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Titre : | The Changeling Legend and Queer Kinship in Caitriona Lally’s Eggshells (2021) |
Auteurs : | Molly FERGUSON, Auteur |
Type de document : | Article |
Dans : | Irish University Review (Vol 51 n 2 Autumn/Winter 2021) |
Article en page(s) : | p. 296-311 |
Langues: | Anglais |
Mots-clés : | |
Résumé : | In Caitriona Lally's debut novel Eggshells (2015), the narrator Vivian Lawlor is an adult woman with a quirky personality living in North Dublin, who believes herself to be a changeling. Throughout the novel, Vivian travels various paths in Dublin looking for specific ‘thin places,’ creating ‘an alternative map of Dublin’, as Claire Kilroy's review puts it. Folklore is often used as a code for hiding aspects of Irish life that are unspeakable, and in Eggshells the changeling story is a coded testimony of family violence in which the changeling figure is labelled as nonhuman. Rejected by family, she looks to queer models of kinship as outlined by Judith Butler, through transformative portals and a companion who is a fellow trauma survivor. This essay argues that, while her experience of traumatic family violence is silently coded within the changeling story, Vivian strategically deploys changeling legend to embody a nonconforming gender presentation. |
Pays de publication : | Irlande |
Fonds : | Médiathèque |