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    ‘Plastic and proud’?: discourses of authenticity among the second-generation Irish in England

    Citation

    Scully, M. (2009) "‘Plastic and proud’?: discourses of authenticity among the second-generation Irish in England". Psychology & Society 2(2), pp.124 ‐ 135. ISSN: 2041-5893
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    Date
    2009
    Author
    Scully, Marc
    Peer Reviewed
    Yes
    Metadata
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    Scully, M. (2009) "‘Plastic and proud’?: discourses of authenticity among the second-generation Irish in England". Psychology & Society 2(2), pp.124 ‐ 135. ISSN: 2041-5893
    Abstract
    This paper argues that understandings of authenticity are crucial in the construction of a diasporic identity and explores how members of the Irish diaspora in England construct discourses of what it means to be ‘authentically’ Irish. In particular, it examines how these discourses are arranged around the ‘Plastic Paddy’ trope, a label originally coined by young Irish migrants in London in the 1980s to describe the second‐generation London‐Irish they encountered. The attribution of ‘plastic‐ness’ in interview data as well as rhetorical defences against being labelled ‘plastic’ reflect ongoing issues of contestation over meaning and ownership of diasporic Irishness. From a social psychological perspective, this provides an example of the subtle ways in which language and labels may be used for exclusionary purposes, as well as the agency displayed by those who are positioned as ‘inauthentic’ by these discourses in constructing their own identities in dialogue with them.
    Keywords
    Discourse
    Authenticity
    Second-generation Irish
    Irish in England
    England
    Ireland
    Language (ISO 639-3)
    eng
    Publisher
    University of Cambridge
    License URI
    https://lra.le.ac.uk/bitstream/2381/28065/6/Marc%20Scully%20-%20Plastic%20and%20Proud%20-%20revised%20version.pdf
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10395/2246
    ISSN
    2041-5893
    Collections
    • Psychology (Peer-reviewed publications)

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