Women, Reform, and Resistance in Ireland, 1850–1950

Author:   Christina S. Brophy ,  Cara Delay
Publisher:   Palgrave Macmillan
Edition:   1st ed. 2015
ISBN:  

9781137513137


Pages:   242
Publication Date:   12 October 2015
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Women, Reform, and Resistance in Ireland, 1850–1950


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Author:   Christina S. Brophy ,  Cara Delay
Publisher:   Palgrave Macmillan
Imprint:   Palgrave Macmillan
Edition:   1st ed. 2015
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.450kg
ISBN:  

9781137513137


ISBN 10:   1137513136
Pages:   242
Publication Date:   12 October 2015
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

'Brophy and Delay's eclectic mix of historical essays provide accounts of struggles faced, and lives lived, by mna na hEireann (the women of Ireland). Each essay can be read either as active engagement in, or resistance to, social, legal and cultural reform in modern Ireland. Covering a diverse range of themes from philanthropy -both as actors and agents- deviant behavior, criminality, patriarchy and folk beliefs, the entire social spectrum finds representation in this lively read, which will appeal to scholars of Irish studies, gender, and world histories alike.' -Ciara Breathnach, Lecturer in History, University of Limerick, Ireland 'Christina Brophy and Cara Delay have brought together a dazzling array of writers who produced a challenging set of essays, all of which give Irish women agency and voice. Whether think about family, religion, the criminal justice system, sexuality or citizenship, these articles challenge and inform, rightfully making the women who come alive in these pages powerful historical actors.' -Hasia R. Diner, Director, Goldstein-Goren Center for American Jewish History, New York University, USA 'This collection of essays offers a fresh and insightful exploration of women's lives in Ireland in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Including work by historians and anthropologists it provides enlightening studies of how the interactions between middle class and poorer women shaped both the nature of power between them, and also the character of their resistance to wider economic and social pressures. The essays move among women in institutions such as prisons, hospitals and reformatories exploring the impact of women's behavior and speech on shaping their interactions with authority. It also examines the intersections of gender and class. That some Irish women were adept at defying society's expectations of appropriate gendered conduct is evident in their disruptive behavior in institutions. Other women, particularly those who petitioned for charitable assistance, were able to utilize accepted gendered ideals to mediate between power and poverty and in the process sustain their own and their families' wellbeing. Many of the essays reveal acts of resistance in the ways, for instance, in which young women acquired sexual knowledge, through storytelling, or in the formulaic cursing employed by keening women and widows. These essays provide a sense of the complexity of Irish women's lives within a dramatically changing social, economic and political period of Irish history.' -Maria Luddy, Professor of History, University of Warwick, England 'The historians in this collection provide rich narratives of how the forces of modernization resulted in increased surveillance and stifling regulation of women and girls in late Nineteenth and early Twentieth century Ireland. Yet the central achievement of these scholars is the attention they give to the resilience of the women they document: their strategies of resistance, subversion and even rebellion. The archives used for documentary sources in this book are more varied than generally mined by Irish historians and the deft deployment of theoretical concepts is also not routinely found in Irish history writing. Perhaps most impressive is that the scholars are as attentive to how class inflects, constrains and demarcates differing female experiences as much as they are focused on the discourses of gender. The essays gathered here are not 'women's history' in that they don't seek to add an account of what women did to the dominant narrative of Irish history. The scholars in this collection provide a consummate example of how feminist historiography not merely adds nuance or complicates received historical accounts but radically challenges the unreflective assumptions of much Irish history writing: their work provides new ground from which to gain a perspective on how lives were lived, and what lives mattered in post-Famine Ireland.' -Katherine O'Donnell, Senior Lecturer, School of Philosophy, University College Dublin, Ireland 'This is a coherent and very stimulating collection of essays. It makes an innovative and fresh contribution to Irish historical studies. Drawing on the multi-disciplined approaches of historians, folklorists and literary scholars, the volume interrogates the notion of Irish women as passive victims of church and state. It documents the complex and, often, surprising ways in which women responded to the challenges of post-Famine Irish society. The volume is essential reading for students of modern Irish history.' -Mary O'Dowd, Professor of Gender History, Queen's University Belfast, Northern Ireland


'Brophy and Delay's eclectic mix of historical essays provide accounts of struggles faced, and lives lived, by mna na hEireann (the women of Ireland). Each essay can be read either as active engagement in, or resistance to, social, legal and cultural reform in modern Ireland. Covering a diverse range of themes from philanthropy both as actors and agents- deviant behavior, criminality, patriarchy and folk beliefs, the entire social spectrum finds representation in this lively read, which will appeal to scholars of Irish studies, gender, and world histories alike.' -Ciara Breathnach, Lecturer in History, University of Limerick, Ireland 'Christina Brophy and Cara Delay have brought together a dazzling array of writers who produced a challenging set of essays, all of which give Irish women agency and voice. Whether think about family, religion, the criminal justice system, sexuality or citizenship, these articles challenge and inform, rightfully making the women who come alive in these pages powerful historical actors.' -Hasia R. Diner, Director, Goldstein-Goren Center for American Jewish History, New York University, USA 'This collection of essays offers a fresh and insightful exploration of women's lives in Ireland in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Including work by historians and anthropologists it provides enlightening studies of how the interactions between middle class and poorer women shaped both the nature of power between them, and also the character of their resistance to wider economic and social pressures. The essays move among women in institutions such as prisons, hospitals and reformatories exploring the impact of women's behavior and speech on shaping their interactions with authority. It also examines the intersections of gender and class. That some Irish women were adept at defying society's expectations of appropriate gendered conduct is evident in their disruptive behavior in institutions. Other women, particularly those who petitioned for charitable assistance, were able to utilize accepted gendered ideals to mediate between power and poverty and in the process sustain their own and their families' wellbeing. Many of the essays reveal acts of resistance in the ways, for instance, in which young women acquired sexual knowledge, through storytelling, or in the formulaic cursing employed by keening women and widows. These essays provide a sense of the complexity of Irish women's lives within a dramatically changing social, economic and political period of Irish history.' -Maria Luddy, Professor of History, University of Warwick, England 'The historians in this collection provide rich narratives of how the forces of modernization resulted in increased surveillance and stifling regulation of women and girls in late Nineteenth and early Twentieth century Ireland. Yet the central achievement of these scholars is the attention they give to the resilience of the women they document: their strategies of resistance, subversion and even rebellion. The archives used for documentary sources in this book are more varied than generally mined by Irish historians and the deft deployment of theoretical concepts is also not routinely found in Irish history writing. Perhaps most impressive is that the scholars are as attentive to how class inflects, constrains and demarcates differing female experiences as much as they are focused on the discourses of gender. The essays gathered here are not 'women's history' in that they don't seek to add an account of what women did to the dominant narrative of Irish history. The scholars in this collection provide a consummate example of how feminist historiography not merely adds nuance or complicates received historical accounts but radically challenges the unreflective assumptions of much Irish history writing: their work provides new ground from which to gain a perspective on how lives were lived, and what lives mattered in post-Famine Ireland.' -Katherine O'Donnell, Senior Lecturer, School of Philosophy, University College Dublin, Ireland 'This is a coherent and very stimulating collection of essays. It makes an innovative and fresh contribution to Irish historical studies. Drawing on the multi-disciplined approaches of historians, folklorists and literary scholars, the volume interrogates the notion of Irish women as passive victims of church and state. It documents the complex and, often, surprising ways in which women responded to the challenges of post-Famine Irish society. The volume is essential reading for students of modern Irish history.' -Mary O'Dowd, Professor of Gender History, Queen's University Belfast, Northern Ireland


'Brophy and Delay's eclectic mix of historical essays provide accounts of struggles faced, and lives lived, by mna na hEireann (the women of Ireland). Each essay can be read either as active engagement in, or resistance to, social, legal and cultural reform in modern Ireland. Covering a diverse range of themes from philanthropy both as actors and agents- deviant behavior, criminality, patriarchy and folk beliefs, the entire social spectrum finds representation in this lively read, which will appeal to scholars of Irish studies, gender, and world histories alike.' -Ciara Breathnach, Lecturer in History, University of Limerick, Ireland 'Christina Brophy and Cara Delay have brought together a dazzling array of writers who produced a challenging set of essays, all of which give Irish women agency and voice. Whether thinking about family, religion, the criminal justice system, sexuality or citizenship, these articles challenge and inform, rightfully making the women who come alive in these pages powerful historical actors.' -Hasia R. Diner, Director, Goldstein-Goren Center for American Jewish History, New York University, USA 'This collection of essays offers a fresh and insightful exploration of women's lives in Ireland in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Including work by historians and anthropologists it provides enlightening studies of how the interactions between middle class and poorer women shaped both the nature of power between them, and also the character of their resistance to wider economic and social pressures. The essays move among women in institutions such as prisons, hospitals and reformatories exploring the impact of women's behavior and speech on shaping their interactions with authority. It also examines the intersections of gender and class. That some Irish women were adept at defying society's expectations of appropriate gendered conduct is evident in their disruptive behavior in institutions. Other women, particularly those who petitioned for charitable assistance, were able to utilize accepted gendered ideals to mediate between power and poverty and in the process sustain their own and their families' wellbeing. Many of the essays reveal acts of resistance in the ways, for instance, in which young women acquired sexual knowledge, through storytelling, or in the formulaic cursing employed by keening women and widows. These essays provide a sense of the complexity of Irish women's lives within a dramatically changing social, economic and political period of Irish history.' -Maria Luddy, Professor of History, University of Warwick, England 'The historians in this collection provide rich narratives of how the forces of modernization resulted in increased surveillance and stifling regulation of women and girls in late Nineteenth and early Twentieth century Ireland. Yet the central achievement of these scholars is the attention they give to the resilience of the women they document: their strategies of resistance, subversion and even rebellion. The archives used for documentary sources in this book are more varied than generally mined by Irish historians and the deft deployment of theoretical concepts is also not routinely found in Irish history writing. Perhaps most impressive is that the scholars are as attentive to how class inflects, constrains and demarcates differing female experiences as much as they are focused on the discourses of gender. The essays gathered here are not 'women's history' in that they don't seek to add an account of what women did to the dominant narrative of Irish history. The scholars in this collection provide a consummate example of how feminist historiography not merely adds nuance or complicates received historical accounts but radically challenges the unreflective assumptions of much Irish history writing: their work provides new ground from which to gain a perspective on how lives were lived, and what lives mattered in post-Famine Ireland.' -Katherine O'Donnell, Senior Lecturer, School of Philosophy, University College Dublin, Ireland 'This is a coherent and very stimulating collection of essays. It makes an innovative and fresh contribution to Irish historical studies. Drawing on the multi-disciplined approaches of historians, folklorists and literary scholars, the volume interrogates the notion of Irish women as passive victims of church and state. It documents the complex and, often, surprising ways in which women responded to the challenges of post-Famine Irish society. The volume is essential reading for students of modern Irish history.' -Mary O'Dowd, Professor of Gender History, Queen's University Belfast, Northern Ireland


Author Information

Lindsey Earner-Byrne, University College Dublin, Ireland Elaine Farrell, Queen's University Belfast, Northern Ireland Brigittine French, Grinnell College, USA Margaret Preston, Augustana College, USA E. Moore Quinn, College of Charleston, usa Jennifer Redmond, NUI Maynooth, Ireland Conor Reidy, University of Limerick, Ireland Vanessa Rutherford, University College Cork, Ireland

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