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E-raamat: Working-Class Women in Irish Literature and Theatre: Emerging from the Silence [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

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Working-Class Women in Irish Literature and Theatre critically engages with works of theatre both by and about working-class women, historically and presently. Addressing professional and community theatre productions, from both textual and performative perspectives, this volume focuses on works of theatre by practitioners, directors, playwrights, and performance artists across rural and urban contexts. Irish theatre has a long history of signifying social class. Yet the representations of working-class women in Irish theatrical history also encompass several problematic issues, starting with the fact that these depictions were created by male writers like J. M Synge and Seán O'Casey to name but a few. Nonetheless, the theatres emphasis on embodied performance and its ability to reach its public in an unmediated way has attracted working-class engagement perhaps more than other art forms in Ireland. Contemporary playwrights in the Republic and the north of Ireland have tirelessly striven to illuminate working-class womens lived experiences and have reframed the characterisation of working-class women by drawing out the intersection of social class with sexualities, ethnic minorities, and racial identities. This edited collection also includes the voices of directors, playwrights, and performers who identify with a working-class social background, offering first-hand accounts of their lived experience in the theatre industry.
Introduction: No Working-Class Women in Irish Culture? by Clara Mallon
and Salomé Paul

Section One: Absent Presence: Working-Class Women in the Canon

Chapter One: Not in Flesh: The Construction and Deconstruction of Poor
Woman in Irish Theatre by Salomé Paul

Chapter Two: Working-Class Actresses and Working-Class Roles: Ireland in the
1910s and 1950s by Cathy Leeney

Chapter Three: The Juno Complex: Tracing Representations of Working-Class
Women in Contemporary Dublin Theatre by Fiona Charleton

Section Two: Class, Convergence and Consciousness on the Contemporary Stage

Chapter Four: Theatre of Grace Dyas: Classed Re-Imaginings of Social and
Cultural Histories by Clara Mallon and Salomé Paul

Chapter Five: Who are you angry with?: Class, Race, and Conflict in the
Plays of Rosaleen McDonagh by Justine Nakase

Chapter Six: Hope in the Face of Despair: (Re)Presenting Working-Class Women
in Natural History of Hope by Clara Mallon

Chapter Seven: The Bearable, Bridgeable and the Imaginable: Deirdre Kinahans
The Unmanageable Sisters by Eamonn Jordan

Chapter Eight: Wakened Solidarity: Making the Invisible Visible for
Working-Class Women in Frank McGuinnesss The Factory Girls by David Cregan

Section Three: Fractured Existences: Women on the Periphery in Theatre in the
North of Ireland

Chapter Nine: Womens Work: Challenging Social Dysfunction through
Working-Class Womens Performance Practice in the North of Ireland by Ciara
L. Murphy

Chapter Ten: Confinement, Resistance and Reclaiming Space in JustUss Just a
Prisoners Wife by Michael Pierse

Section Four: Breaking Silence: In Conversation with Working-Class Artists

Chapter Eleven: In Conversation with Veronica Dyas

Chapter Twelve: In Conversation with Louise Lowe

Chapter Thirteen: In Conversation with Felispeaks

Chapter Fourteen: In Conversation with Emmet Kirwan
Clara Mallon recently completed her PhD thesis at the ODonoghue Centre for Drama, Theatre and Performance, University of Galway. Her project was funded by the Irish Research Councils Postgraduate Scholarship and centres on the representation of the working class in Irish theatre and performance in Ireland. She has published with the Irish University Review, and has a number of chapters in edited collections. She occasionally lectures at University College Dublin.

Salomé Paul is a Teaching Fellow in Drama Studies at University College Dublin (UCD). She completed a cotutelle PhD from Sorbonne University and UCD in 2020. She was awarded the French Government Medal and the National University of Ireland Prize for Distinction in Collaborative Degrees for her doctoral research in 2021. She was the recipient of the Two-Year Postdoctoral Scheme of the Irish Research Council from 2020 to 2022, which led to the publication of her monograph Marina Carr and Greek Tragedy: Feminist Myths of Monstrosity in 2024.