This book analyzes the roots of Irish social and sexual
conservatism and the dramatic change in one of the most basic areas
of human experience: how we understand our roles as men and women.
It looks at the relationship between sexual and cultural dissent
and the long, slow role of culture in generating change. Meaney
offers the first major study that sets the relationship between
national and gender identities in the context of analysis of Irish
identity as white identity, tracing the identification of female
sexuality with foreign threat in nationalist discourse and its
consequences in contemporary representations of immigrant women and
their children. The study presents an extended analysis of the
relationship between feminism and nationalism, and between gender
and modernism. Analyzing the role of Joyce in contemporary culture
and Yeats and Synge in the understanding of tradition, it also sets
their work in the context of their less known female contemporaries
and challenges conventional understandings of the Irish literary
tradition. The book concludes with an analysis of the relationship
between race and masculinity in Irish characters in US and British
culture, from Patriot Games to Rescue Me and The Wire, The Romans
in Britain to M.I.5
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