Fitness for Freedom

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A Portrait of the Artists as a Young Man
A01=Marion Quirici
anglophone literature
anthropology
Author_Marion Quirici
blindness
Category=DS
Category=DSBH
Category=JBFM
Celtic literature
children
Cyclops
degeneration
Diedre O'Kane
disability
disability studies
disabled children
Dubliners
Edna O'Brien
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
eugenics
fiction
Flann O'Brien
Gaelic
hysteria
I Raise My Eyes to Say Yes
identity politics
insanity
intellectual disability
Irish studies
James Joyce
John Milton
John Stuart Mill
Karl Marx
Lewis Wyndham
literary criticism
Magdalene Laundries
masculinity
modernist literature
My Left Foot
On the Boiler
post-feminism
post-humanism
postcolonialism
Samuel Beckett
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
sexism
The Country Girls Trilogy
transgender
Ulysses
W. B. Yeats
W. E. B. Du Bois
W.H. Auden
women's studies

Product details

  • ISBN 9780815611929
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Nov 2025
  • Publisher: Syracuse University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Fitness for Freedom explores the legacy of intersectional stereotypes of disability, race, gender, sexuality, class, and religion that justified imperial rule in Ireland and the forms of oppression that continued after independence. Marion Quirici identifies models of citizenship and creative autonomy in Irish modernist literature that valorize vulnerability over ability and interdependence over independence. She uncovers a history in which an entire nation, Ireland, was characterized as disabled and therefore "not fit for freedom." Beyond symbolism, the Famine and decades of emigration led to a perception that Ireland’s racial stocks were depleted, and that those who remained were feeble and few.

The fraught relationship between disability and Irishness provides context for Quirici’s analysis of modernist Irish literature. Revivalists such as William Butler Yeats, Lady Gregory, Pádraic Pearse, and the Gaelic Athletic Association created new mythologies of Irish ability to counter imperial stereotypes, tacitly reinforcing the idea of disability as a disqualification for sovereignty. Certain Irish modernists, however—James Joyce, Edna O’Brien, Samuel Beckett, Brian O’Nolan, and Christy Brown—called the "fitness for freedom" ideology into question. These authors allow us to disentangle disability from unfitness and scrutinize its relationship to liberation. In their work, disability becomes an avenue for exploring the human experience and discovering the inherent creativity and collaborative potential of an interdependent life.

Marion Quirici is an assistant professor of disability studies and global anglophone literature at Kennesaw State University. She has published in Pediatric Clinics of North America, Medical Humanities, Journal of Pediatric Rehabilitation Medicine, and Joyce Studies Annual, among other journals.

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