“What secret torture?”: Normativity, “Homoeros” and the Will to Escape in Yeats’s “The Land of Heart’s Desire” and Edward Martyn’s “The Heather Field”

This paper offers a dramaturgical and comparative analysis of W.B. Yeats’s The Land of Heart’s Desire (1889) and Edward Martyn’s The Heather Field (1899) in light of their representation of the tension between the queer and the normative. I focus on characters who feel different and the unease of th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Zsuzsanna Balázs
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Firenze University Press 2020-06-01
Series:Studi Irlandesi : a Journal of Irish Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/bsfm-sijis/article/view/11750
id doaj-5a55ef560b2c4f9aa2c1622c8adf2a7e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5a55ef560b2c4f9aa2c1622c8adf2a7e2020-11-25T03:20:34ZengFirenze University PressStudi Irlandesi : a Journal of Irish Studies2239-39782020-06-011010“What secret torture?”: Normativity, “Homoeros” and the Will to Escape in Yeats’s “The Land of Heart’s Desire” and Edward Martyn’s “The Heather Field”Zsuzsanna Balázs0National University of IrelandThis paper offers a dramaturgical and comparative analysis of W.B. Yeats’s The Land of Heart’s Desire (1889) and Edward Martyn’s The Heather Field (1899) in light of their representation of the tension between the queer and the normative. I focus on characters who feel different and the unease of the normative discourse which insults them and perceives their existence as a threat for traditional family values and as a cause of the family’s unhappiness. This tension between the queer and the normative is also what creates spaces that allow new ways to think about gender and sexuality in these plays. I also argue that playwrights like Yeats and Martyn associated with the Revival and the Irish Literary Theatre often used the mainstream and widely accepted cultural framework of the supernatural to express same-sex intimacies in code and to offer a discourse of legitimation for non-normative subjectivities. Both Martyn’s and Yeats’s plays tell about the pressure normalcy imposes on stigmatised individuals and the resulting desire to escape to find alternative ways of love, intimacy and happiness. I will refer to the works of contemporary queer theorists including Jack Halberstam, Heather Love, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Didier Eribon, José Esteban Muñoz and Sara Ahmed to demonstrate that these plays can offer “a rich archive of queer historical structures of feeling” (Love 2007, 24). https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/bsfm-sijis/article/view/11750failurehomoerosnormativitysupernaturalYeats
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zsuzsanna Balázs
spellingShingle Zsuzsanna Balázs
“What secret torture?”: Normativity, “Homoeros” and the Will to Escape in Yeats’s “The Land of Heart’s Desire” and Edward Martyn’s “The Heather Field”
Studi Irlandesi : a Journal of Irish Studies
failure
homoeros
normativity
supernatural
Yeats
author_facet Zsuzsanna Balázs
author_sort Zsuzsanna Balázs
title “What secret torture?”: Normativity, “Homoeros” and the Will to Escape in Yeats’s “The Land of Heart’s Desire” and Edward Martyn’s “The Heather Field”
title_short “What secret torture?”: Normativity, “Homoeros” and the Will to Escape in Yeats’s “The Land of Heart’s Desire” and Edward Martyn’s “The Heather Field”
title_full “What secret torture?”: Normativity, “Homoeros” and the Will to Escape in Yeats’s “The Land of Heart’s Desire” and Edward Martyn’s “The Heather Field”
title_fullStr “What secret torture?”: Normativity, “Homoeros” and the Will to Escape in Yeats’s “The Land of Heart’s Desire” and Edward Martyn’s “The Heather Field”
title_full_unstemmed “What secret torture?”: Normativity, “Homoeros” and the Will to Escape in Yeats’s “The Land of Heart’s Desire” and Edward Martyn’s “The Heather Field”
title_sort “what secret torture?”: normativity, “homoeros” and the will to escape in yeats’s “the land of heart’s desire” and edward martyn’s “the heather field”
publisher Firenze University Press
series Studi Irlandesi : a Journal of Irish Studies
issn 2239-3978
publishDate 2020-06-01
description This paper offers a dramaturgical and comparative analysis of W.B. Yeats’s The Land of Heart’s Desire (1889) and Edward Martyn’s The Heather Field (1899) in light of their representation of the tension between the queer and the normative. I focus on characters who feel different and the unease of the normative discourse which insults them and perceives their existence as a threat for traditional family values and as a cause of the family’s unhappiness. This tension between the queer and the normative is also what creates spaces that allow new ways to think about gender and sexuality in these plays. I also argue that playwrights like Yeats and Martyn associated with the Revival and the Irish Literary Theatre often used the mainstream and widely accepted cultural framework of the supernatural to express same-sex intimacies in code and to offer a discourse of legitimation for non-normative subjectivities. Both Martyn’s and Yeats’s plays tell about the pressure normalcy imposes on stigmatised individuals and the resulting desire to escape to find alternative ways of love, intimacy and happiness. I will refer to the works of contemporary queer theorists including Jack Halberstam, Heather Love, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Didier Eribon, José Esteban Muñoz and Sara Ahmed to demonstrate that these plays can offer “a rich archive of queer historical structures of feeling” (Love 2007, 24).
topic failure
homoeros
normativity
supernatural
Yeats
url https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/bsfm-sijis/article/view/11750
work_keys_str_mv AT zsuzsannabalazs whatsecrettorturenormativityhomoerosandthewilltoescapeinyeatssthelandofheartsdesireandedwardmartynstheheatherfield
_version_ 1724618018188689408