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    Bridget Cleary Speaks!


    Coleman, Steve (2006) Bridget Cleary Speaks! Irish Journal of Anthropology, 9 (1). pp. 35-36. ISSN 1393-8592

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    Abstract

    Bridget Cleary's death in 1895 at the hands of her husband, in the presence of several of their neighbours and relations, became enmeshed in a web of public narrative as it was recounted in courtrooms, reported in newspapers worldwide, and debated in scholarly and popular journals. Angela Bourke's The Burning of Bridget Cieuly (1999) demonstrates, however, that this event emerged from another type of narrative web, the folk beliefs which provided Michael Cleary and his neighbours with an explanation and rationale for her murder and a course of action for 'driving out the fairy' which they believed had taken over Bridget's body. Meanwhile, in other discursive networks, this same fairy lore was also providing data for the emering science of folklore, and at a further remove, inspiration for the aesthetics of the Celtic Twilight. It also functioned negatively as an image of superstitious primitivism - fodder for Unionist mistrust of the Irish peasantry and a foil for both the modernising Catholic church and the belief in rational progress which guided Irish civic nationalism. Bourke shows the dalogic interrelationships between all these discourses, not least in the way that fairy lore was both believed and doubted by its carriers, and the intense conflicts about belief and superstition that informed Michael Cleary's actions.
    Item Type: Article
    Keywords: Bridget Cleary; Angela Bourke; The Burning of Bridget Cleary; fairy lore; folk beliefs.
    Academic Unit: Faculty of Social Sciences > Anthropology
    Item ID: 1194
    Depositing User: Dr. Steve Coleman
    Date Deposited: 20 Jan 2009 16:21
    Journal or Publication Title: Irish Journal of Anthropology
    Publisher: The Anthropological Association of Ireland (AAI)
    Refereed: Yes
    Related URLs:
    URI: https://mu.eprints-hosting.org/id/eprint/1194
    Use Licence: This item is available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike Licence (CC BY-NC-SA). Details of this licence are available here

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