plight of the poor and minorities,
women’s rights were now “largely dismissed as being unimportant or insig-
nifi cant by mainstream opinion leaders” (Finlay 2006, 4).
When women tried to call positive attention to their patriotic efforts,
such as the documentary
The Women of Ground Zero
, they were disregarded.
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As Brenda Berkman notes, “‘I’ve been a fi refi ghter for 20 years and I’ve
never seen the contributions of women fi refi ghters, police offi cers and para-
medics so completely ignored. Suddenly we’ve become invisible.” Even worse
was the reaction to the fi lm. The noted liberal jurist Jonathan Turley actually
accused the fi lmmakers of mining the tragedy “for aggrieved heroes who
would carry a banner of division” (quoted in Faludi 2007, 81–82). When
the movie was released across the country, many people were outraged, most
notably New York City fi refi ghters. Although the department hired 308 new
recruits to replace those killed in the Towers, not a single one was female.
Similar backlash was evident among police offi cers. Said the fi rst female
police chief in Portland, Oregon, “There was this attitude of, ‘Oh, we don’t
need to hire women anymore.’ It was almost like throwing a switch and we
were back in the 50s. Across the country I was seeing what I saw decades
ago” (quoted in Faludi 2007, 85–86).
Despite the three-to-one ratio of male-to-female deaths in the Towers
(Faludi 2007, 3), the media focused on the female victims. They ignored the
women who walked down the stairs of the World Trade Center, the women
who worked the day of the tragedy, the women who returned to their jobs
after burying a family member. Instead, they singled out the 9/11 widows
who “were at home that day tending to the hearth, models of all-American
housewifery” (Faludi 2007, 93). This message was promulgated not only
by the Right, but also by the mainstream media and representatives of the
Left. An article in
The New York Times Magazine
, for example, suggested
that the attacks made single women want to marry and married women want
children.
Time
magazine announced that in the aftermath of the attack,
Americans were returning to “our oldest values,” among them “homecom-
ing and housecleaning” as well as “couples renewing their vows,” while
Time
magazine reported that matchmakers were overwhelmed with clients (Faludi
2007, 117, 122).
These headlines were reinforced by the nation’s retailers. Just as post–
World War II marketers emphasized labor-saving appliances for stay-at-home
wives forced out of their jobs, advertisers were now advised to “dust off their
old commercials and jingles . . . banking on the theory that post-9/11 Amer-
icans would want to retreat to fi fties-era domesticity” (Faludi 2007, 135).
Fashion reinforced the message by designing “Crisis Couture”—described
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by
The Washington Post
as “softer, without the hard edges and S&M sexu-
ality of recent years.” As recently as May 7, 2009, a
New York Times
article
noted that post-9/11, “child-women were bowed and baby-dolled up to
resemble decorative Easter eggs: newly and uptightly pregnant (a paragon
of marital fi delity), half-crippled by feminine weakness and excess luxury,
declawed and wholly dominated by the unstoppable twin libidos of war and
Wall Street. Men’s wear, in the meantime, fl ew its most ruthless semiotic
pirate fl ags: pinstripes and camoufl age—merciless prints altogether deaf to
feminine pleading and blind to the suffering of tots. Clothing, in a symbiotic
refl ection of the times, told us that the men were to
have their way
” (Wilson
2004, E4, original emphasis).
Some Irish American women writers took this to heart. Pre-9/11, Mary
McGarry Morris’s novels featured tough but misunderstood heroines. The
eponymous heroine in
Fiona Range
(2000) exemplifi es the traditionally
strong Irish American woman (Gott 2008, 172). Fiona is persistent, self-
aware, and honest to a fault—perhaps Morris’s most positive and successful
heroine. But in
A Hole in the Universe
(2004), Morris’s main character is
Gordon Loomis, a slightly backward man convicted of murder. The novel
traces Gordon’s clumsy reacclimation to life outside prison, including his
relationship with Delores Dufault. Delores is the real heroine of this book,
but it is the desire for a family that drives her. This reifi cation of family grows
more profound in Morris’s next novel,
The Lost Mother
(2005). Set during
the Depression, Thomas and Margaret are themselves greatly depressed by
the disappearance of their mother, Irene. Throughout, the children long for
her return. In fact, this longing becomes a refrain. Margaret “didn’t care if
they stayed poor and had to live in a tent forever so long as they could be
together again” (Morris 2004, 2). Thomas sobs, “His mother was gone, his
house. . . . And here he sat bawling in their shadows because his whole life
had changed and he couldn’t do a thing to make it better” (18–19). Despite
a happy ending—which includes a loving stepmother—the children never
forget their mother. “For how could any of us not? . . . Even if you make that
conscious effort, there is still the longing, the almost primitive need. In the
marrow, the blood, the genes. What is so very amazing then is how she could
walk out on her children and then betray them” (270).
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Anna Quindlen’s
Rise and Shine
(2006) represents another strong reac-
tion to 9/11. Rather than continue her string of twentieth-century feminist
novels such as
One True Thing
and
Black and Blue
, Quindlen explores what
happens when the TV celebrity Meghan becomes so immersed in her career
as a television talk show host that she is gob-smacked when her husband
leaves her. A subplot concerns Meghan’s sister, Bridget, a social worker in
a long-term, happily childless relationship with an older man. Yet the novel
concludes with Meghan leaving her job and fi nding love with a longtime
admirer and Bridget happily pregnant. Unlike Quindlen, Beth Lordan and
Bobbie Ann Mason have never written overtly feminist novels; however,
they defi nitely move away from women’s issues in their twenty-fi rst-century
works. In
But Come Ye Back
(2004), Lordan takes a retired Irish American
couple to Ireland where they fi nd new romances before they reconcile. The
plot of Bobbie Ann Mason’s
An Atomic Romance
(2005) falls right into the