8,133 research outputs found
Mass Communication Guest Speaker: Vera Moore
Vera Moore speaks with Professor Judith Gaffney's Mass Communication class. Vera Moore is the President and CEO of a highly competitive business, Vera Moore Cosmetics. She has national recognition as one of the first black actresses to be contracted on a national television show when she portrayed "Linda" on the soap opera, Another World, for 12 years
The question of gendered voice in some contemporary Irish novels by Brian Moore and John McGahern
This thesis questions the use of the 'voice' metaphor in contemporary Irish cultural studies in order to examine
the ways in which gendered identities are constructed in some Irish Catholic communities in twentieth-century
Ireland. With reference to novels by Brian Moore and
John McGahern as well as to Judith Butler's theories of performativity and citational practices, it argues that gendered identities are constructed through the repetitive citation of hegemonic cultural discourses. This thesis
focuses on the ways in which gendered identities are produced and maintained through the citation of the official discourses of the Catholic Church and the State as
well as the more mundane discourses related to popular nationalism and the family.
The first two chapters concentrate on novels whose protagonists are trying to construct powerful identities in urban Irish society through the manipulation of gendered discourses. The discussion of Moore's The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne identifies some of the strategies through which conventional Irish women's voices are constructed
and questions the validity of the category of 'authentic' women's voices. In the chapter relating to McGahem's The
Pornographer, the powerful, abstract male voice is exposed as a performative construct which is sustained only through the abjection of those elements which disrupt the narrator's performance of masculinity.
The remaining chapters concentrate on the use of idealised images such as those of the 'woman-as-nation' and the iconised mother in novels by Moore and McGahem. Moore's The
Mangan Inheritance provides the basis for a discussion of whether or not voices attributed to women in texts by Irish men can be read in ways that disrupt the apparent authority of Irish men's voices. This thesis discusses the issues
raised when men participate in the deconstruction
of idealised images of Irish women. The final chapter examines the processes through which conventional identities are discursively constructed and maintained in two novels by John McGahem: The Dark and Amongst Women. This thesis contends that through the strategic
redeployment of those voices attributed to idealised images of Irish women, voices which are conventionally regarded
as silent, patriarchal gendered identities can be destabilised or displaced
Recommended from our members
Charles B. Moore Family papers, 1832-1917
Transcript of a letter to Elvira Moore discussing Elvira's schooling, local marriages, money owed to the author, and work
Charles B. Moore Family papers, 1832-1917
Transcript of a letter to Elvira Moore discussing Elvira's schooling, local marriages, money owed to the author, and work
Recommended from our members
Charles B. Moore Family papers, 1832-1917
Letter to Elvira Moore discussing Elvira's schooling, local marriages, money owed to the author, and work
Charles B. Moore Family papers, 1832-1917
Letter to Elvira Moore discussing Elvira's schooling, local marriages, money owed to the author, and work
Charles B. Moore Family papers, 1832-1917
Transcript of an unsigned letter to Elvira Moore. In it the author writes about local gossip, including numerous deaths and births, house fires, and the treatment of a neighbor's miscarriage
Recommended from our members
Charles B. Moore Family papers, 1832-1917
Transcript of an unsigned letter to Elvira Moore. In it the author writes about local gossip, including numerous deaths and births, house fires, and the treatment of a neighbor's miscarriage
Charles B. Moore Family papers, 1832-1917
An unsigned letter to Elvira Moore. In it the author writes about local gossip, including numerous deaths and births, house fires, and the treatment of a neighbor's miscarriage
Recommended from our members
Charles B. Moore Family papers, 1832-1917
An unsigned letter to Elvira Moore. In it the author writes about local gossip, including numerous deaths and births, house fires, and the treatment of a neighbor's miscarriage
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