Symposium Registration

To register for the Symposium 'Inventing and Re-Inventing the Irish Woman 1760-2000'
Please email susan.cahill@ucd.ie as soon as possible.

Symposium Programme

Symposium
‘Inventing and Re-Inventing the Irish Woman 1760-2000’

Venue:
Humanities Institute of Ireland.
University College Dublin.
10-11 October 2008.



Programme.

Friday 10 October.

2.30 p.m. Registration, tea and coffee
2.50 Official Opening:
Professor Mary Daly
College Principal, College of Arts and Celtic Studies, UCD.

3.00 - 4.00 Professor Maria Luddy (University of Warwick)
‘Sex and the Shaping of Irish Woman’
4.00 - 5.00 Dr. Claire Connolly (Cardiff University)
‘Four Nations Feminism: Una Troy and Menna Gallie'

5.00 – 5.15 - Coffee

5.15 – 6.15 Professor Clair Wills (Queen Mary,University of London)
‘Representations of women, marriage and modernity in the 1950s’.

Saturday 11 October.

9.30 – 10.00 - Coffee

10.00 – 11.00 Professor Andrew Carpenter (UCD)
‘Voices in verse: women poets in eighteenth-century Ireland’
11.00 – 12.00 Dr. Anne Mulhall (UCD)
'Intersectionality and the Space of Writing: The Women Writers in the New Ireland Network'

1200 -1.00 - Lunch



1.00– 2.00 Professor Grace Neville (UCC)
‘Living in the material world: the Fashioning of America by Irish Women Emigrants, 1880-1920’
2.00 – 3.00 Dr. Maryann Valiulis (TCD)
‘Gendering the Irish Free State'

3.00 – 3.15 – Coffee

3.15 – 4.15
Dr. Catherine O’Connor (UL)
‘The women who stayed: Perceptions of America and its impact on Irish women 1900-1960’.

Dr. Susan Cahill (UCD)
‘“Let it become a traveller in words” : Contemporary women’s poetry in Irish poetry magazines 1960-2005.’

4.15. Round table session chaired by Professor Gerardine Meaney (UCD); Professor Mary O’ Dowd (QUB); Dr. Bernadette Whelan (UL).
Inventing and Re-Inventing the Irish Woman: External Influences on Gender Construction



The Irish Research Council for the Humanities and Social Sciences
An Chomhairle um Thaighde sna Dána agus sna hEolaíochtaí Soisialta
Symposium 10-11 October 2008
University College Dublin
Confirmed Speakers: Professor Andrew Carpenter, Dr. Claire Connolly, Dr. Anne Mulhall, Dr. Maryann Valiulis, Professor Clair Wills, Professor Maria Luddy, Professor Grace Neville.

For further information contact: Susan Cahill susan.cahill@ucd.ie or Catherine O' Connor catherine.oconnor@ul.ie.

Inventing and Re-Inventing the Irish Woman: External Influences on Gender Construction 1760-2006

An Chomhairle um Thaighde sna Dána agus sna hEolaíochtaí Sóisialta

Irish Research Council for the Humanities and Social Sciences

GOVERNMENT OF IRELAND RESEARCH PROJECT GRANTS
IN THE HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES
Description of project
This project has three broad aims:
· to examine how outside influences helped to invent and reinvent women’s perceptions of their gender and national identity in the time period, 1750-2006
· to interrogate the relationship between personal, national and global forces in the formation of women’s identity
· to explore the interaction between social and cultural change

The first part of the project will involve research into the non-Irish literature read by women in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, much of which was imported from England or the continent. A particular focus will be on two types of literature: the expanding prescriptive and religious literature of the period and the increasing number of newspapers, journals and magazines that addressed women readers and were clearly modelled on or borrowed heavily from English printed material. In the eighteenth century, this literature was read largely by Protestant women but by the first half of the nineteenth century, Catholic middle class women also began to read similar material. Through an examination of manuscript correspondence and diaries the project will aim to explore the reaction of women to their reading material and the impact it had on their self-perception and sense of identity.
By the end of the nineteenth century, a second major external cultural influence was apparent. The ‘idea of America’ was an established part of the Irish mentality and a number of sources informed the popular image and understanding of it. The first and perhaps most significant one was emigration. Through the use of folklore material, letters, newspapers, magazines, official records and later oral history and film, the second part of this project will examine how ideas and information about America filtered back to Ireland. A further aspect of this ‘return tide’ will be to examine the impact which the returned female emigrant had on gender behaviour in her local community. Building on an existing oral history study by Dr Whelan, it is intended to examine how Irish women reacted to ‘American’ ideas and practices and whether it informed their behaviour and their gender and national identities.

These themes will be traced from 1960-2005 through an analysis of external influences on the proliferation of Irish women’s cultural production. It will draw on work completed for the Women in Modern Irish Culture database which has identified a much broader range of cultural production by women in the period 1960-2005 than has informed previous analyses. It will take two case studies which the data indicates challenge existing paradigms for an understanding of the socio-cultural identity of Irish women. The study will compare the role of the UK based Channel 4 in the nineteen eighties and the EU Media project in the 1990s in the funding of work by Irish women for an international audience, focussing on the opportunities offered as well the restraints consequent upon external funding. While the responses of Irish women film-makers to this context is apparent in the work identified by the Women in Modern Irish Culture database, a much more detailed analysis of the impact of experimental and political film-making by women outside of Ireland needs to be undertaken. and the role of training abroad in the formation of style and content of Irish women’s films. The second case history will look at the role will look at the role of literary journals in the dissemination of work by women from abroad in Ireland between 1960 and 2005. This case history will analyse the dual identity of the Irish writer/woman writer and its impact on the re-invention of personal, gender and national identity in the contemporary period.


Resources to be available online:
Digital archive: Oral History interviews currently being created
Database
3 April 2008
Conference Presentation made to Image and Reality: Women in 19th and 20th Century Ireland
second annual Women's History conference at Queen's University, Belfast.
Participants : Professor Gerardine Meaney; Dr. Susan Cahill; Professor Mary O' Dowd; Dr. Bernadette Whelan; Dr. Catherine O' Connor.