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What is de Valera’s Ireland

Immigrant Women’s Voices and Integrating Feminism Into Migration Theory
The period from 1959 to 1973 of the history of Ireland with Éamon de Valera serving as president. Following an autarchic economic model and an isolationist policy, and counting on the support of the Catholic Church, Ireland was to be shaped as a model for the entire world, as a country with devout, loving, chaste, modest and simple citizens who would excel in respecting the Word of God and His teachings, while rejecting any type of materialistic aspirations or carnal gratifications, considered sources of embarrassment, guilt, temptation, sin and impurity.
Published in Chapter:
What Made Them Leave?: Myths and Realities of the Irish Woman Emigrant in the Contemporary Irish Short Story
Madalina Armie (University of Almería, Spain)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-4664-2.ch010
Abstract
Almost coinciding with the prosperity of the Celtic Tiger economic story of success, recent decades have witnessed how politicians, scholars, and writers started to vindicate the contributions of the Irish diaspora and, by extension, those of Irish emigrant women in the construction of Mother Ireland. The chapter attempts to illustrate how the contemporary Irish short story written during these years was depicting disheartening or happy-ending stories about emigration, exile, and return, being at times regressive in its outlooks, and at times setting the stories of their heroines in the here and now. Here, due to the readings of these creative works, a more nuanced picture of Irish women's emigration is offered and this goes beyond the conceptualizations of those women who left the Irish shores as vulnerable, ignorant, poor, pregnant, or sexually deviant, while the phenomenon of immigration itself is understood in relation to variables such as class, age, education, nationality, and religion.
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