A Woman's Words: Emer and Female Speech in the Ulster Cycle

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'A Woman's Words' is the first in-depth analysis of Middle Irish literature from a feminist standpoint, and the first formal critical discussion of the representation of female speech in medieval Irish literature. Joanne Findon analyses the representation of Emer, the wife of the great Irish hero Cú Chulainn, in four linked medieval Irish tales, and discusses Emer's ability to use powerful, effective words to change her fictional world and the audience's reading of that fictional world. 'A Woman's Words' considers Emer as a literary figure rather than a mythic archetype or a reflection of a pre-Christian Celtic goddess. Emer and the narratives she inhabits are discussed as literary constructs, and are considered within the historical and legal milieu in which these tales were told, recorded, and read. Findon places Emer within the wider context of medieval literature in general as an unusual and compelling example of a heroic secular woman, married and fully integrated into her aristocratic society and yet capable of speaking out against its abuses. Her freedom to speak and be heard is remarkable in the light of prevalent later medieval impulses to silence women. By employing speech act theory to analyse Emer's discourse, and by viewing and interpreting the texts through the lens of current feminist criticism, Joanne Findon seeks to bring Middle Irish literature into the arena of current debates, particularly among feminist medievalists, and to offer a new approach to reading female characters in medieval Irish literature.

Author(s): Joanne Findon
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Year: 1997

Language: English
Pages: XIV+212

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ix
PREFACE xi
ABBREVIATIONS xiii
Introduction 3
1. 'The Wooing of Emer': The Sweet Speech of Courtship 23
2. 'Bricriu's Feast': Women's Words as Weapons 57
3. 'The Death of Aife's Only Son': 'Do not slay your only son' 84
4. 'The Wasting Sickness of Cú Chulainn': The Language of Desire 107
Conclusion 135
Appendix: Sources and Manuscripts 141
NOTES 147
REFERENCES 191
INDEX 205