In a period when the stereotype of womanhood in Irish drama was determined by political influences, and the male figure was the sole representation of the active force of humanity, Sean O’Casey’s women were a type of subject which was apparently non-existent, even though they demonstrated the real significance of the power they withheld among their families and communities. In Juno and the Paycock (1924), the playwright surprises the audience by staging representations of Dublin tenement women which subvert the prevailing image of powerless females in Irish drama. O’Casey’s female characters, Juno and Mary, undergo a process of strengthening which enables them to surpass domineering structural forces and challenge conservative and oppressiv...
Questions regarding the female gender – especially those that entail women’s role in society – are b...
This article explores the ways in which the traditional trope of Cathleen Ni Houlihan continues to h...
This article starts from the position that gender is crucial in understanding Irish society. Using C...
Irish female imagery and its connection with the Irish New State politics seem to be one interrelati...
This article discusses the performance of nationalism, according to society's accepted definition of...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Kansas, Theatre and Film, 1993. Includes bibliographical references (le...
If Hibernia is often reflected in the major female characters of Irish drama, the mother-daughter re...
The 1959 Broadway musical Juno, based on Sean O\u27Casey\u27s 1924 classic Juno and the Paycock, is ...
Ireland’s particular national culture has shaped an imaginary conception of identity which has also ...
This essay explores the gender politics of a neglected one-act play by Teresa Deevy, first staged at...
The programme was scanned from an original held in the University Archives.This play was produced un...
This article deals with the corporeal consequences of violence in two selected works of the Irish pl...
Within the context of Irish and international twenty-first-century young adult (YA) literature, thi...
[Summary of the book containing this chapter:] This collection of fourteen new essays by scholars of...
By Sean O\u27Casey Directed by Thomas Powerhttps://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/theatre-programs-199...
Questions regarding the female gender – especially those that entail women’s role in society – are b...
This article explores the ways in which the traditional trope of Cathleen Ni Houlihan continues to h...
This article starts from the position that gender is crucial in understanding Irish society. Using C...
Irish female imagery and its connection with the Irish New State politics seem to be one interrelati...
This article discusses the performance of nationalism, according to society's accepted definition of...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Kansas, Theatre and Film, 1993. Includes bibliographical references (le...
If Hibernia is often reflected in the major female characters of Irish drama, the mother-daughter re...
The 1959 Broadway musical Juno, based on Sean O\u27Casey\u27s 1924 classic Juno and the Paycock, is ...
Ireland’s particular national culture has shaped an imaginary conception of identity which has also ...
This essay explores the gender politics of a neglected one-act play by Teresa Deevy, first staged at...
The programme was scanned from an original held in the University Archives.This play was produced un...
This article deals with the corporeal consequences of violence in two selected works of the Irish pl...
Within the context of Irish and international twenty-first-century young adult (YA) literature, thi...
[Summary of the book containing this chapter:] This collection of fourteen new essays by scholars of...
By Sean O\u27Casey Directed by Thomas Powerhttps://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/theatre-programs-199...
Questions regarding the female gender – especially those that entail women’s role in society – are b...
This article explores the ways in which the traditional trope of Cathleen Ni Houlihan continues to h...
This article starts from the position that gender is crucial in understanding Irish society. Using C...