‘So am I detached / From the fabric which claims me’ Women, Fabric, and Poetry

Women are immemorially associated with fabric, an association both metaphorical and metonymic, and one widespread in myth, legend and folklore. Spinning and weaving are bound up with women and femininity in fundamental ways, entwining socio-economic histories with deep and persistent trans-cultural...

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Main Author: Patricia Coughlan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Federation of Associations and Centres of Irish Studies 2018-03-01
Series:Review of Irish Studies in Europe
Online Access:http://risejournal.eu/index.php/rise/article/view/1732/1360
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author Patricia Coughlan
author_facet Patricia Coughlan
author_sort Patricia Coughlan
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description Women are immemorially associated with fabric, an association both metaphorical and metonymic, and one widespread in myth, legend and folklore. Spinning and weaving are bound up with women and femininity in fundamental ways, entwining socio-economic histories with deep and persistent trans-cultural symbolic and ideological systems. Women spinning or weaving are figures for both death and birth, and ancient equivalences represent gestation itself as a process of weaving. Drawing on Bracha Ettinger’s revisionary theorizing of maternal subjectivity as both seamless and a paradigm for human creativity, this article teases out significant strands in the representation by contemporary poets Boland, McGuckian, and Ní Chuilleanáin of the women-fabric association and its meanings. If there is a powerful cultural given that women in some sense are fabric, that which has been woven, these three poets have fabricated powerful and various accounts of the different proposition that women are agents of their own weaving, in McGuckian’s words both ‘detached’ and constituting ‘the fabric which claims’ them.
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spelling doaj.art-b833737cccd14b93ac81a09068ce21e82022-12-22T02:39:31ZengEuropean Federation of Associations and Centres of Irish StudiesReview of Irish Studies in Europe2398-76852018-03-0121241261https://doi.org/10.32803/rise.v2i1.1732‘So am I detached / From the fabric which claims me’ Women, Fabric, and PoetryPatricia Coughlan0University College, CorkWomen are immemorially associated with fabric, an association both metaphorical and metonymic, and one widespread in myth, legend and folklore. Spinning and weaving are bound up with women and femininity in fundamental ways, entwining socio-economic histories with deep and persistent trans-cultural symbolic and ideological systems. Women spinning or weaving are figures for both death and birth, and ancient equivalences represent gestation itself as a process of weaving. Drawing on Bracha Ettinger’s revisionary theorizing of maternal subjectivity as both seamless and a paradigm for human creativity, this article teases out significant strands in the representation by contemporary poets Boland, McGuckian, and Ní Chuilleanáin of the women-fabric association and its meanings. If there is a powerful cultural given that women in some sense are fabric, that which has been woven, these three poets have fabricated powerful and various accounts of the different proposition that women are agents of their own weaving, in McGuckian’s words both ‘detached’ and constituting ‘the fabric which claims’ them.http://risejournal.eu/index.php/rise/article/view/1732/1360
spellingShingle Patricia Coughlan
‘So am I detached / From the fabric which claims me’ Women, Fabric, and Poetry
Review of Irish Studies in Europe
title ‘So am I detached / From the fabric which claims me’ Women, Fabric, and Poetry
title_full ‘So am I detached / From the fabric which claims me’ Women, Fabric, and Poetry
title_fullStr ‘So am I detached / From the fabric which claims me’ Women, Fabric, and Poetry
title_full_unstemmed ‘So am I detached / From the fabric which claims me’ Women, Fabric, and Poetry
title_short ‘So am I detached / From the fabric which claims me’ Women, Fabric, and Poetry
title_sort so am i detached from the fabric which claims me women fabric and poetry
url http://risejournal.eu/index.php/rise/article/view/1732/1360
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