Read The Banshees: A Literary History of Irish American Women Online
Authors: Sally Barr Ebest
Tags: #Social Science, #Literary Criticism, #English; Irish; Scottish; Welsh, #Feminism & Feminist Theory, #European
Doh, possessed of no ego at all, fetching and carrying for hubby with her hair
freshly done and the beef bourguignon simmering on the range, a pal who
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likes hockey, football, lacrosse, craps (you name it) because HE does, who
never nags, who keeps hubby thin, puts the big chair by the fi re for him and
slinks about in a black negligee if HE is in the mood. And she always,
always
spends an hour a day cross-examining herself to make sure she is Making
Marriage Work. She makes me want to throw up” (1973, 246)
Many women agreed. By 1970, women comprised 44 percent of the
workforce while the birthrate dropped from a high of 25.3 births per thou-
sand in 1957 to 14.8 by 1975 (Woods 2005, 367). Feminists took to the
streets to protest, met privately in consciousness-raising groups, and argued
for the inclusion of women’s literature, history, and accomplishments in the
academic curriculum. To do so, American women had to unlearn what they
had been taught and decondition the ingrained tendency to sublimate their
personal desires to serve their bosses, parents, boyfriend, spouse, or children
(Rich 1979).
Sexually Transgressive Writing
In addition to protesting for equal rights, feminists raised awareness of sti-
fl ing marriages, rape and domestic violence, and the desire for sexual free-
dom. On these issues, Irish American women were at the forefront. Whereas
Mary McCarthy and Betty Friedan represented the needs of Irish Catholic
and Jewish women writers in the 1960s, Mary Gordon encompassed both
categories. Her mother, Anna Gagliano Gordon, was Italian Irish while her
father, David Gordon, was a Jewish convert to Catholicism. This genetic
confl uence yielded a fi rst novel set in Queens, a middle-class Irish Ameri-
can borough, featuring female friendships, teen-age and adulterous sex, rape
and a lesbian relationship, domestic violence and self-loathing, priests and
politicians, repentance and forgiveness. In other words, Gordon took Mary
McCarthy’s themes away from the upper-class Episcopalians, set them in a
working-class Irish urban enclave, and added Catholics, priests, and guilt.
Like
The Group
,
Final Payments
was a hit. It spent fi ve weeks on
The New
York Times
“Best Sellers” list, was named a
New York Times
outstanding
book of 1978, and was nominated for a National Book Critics Circle Award.
In 1979 alone
Final Payments
sold 1.25 million copies (Bennett 2002, 11).
After eleven years spent caring for her widowed, stroke-ridden father,
a retired rightwing conservative Catholic professor of medieval literature,
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Gordon’s Isabel Moore fi nds herself unable to mourn his death because she
is thrilled to be free: “I felt light, as from the removal of a burden, light as a
spaceman in a gravity less universe” (1978, 9). Taking a feminist stance often
misinterpreted as anti-Irish, Isabel rejects suggestions from the family lawyer
that she, a college graduate, become a housekeeper. She has no desire to join
“that network of Irish daughters, orphaned in their forties by the death of an
invalid parent, [working] always for less than minimum wages at jobs found
by some priest, some doctor, among their own kind” (26). Confl ating femi-
nism and Catholicism, Gordon explains, “I was brought up to take issues of
justice very seriously. . . . And what is feminism except a desire for universal
justice not bounded by gender roles?” (quoted in Wachtel 2002, 272).
Paralleling the feminist movement, Isabel’s progress is slow and some-
what recursive. Her distaste for servile jobs stems largely from her association
with Margaret Casey, the family housekeeper who hoped to marry Isabel’s
father and stop him from spoiling his daughter. A recurring fi gure based on
Gordon’s hated aunt,1 Margaret is a horrid old woman constantly whining
about her lot. Isabel wisely has no desire to join her company: “I always knew
who I was; I was not Margaret. It gave me a great freedom. I could do what-
ever I wanted.” This belief is fostered by Isabel’s father, who “always said he
was raising a Theresa of Avila, not a Therese of Lisieux: someone who would
found orders and insult recalcitrant bishops, not someone who would submit
to having dirty water thrown on her by her sisters in Christ” (27–28).
Although
Final Payments
garnered praise from critics, like
The Group
,
it caused an uproar among the people it skewered: in this case, Irish Ameri-
cans. A
New York Times
Book Review begins positively— “Along with her
unmistakable talent Mary Gordon shows great respect for her craft: she
cares about her diction, the rhythms of a sentence, the pacing of her para-
graphs”—but then continues, “Mary Gordon’s cleverness, like her heroine’s,
can be forced and somewhat parochial” (Howard 1978, 32). Charles Fan-
ning’s reaction is better-known and less tempered. Accusing
Final Payments
of being “fueled by personal rage and bitterness at the perceived excesses,
distortions, and injustices of Irish-American family life,” he describes the
1. See Gordon’s autobiography,
Circling My Mother
.
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plot as movement “from a caricatured constriction to an exaggerated escape
into the open air.” The father is depicted as “an intolerant Catholic conser-
vative who makes William F. Buckley, Jr. look like Dorothy Day”; the fam-
ily priest as “a mawkish, alcoholic priest who retards Isabel’s growth”; and
the working-class Irish neighbors as fractious and irrational (2001, 329).
Later analyses accuse Gordon of blaming the bleak Irish American lifestyle
on “tragic defects in Irish culture” (Meagher 2005, 166) and criticize such
works as depicting “a parade of grotesques” (Ebest 2005, 182).
But Irish American sociological history suggests Gordon’s depiction
might be somewhat accurate—even though critics should take care not to
confl ate literature with sociology (Dezell 2001, 31). Regardless, such criti-
cisms refl ect Kerby Miller’s depiction of Irish Americans as overly concerned
with assimilation and respectability (Dezell 2001, 72). Clearly Gordon had
moved beyond this. In fact, the New Irish immigrant Eamonn Wall defends
the novel as representative of the genre. Noting that “Irish American writ-
ers usually present their ethnic group in an unfl attering light,” he explains
that “this modus operandi, which has long been a feature of Irish and Irish
American writing, is part of the writer’s historical inheritance,” a trait that
can be traced from James Joyce through Edna O’Brien and Dermot Bulger
(1999, 16). In this instance, Wall suggests that Gordon’s characterization
of Isabel Moore displays an understanding of how cloistered her life had
been and how poorly her upbringing had prepared her for adulthood. At the
same time, the plotline serves as an allegory for “the secondary role women
have been forced to play in Irish American families” (Wall 1999, 32–33)
while reminding us that most academics are more comfortable with Irish
Americans portrayed by male writers who focus on pubs, cops, and “boyos”
(Dezell 2001, 31).
A close reading of the novel, as well as Gordon’s 1989 memoir,
The
Shadow Man
, further refutes such criticism. As Maureen Howard did in
Bridgeport Bus
, Gordon draws on real-life personality traits to develop her
main characters and then changes their identities. She reverses her own
father’s virulent anti-Semitism, turning it into ultraconservative Catholicism
as a means of exposing the church’s treatment of women.
Final Payment’s
opening scene “refl ects the views of most Catholic feminists . . . that the
church’s attempt to accommodate feminist ideals in recent years amounts
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to ‘tokenism’” (Labrie 1997, 248–49). The priests are less than respectful:
constant visitors to Isabel’s home, they spend their time “determin[ing] the
precise nature of the Transubstantiation, fumbling for my name as I fresh-
ened their drinks” (Gordon 1978, 1). Such commentary suggests conscious-
ness, if not resentment, of the patriarchal relationships still present in the
1970s. But the burden of caring for her father and the apparent futility of
change—for him and for her—further contribute to Isabel’s rejection of the
church. Afraid of upsetting her father, she takes long walks while suppos-
edly attending Mass. Here too a bit of feminist anger creeps in: “when the
Church ceased to be inevitable, it became for me irrelevant. And then there
was the [Vatican II] Council, with its sixties relevance and relativity that
interested me not a whit” (Gordon 1978, 17).
Guilt also plays a role. Isabel illogically believes that her father’s stroke
was a reaction to his discovery of her in fl agrante with his star pupil, an atti-
tude refl ecting the church’s view of extramarital or adulterous sex as illness
or disease (Del Rosso 2005, 38). “My sex was infecting me; my sex was a
disease,” Isabel laments (Gordon 1978, 265). But although Gordon initially
personifi es the church through the character of Isabel’s tyrannical father,
through her refl ections she ultimately matures and gains self-knowledge,
in the process exploring her attitudes toward and rejection of the church.
Indeed, by the novel’s end, Isabel comes full circle. Her indifference fades as
she begins to mourn her father and fi nd solace in their shared faith. In this,
the family priest is the key to her return to the church and eventual escape
from self-immolation.
Although both Jeanna del Rosso and Charles Fanning maintain that
Gordon is explicitly anti-Catholic, her depiction of Father Mulcahy is actu-
ally positive and comforting. In fact, his phone call prompts her awakening.
Although he has never left the city, he offers to drive to upstate New York for
a visit. After they speak, he advises Isabel to take care of herself: “‘I think you
should leave here,’” he tells her. When Isabel protests that she has promised
to care for Margaret, he counters, “‘Even God breaks promises. . . . Here,’ he
said, squeezing a crumpled bill into my hand, ‘Get your hair done on me.’”
Again countering her refusal, he tells her, “‘Well, then, watch your weight,
honey. God gave you beauty. If you waste it, that’s a sin against the fi fth
commandment.’”
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“‘Thou shalt not kill?’” she asks. “‘What does that have to do with it?’”
“‘It means slow deaths, too,’” he replies, and takes his leave (297).
A review of Gordon’s work notes that “neither in her fi ction nor in her
essays and interviews has Gordon ever revealed the personal vendetta against
the Irish that Fanning suspects” (Hoeness-Krupsaw 2008, 204). Rather, she
consistently hails her parents as “immigrant survivors” and credits the Cath-
olic Church as a “formative infl uence.” Another infl uence was Mary McCar-
thy, who praised the novel even before it was published. Likewise, Gordon
gives a nod to McCarthy in her second novel, writing: “She had been warned
about Mary McCarthy for years. Ever since
The Group
nuns had shaken their
heads and breathed her name as a warning to the better students. ‘What
good do all those brains do her? Four husbands and writing fi lth,’ they said.
It was a comfort to have that book with her. She felt accompanied by a daring
older sister whom defi ance had made glamorous” (Gordon 1980, 90). Just as
The Group
raised eyebrows in the 1960s through its exploration of feminist
issues,
Final Payments
epitomized Irish American women’s writing in the
seventies—as liberating—“for she employs traditional fi ctional elements to
new effects that eventually broaden the parameters of the traditional Irish
American novel” (Hoeness-Krupsaw 2008, 208).
In addition to
Bildungsromane
like Gordon’s, the 1970s saw the rise of
“feminist meta-fi ction—novels in which the author ‘revises’ traditional phal-
locentric messages by inserting a feminist plot which quite often abandons
the traditional path from parents’ to husband’s home” (Showalter 2009,
443). Like most Irish Americans, Joyce Carol Oates’s novels refl ect their
author. Although Oates is not so explicitly autobiographical as other Irish