This paper argues that ‘Irishness ‘has not been sufficiently problematised in relation to gender and ethnicity in discussions of Irish national identity, nor has the term ‘Irish women ‘been ethnically problematised. Sociological and feminist analyses of the access by women to citizenship of the Republic of lreland have been similarly unproblematised. This paper interrogates some discourses of Irish national identity, including the 1937 Constitution, in which différence is constructed in religions, not ethnie terms, and in which women are constructed as ‘naturally ‘domestic. Ireland’s bourgeois nationalism privileged property owningand denigrated nomadism, thus excluding Irish Travellers from definitions of ‘Irishness’. ne paper then seeks to problematise T.H. Marshall ‘s definition of citizenship as ‘membership in a Community ‘from a gender and ethnicity viewpoint and argues that sociological and feminist Studies of the gendered nature of citizenship in Ireland do not address access to citizenship by Traveller and other racialized women which this paper examines in brief It does so in the context of the intersection between racism and nationalism, and argues that the racism implied in the narrow definition of ‘Irishness’ is a central factor in the limited access by minority Irish women to aspects of citizenship. It also argues that racism not only interfaces with other forms of exclusion such as class and gender, but also broadens our understanding of the very nature of Irish national identity.
CITATION STYLE
Lentin, R. (1998). Irishness, the 1937 constitution, and citizenship: A gender and ethnicity view. Irish Journal of Sociology, 8(1), 5–24. https://doi.org/10.1177/079160359800800101
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