Article
Feminist Review (1995) 50, 5–19. doi:10.1057/fr.1995.18
Deconstructing Whiteness: Irish Women in Britain
Mary J. Hickman is Director of the Irish Studies Centre at the University of North London. She is currently directing a research project for the Commission for Racial Equality about discrimination and the Irish community in Britain. In 1995 her book for Avebury Press, Religion, Class and Identity, will be published; this is a study of the British State, the Catholic Church and the Irish in Britain.
Bronwen Walter is Senior Lecturer in Geography at Anglia Polytechnic University, Cambridge. Her main research interest is in Irish women's migration to Britain. She is Senior Research Associate for the Commission for Racial Equality initiative on discrimination and the Irish community in Britain.
Mary J. Hickman and Bronwen Walter
Abstract
The Irish are largely invisible as an ethnic group in Britain but continue to be racialized as inferior and alien Others. Invisibility has been reinforced by academic treatment. Most historians have assumed that a framework of assimilation is appropriate and this outcome is uncritically accepted as desirable. Sociologists on the other hand have excluded the Irish from consideration, providing tacit support for the 'myth of homogeneity' of white people in Britain against the supposedly new phenomenon of threatening (Black) 'immigrants'.
Focus on the paradigm of 'colour' has limited the range of racist ideologies examined and led to denial of anti-Irish racism. But an analysis of nineteenth-century attitudes shows that the 'Irish Catholic' was a significant Other in the construction of the British nationalist myth. Despite contemporary forgetting, hostility towards the Irish continues, over and above immediate reactions to recent IRA campaigns. Verbal abuse and racial harassment are documented in London and elsewhere, but unacknowledged.
The masculine imagery of 'Paddy' hides the existence of Irish women in Britain, although they have outnumbered men since the 1920s. In America, by contrast, there is a strong stereotype of 'Bridget' and her central contribution to Irish upward mobility is recognized. But invisibility does not protect Irish women in Britain from racism. Indeed, they are often more exposed since their productive and reproductive roles connect more firmly to British society. Moreover, women have played a key role in maintaining Catholic adherence, which continues to resonate closely with Irishness and difference.
Keywords:
Irish, whiteness, Britishness, racism, invisibility, assimilation







