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Title: NEGOTIATING IDENTITY: SUBVERSION AND CONFORMITY IN MODERNIST
IRISH DRAMA |
Authors: Lect. Muhanned R. K. Al-Sultani, Iraq |
Abstract: This paper explores how subversion and conformity negotiate identity in modernist Irish drama,
focusing on the works of W.B. Yeats, J.M. Synge, and Sean O'Casey. In the light of the sociopolitical transformation of Ireland at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century,
these playwrights were using innovative dramatic techniques to explore the complex interplay
between personal and national identity. Yeats used myth and symbolism to explore an Irish mass
consciousness based upon remembering the past-as in Cathleen ni Houlihan and The Countess
Cathleen. Synge shocked the traditional views of heroism, sexual roles, and idealism within the
countryside in The Playboy of the Western World and Riders to the Sea-to show the
circumscription levied by a conventional society. O'Casey gave voice to class struggle and
religious conformity in plays such as The Plough and the Stars and Juno and the Paycock, works
which reveal the conflict of agency versus collective identity. In this way, this research will
investigate how modernist Irish drama served as a site of cultural negotiation and resistance and,
at the same time, contribute to the broader understanding of how literature operates in the creation
and challenging of national ideologies. It thereby underlines the relevance of these plays for
contemporary debates on identity, nationalism, and cultural politics, showing how their themes
keep pace with ongoing debates on gender, class, and power. In conclusion, this research positions
modernist Irish drama as a medium of change that reflects and challenges emergent dynamics of
identity formation. |
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