When politics meets gender: trauma in Edna O’Brien’s House of Splendid Isolation
The signing of the contentious Anglo-Irish Treaty in 1921 was a traumatic experience for many Irish people. This is not only because of the ensuing Irish Civil War, but the psychological adjustments that the Irish people have to make in their partitioned land. Since the Irish Republican Army (IRA...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
2017
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Online Access: | http://journalarticle.ukm.my/11766/ http://journalarticle.ukm.my/11766/ http://journalarticle.ukm.my/11766/1/19244-63571-1-PB.pdf |
Summary: | The signing of the contentious Anglo-Irish Treaty in 1921 was a traumatic experience for
many Irish people. This is not only because of the ensuing Irish Civil War, but the
psychological adjustments that the Irish people have to make in their partitioned land. Since
the Irish Republican Army (IRA) emerged during the Anglo-Irish War (1919-21), it has been
bent on terminating the British government’s control of Ireland and establishing a truly
independent and unified Irish Republic through armed struggles. This traumatic history,
which was embedded with the conflicts and compromises of such struggles, became a pivotal
issue in many Irish writings. As a consequence, it helped shape subsequent Irish literature
and culture when the dream of a free and unified Ireland was constantly recalled and
reconfigured. These painful markings are reflected in complex ways in Edna O’Brien’s
fiction House of Splendid Isolation (1994), in which an IRA fugitive named McGreevy holes
up and finally bonds with Josie O’Meara, an aged widow, in a dilapidated house. Apart from
the political turmoil, considerable anguishes caused by love and marriage converge to
entangle the protagonists’ traumas. This paper focuses on how, by shifting between the
multifarious narrative perspectives, O’Brien’s House of Splendid Isolation stitches the
interwoven personal, interpersonal, and national suffering together. In addition, the role
women play in facilitating sympathetic understanding and reconciliation amid the violence
and traumas in contemporary Ireland is discussed. The findings imply that, despite the ageold
traumatic experiences caused by political conflicts in Ireland in the past few centuries, a
trauma-free tomorrow via love and reconciliation, mostly with the help of women, is possible
in contemporary Ireland. |
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