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SOURCE: Cahalan, James M. “‘Humor with a Gender’: Somerville and Ross and The Irish R.M.” In The Comic Tradition in Irish Women Writers, edited by Theresa O'Connor, pp. 58-72. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 1996.
In the following essay, Cahalan offers a discussion of the ways in which the R.M. stories are written from a specifically woman's point of view, and stresses the various ways in which the figure of Major Yeates embodies a self-criticism of the Anglo-Irish Ascendancy class.
Ever since the publication of the first story in 1898—“Great Uncle McCarthy” in London's Badminton Magazine—Somerville and Ross's The Irish R.M. [The Irish R.M. and His Experiences] (hereafter RM) stories have been among the most popular and successful works of comic fiction to have come out of Ireland. The three volumes of stories [Some Experiences of an Irish R.M.; Further Experiences of an...
This section contains 5,947 words (approx. 20 pages at 300 words per page) |