Gender relations and female agency in Claire Keegan’s "Antarctica"
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Date
2021
Authors
Morales-Ladrón, Marisol
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Publisher
Adam Mickiewicz University
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Abstract
Claire Keegan is one of the most prominent voices within the contemporary Irish short story panorama. Internationally acclaimed, her prose has been praised for its frank and bitter portrayal of a rural world, whose outdated values, no matter how anchored in the past they might be, still prevail in a modern milieu. Keegan’s unsympathetic views on society, mainly on the Catholic Church and the family, are the main targets of her harsh criticism. Issues like gender and sexuality, two social constructs with which to validate an uneven distribution of power, constitute the pillars of most of her plots. Bearing these aspects in mind, my proposal focuses on the analysis of Keegan’s first collection of short stories, Antarctica (1999), in light of gender relations and female agency, in an attempt to find patterns of – often thwarted – female emancipation in the context of the rapid changes of a society that is still adjusting to a globalised world. This article will also engage in the discussion of her second collection, Walk the Blue Fields (2007), and her long short story Foster (2010).
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Sponsor
The research carried out for the writing of this article has been financed by the Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitivity, research project FFI2017-84619-P AEI/FEDER, UE.
Keywords
Claire Keegan, short story, gender construction, identity, marriage, rural world, female agency
Citation
Studia Anglica Posnaniensia, vol. 56 (2021), pp. 275-292.
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0081-6272