Traumatic childhood memories and the adult political visions of Sinéad O’Connor, Bono, and Phil Lynott (Pre-published)
Citation
Clare, D. (2020) 'Traumatic childhood memories and the adult political visions of Sinéad O’Connor, Bono, and Phil Lynott' in Gallego, M., ed., Trauma and Identity in Contemporary Irish Culture, Oxford: Peter Lang, 211-242.
Clare, D. (2020) 'Traumatic childhood memories and the adult political visions of Sinéad O’Connor, Bono, and Phil Lynott' in Gallego, M., ed., Trauma and Identity in Contemporary Irish Culture, Oxford: Peter Lang, 211-242.
Abstract
Sinéad O’Connor, Paul “Bono” Hewson of U2, and the late Phil Lynott of Thin Lizzy are
three of Ireland’s most famous rock musicians, but that is not all that these celebrated singer
songwriters have in common. Memories of traumatic events and/or circumstances from their
formative years in Dublin greatly influenced the political visions of all three artists in later
life, as expressed through their lyrics and live performances. In O’Connor’s songs protesting
the handling of abuse cases by the Roman Catholic hierarchy and England’s ill treatment of
the peoples it has colonised,1 she has repeatedly returned to the image of the abused or
endangered child – a reflection of what she has called the “torture” suffered at the hands of
her mother in childhood (qtd in Loughrey). Likewise, the effect of the May 1974 Dublin
bombings perpetrated by loyalist paramilitaries on Bono and his best friend’s brother, Andy
Rowen, inspired several important U2 songs. Examples include tracks addressing Northern
Irish violence, the reconciling of Catholic and Protestant Irishness (which – obviously – also
relates to Bono’s half-Catholic, half-Protestant background) and heroin abuse in 1980s
Dublin. Finally, while Phil Lynott’s music was not used for political activism in the way – or
to the degree – that O’Connor’s and U2’s has been, there is one highly significant political
agenda in his work. His experiences of racial prejudice during his Dublin childhood led him
to repeatedly (if sometimes subtly) assert the validity and power of a black Irish identity.
Keywords
Irish rockMemory studies
Clerical abuse scandals
Dublin-Monaghan bombings
Racism