CHAPTER ONE
FALSE FACES
In her Irish Times review of Seamus Heaneyâs poem-pamphlet An Open Letter (1983), Eavan Boland seems both cautious and uncertain about what it and the other Field Day pamphlets stand for:
A new Ulster nationalism is not my idea of what Irish poetry needs, but I would be quite willing to lay aside this prejudice if the new nationalism contained all the voices, all the fragments, all the dualities and ambiguities of reference; but it doesnât. Judging by the ... pamphlets here in front of me, this is green nationalism and divided culture. âWhatever we mean by the Irish situation,â writes Derek Mahon, âthe shipyards of Belfast are no less a part of it than a country town in the Gaeltacht.â Would that this were true; or, at least, would that it were real.
An influential member of Field Dayâs board, Seamus Deane, is clearly conscious of this absent voice when he talks about breaking down stereotypes:
by making people have the confidence that each of us has a culture thatâs not going to disappear if it comes in contact with the other. But itâs a kind of confidence severely lacking in Unionists, which is why theyâre so neurotically defensive. Thatâs the problem with Field Day. Itâs no good just performing our plays and selling pamphlets to people we know. Thereâs no point in continuing unless we can get through to Unionists.
But there is another important point to be made here. It is unclear what this absent voice âisâ and whether there is, in realisable terms, a culture that can be defined as âProtestantâ and unionist. It depends, of course, on how one defines culture but, taking that term in its widest sense, it is fair to say that the Protestant/unionist sense of self derives its meaning (and is âneurotically defensiveâ for this very reason) from the fact of its being undefined, imaginatively and historically.
The famed inarticulateness, the Ulster that says No!, is, after all, a perfectly legitimate right to silence. In a way, the Protestant/unionist culture has no image of itself and consequently accepts those stereotypes which have been created for political purposes, be that within Northern Ireland or from London or Dublin. Stereotypes that are believed in. An important step would therefore be to begin a process of critical definition, if only to reveal the illegitimacy of those terms of reference and to establish new, imaginative ones.
Yet, in dealing with âAnglo-lrish attitudesâ, Declan Kiberd addresses himself variously to âBritish liberalsâ, âBritish writersâ and âEnglish liberalsâ, the very dependency that the Fifth Province justifiably challenges; as he does elsewhere in his pamphlet when he criticises those, such as F.S.L. Lyons, who have received âpraises and prizesâ from the English. However, it âis certainly timeâ, writes Kiberd, âthat British intellectuals applied themselves to a critical analysis of unionism, what it represents, and what it is doing to Britain as a wholeâ. âBritish writersâ must âapply themselves to the study of Ulster Unionismâ; English intellectuals have also virtually excluded âany informed assessment of the deeper meanings of Ulster Unionismâ.
Writers and critics in Ireland should indeed consider the âdeeper meaningsâ, not simply of Ulster unionism, but of the entirety of âProtestantâ experience in the North and the common ground Northerners share, irrespective of religion, as Northerners. But if, as Declan Kiberd suggests, âin modern Ulster menâs emotions have been ruled not so much by culture as by cashâ, then the solution will lie in that direction and the âfull understanding of the situation in Ireland todayâ resolved on that score, whatever about the current intellectual fuss.
But the unverifiability of so much talk about âidentityâ springs from a severance from common experience and its established terms of negative feeling â hatred, anger, insecurity, bigotry and fear â being sympathetically and imaginatively absorbed. These feelings are fed by particularly virulent forms of supremacy which are themselves reliant upon political and social power-structures throughout the entire country. Only in the North have these become a matter of life and death and they pervade every aspect of contention. It is these terms and their institutionalised structures that will have to be transformed, from the inside, while the dependencies they ritualise will have to be understood and rewritten, before the simple human and ideological barriers to unity are breached in a positive and lasting way.
One notes an implicit interpretation of history as if it were a machine (or monster) which, partially of its own making, but mainly of English making, conscribes âthe Irishâ to a world of thought detached from independent action (or creation). âHistoryâ is populated by brutalised marionettes who continue to dominate the way we think and the way we imagine we feel. But the creative and critical dislocation that takes place as a result of the situation does not illuminate the emotional and subjective bonds that keep both sides in the Northern community locked in what has been described by Thomas Kilroy as âa struggle for the irretrievableâ. It is this struggle which has most often been dealt with at the level of self-fulfilling ideas; otherwise, as Richard Kearney remarks in Myth and Motherland, it is feared that âwe capitulate to the mindless conformism of factâ. But facts are not mindless and they dominate only when we perceive them abstractly; cascading into vicious cycles, they are seen as unfit for our solving preconceptions. Up close, fixed in the imagination and in historical reason, they have all the energy, often destructive, of life, its power struggles and their moral and political consequences.
History is not to âblameâ, but people, and the way the two have drifted apart into exclusive orthodoxies. That is the problem: the human complexity. But when ideas get caught up with only themselves and loosen their moorings in personal experience and historical reality, despite the intention of their being addressed to present social and political conditions, then that critical dialectic has been broken and it is the intellectual process that fossilises, not the world these ideas are intended to change.
There is a conviction which influences much of the discussion about âidentityâ that a fundamental unity actually underlies Irish culture if only the people could (or would) see it. Whatever about the political manipulation of this ideal and the conflicting forms it takes, it must be time for writers and critics to explore all the shades of its creative viability.
In saying this, I am not suggesting, as some may, imitating Johnsonâs anti-Berkeleyan boot against the boulder, that on the rock of one million Protestants thy dreams will perish. Such attitudes betray intolerance and a fear of change. Rather, I am saying that a radical shift of attention is needed. For, in a way, the Protestants of Northern Ireland are peripheral since the critical focus of definition does not involve them. They are, and have always been, a belligerent and beleaguered third party, reacting to the various realignments that have taken place between the dominant two of âIrelandâ and âEnglandâ so that, no matter what âsolutionâ is arrived at they will, more than likely, remain outside it, against the current. They are, though, symbols of a much deeper malaise in the entire island since it no longer has (if it ever had) a cultural unity.
By their very existence, along with so much else of contemporary and historical experience which is either left out of the picture or modishly caricatured, they threaten such ideals. As a result, they are portrayed as dull, dour and pragmatic â the usual epithets that say as much about âNorthern Protestantsâ as similar glosses say about the Republic.
Some take glum satisfaction in this situation; others see Northern Protestant intransigence as one example of those historical facts and cultural conditions that need imaginative exploration, not exploitation. This exploitation has led to the oppressive edifice of the Northern Irish state while permitting the deceit of nationalism (and superficial reactions against it) to make fools or victims of us all.
There is no prescriptive answer here. For the response of the individual imagination is born of a need to get through as best it can to whomever cares to listen. The mediating role of the print and broadcasting world is crucial. For example, take The Irish Reporter, an important left-of-centre journal, published in Dublin. In a recent issue, there are photographs of âProtestants at playâ. In one of them a woman, doing a knees-up, shows off her knickers; in the background is an Orange band.
Side on, the title declares, the protestants. The facing page carries a statement from Sinn Féin on its struggle to improve the quality of life of Irish people. There are other articles dealing with post-colonialism but, stuck there in the back pages, is that unrepentant Protestant woman, having a good time.
Subtextually, she is irredeemable in terms of visual messages. The photograph is a covert sign of an intellectual distaste; for this is no folk session â not in the acceptable sense of either word. This is beyond the pale of cultural and political credibility. Like her people, she is as incorrect as the Twelfth bonfire in Tigerâs Bay. But change the context to an Irish emigrant centre in Manchester and one can imagine the justifiable anger at this anti-feminist, racist exploitation.
Over recent years, intellectual and cultural attitudes have hardened towards Northern Protestants and, particularly, to those who consider the union with Britain to be a personal and emotional lifeline separate from the perceived introversions and hypocrisies of the Catholic country to the south and west.
This hardening or dismissiveness is a reflection of a general switch-off in the Republic to the North itself. The place seems stuck in a groove few in the Republic have much private time for, even if the old historical business of fighting the British has the strange afterlife of graffiti. Similarly, the once assumed dominance of Northern writing â or writers from the North â has meant that southern writers â or writers based in the Republic â have become much less sensitive to what goes on north of the border. Attitudes vary between truculence, indifference, and fatigue about what precisely a writerâs attitude should be to the events there and to the nature of the achievement of the writing that has come from writers born there. The reaction to the initial three volumes of The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing was in part a reaction against the Northern-ness of its declared political and cultural concerns, primarily with national identity.
Sensibilities were already geared to attack Field Day and the protracted gestation of its anthological statement on Irish writing. Field Day had, by the end of the 1980s, started to look out of step with cultural and political issues in the Republic â questions about private morality and public corruption, the scandals of emigration and commercial greed â and, as we all now know, the fundamental sea change that took place in the self-perception of women in Irish society.
Yet it is a curious feature of the anthology itself that it shares a âpan-Irishâ uncertainty when addressing the work, within its own political ambit, of writers from the Northern Protestant background. It is a feature on which Damian Smyth jumped in his condemnation of what he saw as the monolithic dogmatism of Field Dayâs nationalism: âWhat cannot be totalised is left out, and the intellectual ethnic-cleansing which sees the absence of the Rhyming Weavers is only slightly less crude in the treatment of the user-friendly Prods of the nationalist discourseâ.
Whether or not the absence of the Rhyming Weavers constitutes a capital offence artistically is open to question, but on historical grounds the omission is regrettable. The failure to select a just sample of womenâs writing was, however, inexcusable. As for the âuser-friendly Prodsâ, it is instructive to see the manner in which two of them are described in the anthology.
It has to be said that the headnotes in the anthology vary from the almost apocalyptic eagerness with which John Montague casts himself âat timesâ â âunashamedly in the bardic role of spokesperson for the tribeâ â to the subdued etiquette of Michael Longleyâs âself-effacing courtesy, his dry good humourâ. Longley is, however, inexplicably defined in terms of the âsemi-detached suburban muse of Philip Larkin and ... British post-modernism, as is manifest in his homage to L.S. Lowryâ. There is in this summary absolutely no accounting for the surreal, the love lyrics, the bizarre and the classical in Longley, all of which coalesce to make a poetry constitutionally different from the despairing symbolism of Philip Larkin. Longley is also paired with Mahon in a Siamese-twinning of cultural aspiration whereby both poets are taken to represent âa strand of Ulster that identifies itself as British and asserts its rights to the English lyricâ.
Mahon is âThe most underrated Irish poet of the centuryâ â underrated by whom? â and the ontological frame of being a âpost-holocaust poetâ is hedged in the following terms as one who âmay yet prove to be the most durable talent of his generation. He writes not just of, but for, posteritiesâ [my italics]. These uncertainties suggest the wide intellectual instability when it comes to examining the cultural and literary issues of Northern Protestantism.
Longley is conscribed to history as an Irish Larkin, while Mahon exists in a futuristic critical limbo. The significance of this unease plays across the cultural and political life of Ireland. It moderates from good-humoured banter and wit, perplexity and arrogance to bewilderment and contempt, with an average mean in sorrow, bemusement and superiority complexes all around. âProtestantsâ are considered âunionistsâ (or, more fashionably, âneo unionistsâ) unless they publicly declare to the contrary and seek asylum in âIrish Literatureâ. Failure to do so unsettles the kind of cultural agendas that the media, publishing and academic worlds rely upon, both in Ireland and abroad.
In an interview in The Irish Times on the occasion of being awarded the Whitbread Prize for his collection Gorse Fires, Michael Longley remarked on the selection from his work in The Field Day Anthology: âI object to being embalmed wearing a false face, a mask. I feel diminished and travestied. I had thought of asking to be withdrawn from subsequent editions, but it seemed self-important.â
The sense of not having the freedom to be oneâs self (to be considered on oneâs own imaginative ground, so to speak) but inhibited instead by cultural priorities not of oneâs own making, leads to all sorts of negations and misrepresentations. How could it be, though, that an anthology of this magnitude, such an extraordinary achievement in so very many ways, should end up with a call for it to be pulped and other suggestions of withdrawal? From the convicted âterroristâ in a prison in the south of Ireland reciting his poems about âIrelandâ that sound little different from the rhetoric of the nineteen-century Young Irelanders, to the designer caricatures surrounding the term âNorthern Protestantâ, it is tempting to see all writing from Ireland as forever folkloric, underpinned by regional or n...