The Female and the Species: The Animal in Irish Women's Writing (Reimagining Ireland, #19)

by Maureen O'Connor

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Book cover for The Female and the Species

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Describing the Irish as 'female' and 'bestial' is a practice dating back to the twelfth century, while for women, inside and outside of Ireland, their association with children, animals and other 'savages' has had a long history. A link among systems of oppression has been asserted in recent decades by some feminists, but linking women's rights with animal advocacy can be controversial. This strategy responds to the fact that women's inferiority has been alleged and justified by appropriating them to nature, an appropriation that colonialism has also practiced on its racial and cultural others. Nineteenth-century feminists braved such associations, for instance, often asserting vegetarianism as a form of rebellion against the dominant culture. Vegetarianism and animal advocacy have uniquely Irish implications. This study examines a tradition of Irish women writers deploying the 'natural' as a gesture of resistance to paternalist regulation of female energies and as a self-consciously elaborated stage for the performance of Irish identity.
They call into question the violent dislocations and disavowals required by figurative practices, particularly when utilizing Irish topography, an already 'unnatural' cultural construct shaped by conflict and suffering.
  • ISBN10 303530033X
  • ISBN13 9783035300338
  • Publish Date 14 May 2010
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country CH
  • Imprint Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
  • Edition 250th ed.
  • Format eBook
  • Pages 193
  • Language English