Masculinity and Power in Irish Nationalism, 1884-1938 by Aidan Beatty
Author:Aidan Beatty
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan UK, London
If an Irish man could be perfected only by speaking the language of his forefathers, without this language he would be, as another Gaelic League pamphlet phrased it, âa self-degraded and denationalized being who is proud of being mean and who glories in being abject.â Once such an abject young Irish man learnt Irish, a language of which he was previously ashamed, he would gain pride and self-respect from the knowledge that his âCeltic ancestors were worthy of the vigorous and refined language they spokeâ. He would learn that Ireland has produced âsages who in wisdom and learning were not surpassed by men of any nation in the worldâ and âwarriors who in valour might vie with the proudest of other lands.â 28 The return to Irish was thus posited as a return to a more glorious and heroic sense of Irish identity, before the humiliation of being deprived of state power and linguistic purity by British colonial rule.
The claims to be returning to a mythical Gaelic Ireland could also be reworked to accommodate a vision of womenâs liberation. Where British imperialism was often justified on the grounds that it was a benevolent means to protect native women from their âsavageâ menfolk, the 1917 work Women in Ancient and Modern Ireland by C. Maire Nà Dhubhghall (Crissie M. Doyle) instead argued that oppression of women was an English invention, one that would be promptly dismantled with the full return to an Irish Ireland. As Ãine Ceannt declaimed in her introduction to this book: âIn reading of Irelandâs glorious past we find the women taking their rightful place in Arts, Literature, Legislation, and even in the making of War. The Irish woman of to-day is debarred from entering on many a sphere which she would desire. Are we competent to take our proper place in the New Ireland which is dawning for us? Let us see to it that we be worthy successors of Brighid, Maebh and Gráinne Mhaol.â 29 Both Ceannt and Nà Dhubhghall mapped a number of different schemas of time onto each other. The future return to Irish rule would not just be a return to a glorious recovered Irish past, but also a return to an old/new Gaelic gender equality. Nor were Ceannt and Nà Dhubhghall the only ones to think along these lines. In an essay entitled âThe Social Position of Womenâ, Eoin MacNeill claimed no ancient and few modern countries had matched the âenviable positionâ of women in ancient Ireland. 30 It was only in contemporary America, MacNeill claimed, that women had achieved such ancient Irish equality. Thus, for MacNeill the âreturnâ to ancient Gaelic Ireland was also an embracing of American-style modernity. 31 This essay, however, does not appear to have been published. Nor were such ideas at the forefront of MacNeillâs thinking in the 1920s, when he was a prominent government minister of the Free State.
A perhaps more accurate sense of Irish revivalistsâ views of women can be seen in the Gaelic Leagueâs
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Africa | Americas |
Arctic & Antarctica | Asia |
Australia & Oceania | Europe |
Middle East | Russia |
United States | World |
Ancient Civilizations | Military |
Historical Study & Educational Resources |
Magic and Divination in Early Islam by Emilie Savage-Smith;(1451)
Ambition and Desire: The Dangerous Life of Josephine Bonaparte by Kate Williams(1276)
Papillon by Henry Charrière(1260)
Bohemians, Bootleggers, Flappers, and Swells: The Best of Early Vanity Fair by Bohemians Bootleggers Flappers & Swells- The Best of Early Vanity Fair (epub)(1257)
Twelve Caesars by Mary Beard(1136)
Operation Vengeance: The Astonishing Aerial Ambush That Changed World War II by Dan Hampton(1110)
What Really Happened: The Death of Hitler by Robert J. Hutchinson(1066)
London in the Twentieth Century by Jerry White(1048)
Time of the Magicians by Wolfram Eilenberger(1027)
Twilight of the Gods by Ian W. Toll(1021)
The Japanese by Christopher Harding(1017)
Lenin: A Biography by Robert Service(981)
The Devil You Know by Charles M. Blow(930)
Freemasons for Dummies by Hodapp Christopher;(889)
A Social History of the Media by Peter Burke & Peter Burke(883)
Napolean Hill Collection by Napoleon Hill(860)
The Churchill Complex by Ian Buruma(856)
The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self by Unknown(852)
Henry III by David Carpenter;(847)
