Asking Angela: Discourses about Sexuality in an Irish Problem Page, 1963-1980

Ultimately, the letters sent to her and her responses to them demonstrate how in an era of high modernity the distinction between expert and lay authences had been diminished, indeed, how some letter writers challenged Macnamara's authority as an expert and framed new understandings of their se...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of the history of sexuality Vol. 19; no. 2; pp. 317 - 339
Main Author RYAN, PAUL
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States University of Texas Press 01.05.2010
University of Texas at Austin (University of Texas Press)
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Summary:Ultimately, the letters sent to her and her responses to them demonstrate how in an era of high modernity the distinction between expert and lay authences had been diminished, indeed, how some letter writers challenged Macnamara's authority as an expert and framed new understandings of their sexuality drawn from a range of new and conflicting voices.3 Born into an upper-middle-class Dublin home in 1931, Angela Macnamara became the most renowned "agony aunt," or advice columnist, in Irish society. In 1963, when Macnamara was thirty-two, the biggest-selling Sunday newspaper in the land, the Sunday Press, accepted a series of her articles on teenage dating for publication.5 They generated a huge public response, and Macnamara was invited by the editor to respond to readers' questions, effectively launching her career as an agony aunt.
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ISSN:1043-4070
1535-3605
1535-3605
DOI:10.1353/sex.0.0105