Locked in the Family Cell: Gender, Sexuality, and Political Agency in Irish National Discourse

Front Cover
Univ of Wisconsin Press, 2004 - History - 179 pages

Locked in the Family Cell is the first book on Ireland to provide a sustained and interdisciplinary analysis of gender, sexuality, nationalism, the public and private spheres, and the relationship between these categories of analysis and action. Kathryn Conrad examines the writers and activists who are resistant to simplistic nationalist constructions of Ireland and its subjects. She exposes the assumptions and the effects of national discourses in Ireland and their reliance on a limited and limiting vision of the family: the heterosexual family cell.
By actively situating theoretical readings and concerns in practice, Conrad follows the lead of scholars such as Lauren Berlant, Gloria Anzaldua, Ailbhe Smyth, and others who have encouraged dialogue not only among scholars in different academic disciplines but between scholars and activists. In doing so she provides not only a critique of interest to scholars in a variety of fields but also a productive political intervention.

 

Contents

Informing on the Irish Family Cell 34
3
Reproduction Agency and Irish
18
Representations of Homosexuality
21
Abortion Information the X Case
99
Information Space and the Numbers
117
22
143
3555
149
85
168
132
174
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

References to this book