WOMEN, DOMESTICITY AND THE FAMILY: RECENT FEMINIST WORK IN IRISH CULTURAL STUDIES

Author: Wills C.

Source: Cultural Studies , Volume 15, Number 1, 1 January 2001 , pp. 33-57(25)

Publisher: Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group

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Abstract:

This article examines recent feminist work on the modernization of the Irish family which occurred during the twentieth century. It argues that social agencies, including prominently the Catholic Church, encouraged women to introduce 'enlightened' notions of order and hygiene into the family, while seeking to inhibit the development of individualist aspirations to personal pleasure, domesticity and romance. It also considers the development of literacy and reading habits in Ireland in the late nineteenth and twentieth century, as a clue to the changing forms of women's experience and subjectivity. The article concludes that a balanced account of the benefits and drawbacks for women of Irish family patterns, and of their investment in them, must take full account of tensions and ambiguities in both the traditional and the modernized family.

Keywords: IRISH; HISTORY; DOMESTICITY; THE; FAMILY; FEMINISM; MODERNIZATION; LITERACY

Language: English

Document Type: Research article

Publication date: 2001-01-01

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