Gender Modernity and Nation in Joseph O'Connor's Star of the Sea

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TY  - JOUR
  - Ó Gallchoir, Clíona
  - 2013
  - November
  - Irish University Review
  - Gender Modernity and Nation in Joseph O'Connor's Star of the Sea
  - Published
  - ()
  - 43
  - 1
  - 344
  - 362
  - The late 1990s and early 2000s were marked by the appearance of a number of ambitious historical novels by Irish writers, including Joseph O’Connor’s Star of the Sea (2004), which enjoyed both critical and commercial success internationally as well as in Ireland. The turn towards historical fiction occurred as Ireland experienced an unprecedented economic boom accompanied by rapid social change during the period now notoriously referred to as the Celtic Tiger. The concern with Ireland’s belated entry into modernity that was a hallmark of the Celtic Tiger period is reflected in Star of the Sea, in which, this essay argues, there is an attempt to construct a national subject position fully compatible with modernity.  To this end, for instance, the Irish language is represented in the novel as a standardized, written language, so that the voiceless victims of the famine, many of whom were Irish-speaking and illiterate, can be reclaimed for twenty-first-century Ireland.  O’Connor is however concerned as much with authenticity as he is with modernity, and through the figure of Mary Duane the novel thus ultimately reinstates the silence and wordlessness that is a hallmark of the Famine in the Irish national imaginary.
  - 0021-1427
  - http://www.euppublishing.com/journal/iur
  - https://www.jstor.org/stable/24576851
DA  - 2013/11
ER  - 
@article{V239845424,
   = {Ó Gallchoir,  Clíona },
   = {2013},
   = {November},
   = {Irish University Review},
   = {Gender Modernity and Nation in Joseph O'Connor's Star of the Sea},
   = {Published},
   = {()},
   = {43},
   = {1},
  pages = {344--362},
   = {{The late 1990s and early 2000s were marked by the appearance of a number of ambitious historical novels by Irish writers, including Joseph O’Connor’s Star of the Sea (2004), which enjoyed both critical and commercial success internationally as well as in Ireland. The turn towards historical fiction occurred as Ireland experienced an unprecedented economic boom accompanied by rapid social change during the period now notoriously referred to as the Celtic Tiger. The concern with Ireland’s belated entry into modernity that was a hallmark of the Celtic Tiger period is reflected in Star of the Sea, in which, this essay argues, there is an attempt to construct a national subject position fully compatible with modernity.  To this end, for instance, the Irish language is represented in the novel as a standardized, written language, so that the voiceless victims of the famine, many of whom were Irish-speaking and illiterate, can be reclaimed for twenty-first-century Ireland.  O’Connor is however concerned as much with authenticity as he is with modernity, and through the figure of Mary Duane the novel thus ultimately reinstates the silence and wordlessness that is a hallmark of the Famine in the Irish national imaginary.}},
  issn = {0021-1427},
   = {http://www.euppublishing.com/journal/iur},
   = {https://www.jstor.org/stable/24576851},
  source = {IRIS}
}
AUTHORSÓ Gallchoir, Clíona
YEAR2013
MONTHNovember
JOURNAL_CODEIrish University Review
TITLEGender Modernity and Nation in Joseph O'Connor's Star of the Sea
STATUSPublished
TIMES_CITED()
SEARCH_KEYWORD
VOLUME43
ISSUE1
START_PAGE344
END_PAGE362
ABSTRACTThe late 1990s and early 2000s were marked by the appearance of a number of ambitious historical novels by Irish writers, including Joseph O’Connor’s Star of the Sea (2004), which enjoyed both critical and commercial success internationally as well as in Ireland. The turn towards historical fiction occurred as Ireland experienced an unprecedented economic boom accompanied by rapid social change during the period now notoriously referred to as the Celtic Tiger. The concern with Ireland’s belated entry into modernity that was a hallmark of the Celtic Tiger period is reflected in Star of the Sea, in which, this essay argues, there is an attempt to construct a national subject position fully compatible with modernity.  To this end, for instance, the Irish language is represented in the novel as a standardized, written language, so that the voiceless victims of the famine, many of whom were Irish-speaking and illiterate, can be reclaimed for twenty-first-century Ireland.  O’Connor is however concerned as much with authenticity as he is with modernity, and through the figure of Mary Duane the novel thus ultimately reinstates the silence and wordlessness that is a hallmark of the Famine in the Irish national imaginary.
PUBLISHER_LOCATION
ISBN_ISSN0021-1427
EDITION
URLhttp://www.euppublishing.com/journal/iur
DOI_LINKhttps://www.jstor.org/stable/24576851
FUNDING_BODY
GRANT_DETAILS