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9780815611998 Academic Inspection Copy

Banshees, Hags, and Changelings

Feminist Folklore Transformations in Irish Writing
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Irish folklore is replete with images of the monstrous feminine. The wandering witch, the wailing banshee, the mysterious changeling and others recur throughout folktales and have become well-known through contemporary depictions in books and on screens. In the wake of recent feminist thinking, online movements, and revelations of gender-based violence in state institutions such as the Magdalene Laundries, women writers in Ireland and abroad have found new ways to adapt this folklore, addressing the underlying tensions inherent to these stories and reevaluating traditional myths. In Banshees, Hags, and Changelings, Molly Ferguson examines how women writers and the recent cultural feminist reckoning in Ireland allow for a reappraisal of the subjects of these folktales and the anxieties they address. Exploring contemporary works, with attention paid to examples in science fiction and YA literature, Ferguson identifies the cultural processing of trauma resulting from gender-based violence through reconsiderations of the monstrous and the tensions that lie beneath each tale.
Molly Ferguson is an associate professor of English and affiliate faculty member in women's and gender studies at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana.
"The rich examinations of folkloric material as a repository of regressive and liberatory energies will be relevant to anyone interested in how a retold story can reanimate our readings and remake our understanding." - Ed Madden, University of South Carolina. "This is an exciting project that will break new ground for many readers, combining gender theory with folklore studies and Irish studies. Ferguson convincingly shows how contemporary reworkings of Irish folk tales repurpose traditional narratives to resist persistent sexism in modern Irish social configurations." - Mary McGlynn, author of Broken Irelands: Literary Form in Post-Crash Irish Fiction
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