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The publication in 1986 of Anna Parnell's The Tale of a Great Sham,
scrupulously edited and annotated by Dana Hearne, was a landmark
event in Irish women's history. For the first time the general
reader was able to read an account of the land war written by the
woman who at the time had been hailed as the Irish 'Joan of Arc'.
She was now impoverished and disillusioned but remained acutely
sensitive to Irish political developments. Her version of the past
was, as Hearne recognised: 'a searing attack on the male leadership
of the Land League and a penetrating critique of its major
political strategy - the strategy which came to be known as "Rent
at the Point of the Bayonet". It is also a painfully revealing
account of the inability of most key Nationalist men to work on an
equal footing with Nationalist women.' Long out of print, this
welcome re-publication - with a compelling overview of the period
by leading feminist historian Dr Margaret Ward - will enable a new
generation to decide for themselves whether the strategy developed
by the male leadership, explained and criticised with such forensic
precision by Anna, succeeded in producing no more than the
'ridiculous mouse' of the 1881 Land Act, which she believed
supported landlord power and reinforced an ineffectual
parliamentary path to political change in Ireland, rather than the
radical mass movement she favoured. Anna was a pioneering feminist
and nationalist activist who challenged male authority and is a
beacon to all who followed in her footsteps. The Tale of a Great
Sham is history in her words. Read, know, and celebrate Anna
Parnell.
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