Róisín Á Costello provides a critical analysis of the ways in which law is portrayed in Irish literature and argues that authors from Ireland (writing in both Irish and English) have consistently used literature as a mechanism to challenge and critique institutional power. In doing so, she argues that Irish literature, and the narratives it has created about law, have been used to re-assert and recomplicate Irish identities at sites of conflict and to interrogate the legitimacy of power and how it is exercised.Drawing on a range of texts including novels, poetry, plays, song and satire, Costello illustrates that Irish literature has acted as a decolonial and intersectional force in critiquing the institution of law and constructing national, linguistic and political identities in Ireland. She traces a pattern in which Irish authors consistently used literature as a lens for legal analysis in Ireland, using their work to address fundamental concerns about the legitimacy of law, the role of doubt in legal proceedings, the need for popular accountability, and the marginalisation of minority groups an identities by formal institutions and system.
Róisín Á Costello is an Assistant Professor in the Law School at Trinity College Dublin and a practicing barrister.
AcknowledgementsIntroduction1. The Satire (Áer) in Irish Brehon Law: Teleological Visions of Authority and Leadership2. The Death of Poetry: The Filid as Political Subversive3. Feminist Critiques of Law in Irish Literature: Cúirt an Mhéan Oíche and An Triail Compared4. Citizenship and Linguistic Identity in Irish Macaronic Verse5. Making Room for Doubt: James Joyce and Uncertainty in the Law6. Brian Ó Nualláin: The Ex-centric Writer and the Return to Satire7. Both Charm and Steel: The Violence of Law in The Heather BlazingConclusion