New uses of traditional healing in contemporary Irish literature

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Abstract

This is a comparative study in two ways. After a summary of the historical and cultural research into traditional healing which is relevant to this article, then some comments about the general usage of such themes in contemporary Irish literature, the article moves on to examine the role and function of traditional healing as a motif in four specific literary texts. These are: two Irish plays, Brian Friel's Faith Healer, and Jim Nolan's Blackwater Angel, and two pieces of Irish fiction, P.J. Curtis' novel The Lightning Tree and Claire Keegan's short story "The Night of the Quicken Trees". Strong similarities are found on many fronts between the texts, especially in the acceptance of healing and the mystery associated with it. However, differences also occur, depending on the artistic choices of the authors, the gender and community emphasis used, and the relative importance of healing in the context of the work. Women healers seem to be more rooted and less tragic than their male counterparts, but all healers are seen paradoxically as both an asset and a potential threat to society. When these texts are compared with research into historical and cultural aspects of Irish folk medicine, they clearly draw on tradition for their plot elements, but only in the fiction and plays can the full dramatic potential of these life and death situations be explored. © 2012 by Patricia A. Lynch.

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APA

Lynch, P. A. (2012). New uses of traditional healing in contemporary Irish literature. Estudios Irlandeses, 7, 61–68. https://doi.org/10.24162/ei2012-1829

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