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    Irish-American identity in Eugene O'Neill's early plays

    Citation

    Clare, D. (2018). 'Irish-American Identity in Eugene O'Neill's Early Plays'. Eugene O'Neill Review 39(1), pp. 48-57. ISSN: 2161-4318.
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    Date
    2018
    Author
    Clare, David
    Peer Reviewed
    Yes
    Metadata
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    Clare, D. (2018). 'Irish-American Identity in Eugene O'Neill's Early Plays'. Eugene O'Neill Review 39(1), pp. 48-57. ISSN: 2161-4318.
    Abstract
    This article examines Irish-American identity in Eugene O’Neill’s early work, including his “lost” plays. It demonstrates that characters such as Al Devlin in The Movie Man, Joe and Nellie Murray in Abortion, Eileen Carmody and Stephen Murray from The Straw, Robert “Yank” Smith in The Hairy Ape, and even the “Papist” child Mary Sweeney in The Rope are socially marginalized by American WASPs due to their Irish Catholic backgrounds. In the case of Yank such marginalization eventually convinces him that he is too “animalistic” to find a place in mainstream American society. Like Yank, the Irish-American characters in the other plays being examined find it hard to connect with (or are brutally disrespected by) the WASPs in their lives. Previous discussions of WASP/Irish- American tensions in O’Neill’s work have focused primarily on O’Neill’s late masterpieces; this article demonstrates that such tensions are a key feature of O’Neill’s early work as well.
    Keywords
    Eugene O’Neill
    O'Neill
    Irish America
    Irish diaspora
    Drama and theater
    Ethnic identity
    Language (ISO 639-3)
    eng
    Publisher
    Penn State University Press
    License URI
    https://muse.jhu.edu/article/691612/pdf
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10395/2350
    ISSN
    2161-4318
    Collections
    • Drama and Theatre Studies (Peer-reviewed publications)

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