â Paul OâBrien, SeĂĄn OâCasey: Political Activist and Writer, Cork University Press, 2023, âŹ39.
Paul OâBrien has published a political biography of SeĂĄn OâCasey, looking at the dramatist from a broadly left-wing viewpoint. The book is accessibly written and sheds light on details of working-class Dublin and international history.
OâBrienâs interest in Irish labour history is evident in his informative account of late nineteenth and early twentieth-century Dublin working-class life and events, following OâCaseyâs development and the context from which arose his plays. Into this fall the writerâs involvement with the Irish-language and nationalist movement.
OâCasey joined the Irish Republican Brotherhood in 1905 and was later instrumental in the establishment of the Irish Citizen Army, which he left before the 1916 Rising.
OâCaseyâs defining experience had been the Great Lockout of 1913, and much space is rightly devoted to his trade union activism and to Jim Larkin. Less space is spared for the fellow-leader of the Lockout, James Connolly, with whom OâCasey broke. OâBrien sheds some light on this disagreement, concentrating on OâCaseyâs position, who gave priority to the class struggle above the struggle for national liberation, which required an alliance with the class enemy.
Here it could have been useful to outline Connollyâs stance on an anti-imperialist alliance in a little more detail for balance. Where OâCasey shows part of the truth as he sees it, the reader would benefit from the full picture.
This breach was significant in relation to the position OâCasey took on the 1916 Rising and subsequently, informing his three early Dublin plays, each of which examines momentous events concerned with the struggle for independence.
OâCasey did not accurately reflect the degree of working-class involvement in 1916. A significant proportion of the forces of both the Irish Citizen Army and the Irish Volunteers were working-class people, who identified with and fought for the vision of the proclamation of a democratic republic: âWe declare the right of the people of Ireland to the ownership of Ireland and to the unfettered control of Irish destinies, to be sovereign and indefeasible.â
OâBrienâs extensive reading and knowledge of drama and the arts is reflected throughout the book and kindles the readerâs interest in the development of working-class drama, from which grew the first working-class dramatist of international standing writing in English. The chapter entitled âThe New Dramaâ provides much detail and a sense of the times that produced this drama as well as the importance attached to cultural expression and playwriting by the revolutionary working class.
The authorâs refreshingly wide awareness of European theatre is evident in his presentation of OâCasey in the context of the left-wing European playwrights of the 1920s and 30s, Brecht and Toller, but also Denis Johnston in Britain and the wave of expressionism that characterised the era.
OâBrien is similarly well versed in the history of the Abbey Theatre and OâCaseyâs struggle for his plays to be performed there, and his relationship with W. B. Yeats and Augusta Gregory, as well as his final resignation and departure for England when The Silver Tassie was rejected.
While OâBrien devotes most space to discussions of the Dublin tragedies, he is cognisant of OâCaseyâs later plays and brings them into the study, setting each in its time, introducing and discussing them in relation to the writerâs outlook. OâCaseyâs canon beyond the Dublin trilogy is little known in Ireland and the anglophone world; his fantastic mature plays have rarely if ever been performed here. This is in contrast to the socialist countries, where OâCasey was a standard part of the repertoire and known mainly for his later work. In the German Democratic Republic (East Germany), OâCasey was one of the most frequently staged Western dramatists. OâBrien creates an interest in these later plays and presents their artistic as well as political merit.
OâCasey, writing at almost eighty, affirmed: âI am still a Republican, a Communist, and, in a way, a member of the Gaelic League.âÂč OâBrien relates that OâCasey had been approached by the Irish Workersâ League to support the future general secretary of the Communist Party of Ireland, Michael OâRiordan, in the May 1951 general election. Though OâCasey replied saying his endorsement would damage OâRiordanâs chances, and that he would instead donate towards the fund, his affirmation of OâRiordan in the same letter was used in the election leaflet.ÂČ
Robert Lowery states: âHis ardent enthusiasm and life-long adulation for the USSR, which he considered one of the worldâs greatest human experiments in creating a society of a new type, deserves primacy in evaluating his socialist legacy.âÂł
OâBrien states that his purpose is to concentrate âon a political reading of OâCasey on his terms,â⎠and he does this for large sections of the book. He departs from this approach when discussing the dramatistâs position as a lifelong supporter of the communist movement and the Soviet Union, where his own position takes precedence over OâCaseyâs. When this context arises, OâCasey is associated exclusively with the term âStalinism,â and any differences with the Communist Party of Great Britain are highlighted and praised.
SeĂĄn OâCasey: Political Activist and Writer is an interesting, informative and enjoyable read and a valuable addition to the canon of OâCasey commentary. It is far more than a book of academic criticism, although it is that too.
1. David Krause, The Letters of Sean OâCasey, vol. 3, p. 642 (3 November 1958).
2. OâBrien, âąâąâą p. 251.
3. Robert Lowery, âThe socialist legacy of Sean OâCaseyâ, The Crane Bag, vol. 7, no. 1, Socialism & Culture (1983), p. 128.
4. OâBrien, âąâąâąp. 4.
Related
Source: Socialistvoice.ie