Image for Experience, identity & epistemic injustice within Ireland's Magdalene laundries

Experience, identity & epistemic injustice within Ireland's Magdalene laundries

Part of the Bloomsbury Studies in Religion, Gender, and Sexuality series
See all formats and editions

How are the identities of women shaped by religious disciplinary processes in Magdalene laundries and how do women re-engage with their sense of self after leaving the institutions?

Chloë K. Gott situates these questions within the current cultural climate in which the institutions now sit, considering how they fit into Ireland’s present as well as its past. This book represents the first significant secondary analysis to be conducted of 81 oral history interviews recorded as part of the Government of Ireland Collaborative Research project, ‘Magdalene Institutions: Recording an Archival and Oral History’, funded by the Irish Research Council.

These were taken with women formerly incarcerated in these institutions, as well as others associated with this history. Grounded in qualitative analysis of this archive, the book is structured around the voices and words of survivors themselves.

With a strong focus on how the experience of being incarcerated in a Magdalene laundry impacted on the gendered religious selves of the women, this book tracks the process of entering, working in and leaving a laundry, explored through the lens of epistemic injustice.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£26.09 Save 10.00%
RRP £28.99
Product Details
Bloomsbury Academic
1350254460 / 9781350254466
Paperback / softback
24/08/2023
United Kingdom
English
248 pages
24 cm