2005
DOI: 10.1353/sex.2007.0011
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"One Yank and They're Off": Interaction between U.S. Troops and Northern Irish Women, 1942-1945

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Cited by 10 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Burdened by an internalised sense of shame, Theresa remains suspicious of their charitability and openmindedness throughout her life. 37 The story's juxtaposition with the issue's editorial speaking out in favour of the Mother and Child Scheme reinforces its ideological message: Beckett's story ultimately seeks to imagine a society in which unmarried mothers and their children are no longer faced with discrimination and stigmatisation. 38 In that spirit, the story is more conspicuous in its treatment of its taboo theme than the previous stories.…”
Section: Magazine Stories Modernist Aesthetics and Moral Censorshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Burdened by an internalised sense of shame, Theresa remains suspicious of their charitability and openmindedness throughout her life. 37 The story's juxtaposition with the issue's editorial speaking out in favour of the Mother and Child Scheme reinforces its ideological message: Beckett's story ultimately seeks to imagine a society in which unmarried mothers and their children are no longer faced with discrimination and stigmatisation. 38 In that spirit, the story is more conspicuous in its treatment of its taboo theme than the previous stories.…”
Section: Magazine Stories Modernist Aesthetics and Moral Censorshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, Leanne McCormick's study, the only one specifically on Northern Irish women and the Americans during the war, makes no mention of Catholic girls being more likely to date African American servicemen. 102 Objections to Americans, regardless of race, courting local women transcended sectarian divisions and proved a major source of friction. In one sense this reflected the social conservatism of both the Protestant and Catholic churches and their continuing influence, but the reality at street level was much more visceral.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%