The Legacy of The Northern Irish Conflict, Weak Men and Silenced Women in the Novels of Jan Carson
This article focuses on the Belfast-based novelist and short-story writer Jan Carson. Raised in a rural, strictly evangelical Presbyterian household, Carson and her work offer rare insights into a community that is seldom given academic attention. The article will examine how her two most recent nov...
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| Format: | Article |
| Language: | English |
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European Federation of Associations and Centres of Irish Studies
2025-02-01
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| Series: | Review of Irish Studies in Europe |
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| Online Access: | https://risejournal.eu/index.php/rise/article/view/3316 |
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| Summary: | This article focuses on the Belfast-based novelist and short-story writer Jan Carson. Raised in a rural, strictly evangelical Presbyterian household, Carson and her work offer rare insights into a community that is seldom given academic attention. The article will examine how her two most recent novels, The Fire Starters (2019) and The Raptures (2022), speak to themes regarding the legacy of violence and gender roles in Northern Ireland. Supplemented by Carson’s own oral testimonies, passages from her work, and her wider comments in the media, this article explores how Carson’s work reflects historical and contemporary Ulster Protestantism. Given her recent emergence on the literary stage, Carson’s work has been subjected to relatively limited scholarly work and the following article alleviates this condition by highlighting its value in further understanding contemporary Northern Ireland. Carson’s highly original employment of the magic realist style reflects her interest in reframing the history of Northern Ireland, one that she finds ‘tired and over-discussed’. Doing so encourages the reader to view highly contentious and complex issues such as the legacy of violence and gender roles from a new perspective. Given the significant social relevance of these issues and the tangible difficulties in navigating them, Carson’s fiction not only sheds light on the Protestant experience, but also offers an alternative means of understanding real contemporary issues. |
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| ISSN: | 2398-7685 |