Women Rising: Embracing, Negotiating, and Reinterpreting Gender Roles in Revolutionary Ireland, 1913-1923

dc.contributor.advisorDenning, Robert
dc.contributor.authorSchaefer, Meredith Kate
dc.date.accessioned2023-09-13T04:42:34Z
dc.date.available2023-09-13T04:42:34Z
dc.date.issued2017-08-29
dc.description.abstractThis thesis examines the Irish revolutions (1913–1923) through the eyes of the revolutionary women who fought in them. The historiography on the period largely ignores and or downplays the contributions of women, often relying on a few exceptional examples of their participation to censure the work of all. The majority were nameless, faceless foot soldiers who took on traditionally male roles as spies, snipers, and dispatch carriers, but also traditionally female roles as mothers, wives, mourners, and caretakers. Revolutionary women did not reject their femininity so much as realize its possibilities. Recognizing revolutionary women’s experiences were unique and deeply personal, the thesis focuses on using the women’s own words to tell their stories. The research uses Defense Forces Ireland Bureau of Military History witness statements, memoirs, diaries, correspondence, and speeches to draw much-needed attention to the ordinary women who did the extraordinary. It traces women’s participation through four phases: their rise (1913-1916); reaction to their participation (1916-1919); their reinterpretation of the ways in which they would participate (1919-1921); and the ultimate reversal of their agency as Irish Free State political leaders decided women more important as symbols of the nation than active participants in it (1922-1923). Chapter five orients the Irish revolutionary woman’s experience within the larger international context. Women have always been involved in war and revolution; female participation in combat is neither new nor novel. Women were present and did participate in both socially-accepted and circumstantially-allowed roles during the Irish revolutionary period. Historians can no longer confuse women’s exclusion from the Irish revolutionary narrative as non-participation.
dc.description.degreeMaster Arts
dc.description.programHistory
dc.description.schoolCollege of Online and Continuing Education
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10474/3769
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherSouthern New Hampshire University
dc.relation.requiresAdobe Acrobat Reader
dc.rightsAuthor retains all ownership rights. Further reproduction in violation of copyright is prohibited.
dc.rightsHolderSchaefer, Meredith Kate
dc.subject.lcshHistory
dc.subject.lcshEuropean History
dc.subject.lcshWomen's Studies
dc.subject.otherAnglo-Irish War
dc.subject.otherCumann na mBan
dc.subject.otherEaster Rising
dc.subject.otherGender
dc.subject.otherIrish Civil War
dc.subject.otherRevolution
dc.titleWomen Rising: Embracing, Negotiating, and Reinterpreting Gender Roles in Revolutionary Ireland, 1913-1923
dc.typeThesis

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