The Child Sex Scandal and Modern Irish Literatur ? Writing the Unspeakable: Writing the Unspeakable

The Child Sex Scandal and Modern Irish Literatur ? Writing the Unspeakable

Writing the Unspeakable
 
Publisher: MH ? Indiana University Press
Date of Publication:
Number of Volumes: Print PDF
 
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Product details:

ISBN13:9780253053183
ISBN10:0253053188
Binding:Paperback
No. of pages:300 pages
Size:232x163x26 mm
Weight:698 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 3 Illustrations, color; 17 Illustrations, black & white
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Short description:

The Child Sex Scandal and Modern Irish Literature refines the debates on why so many Irish children were lost by offering insight into the lived experience of both the children and those who failed them.

Long description:

Even though the Irish child sex abuse scandals in the Catholic Church have appeared steadily in the media, many children remain in peril.

In The Child Sex Scandal and Modern Irish Literature, Joseph Valente and Margot Gayle Backus examine modern cultural responses to child sex abuse in Ireland. Using descriptions of these scandals found in newspapers, historiographical analysis, and 20th- and 21st-century literature, Valente and Backus expose a public sphere ardently committed to Irish children's souls and piously oblivious to their physical welfare. They offer historically contextualized and psychoanalytically informed readings of scandal narratives by nine notable modern Irish authors who actively, pointedly, and persistently question Ireland's responsibilities regarding its children. Through close, critical readings, a more nuanced and troubling account emerges of how Ireland's postcolonial heritage has served to enable such abuse.

The Child Sex Scandal and Modern Irish Literature refines the debates on why so many Irish children were lost by offering insight into the lived experience of both the children and those who failed them.



Joseph Valente and Margot Gayle Backus's The Child Sex Scandal and Modern Irish Literature: Writing the Unspeakable digs fearlessly into a centurylong literary canon of abused Irish children, unmasking and unmaking the psychological operations that have allowed such abuse, as Fintan O'Toole writes in the book's preface, to long be Ireland's shameful "unknown known" (xiii).