Why Sinéad O'Connor matters

Allyson McCabe

Book - 2023

"Irish singer-songwriter Sinéad O'Connor burst onto the pop scene in 1987 with her album The Lion and the Cobra, and followed it with the Grammy-winning I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got (1990), which featured a cover of Prince's song "Nothing Compares 2 U." In 1992, she infamously tore a picture of Pope John Paul II on Saturday Night Live to protest the sexual abuse committed by priests and covered up by church authorities. O'Connor was immediately castigated for her politics, which were already radical, and her career has suffered ever since. For many people--including, for many years, the author--what they know of O'Connor stops there. Allyson McCabe argues that both that moment and O'Connor&#...039;s long career deserve re-examination. For McCabe, hindsight suggests that O'Connor "was right." Right about the church, right about how the music industry uses women, and "most of all, she was right to seek and speak her own truth" no matter the price she's paid for it. O'Connor continues to be controversial, with public breakdowns and problematic statements (to say nothing of changing her name twice). She also has released 10 albums in addition to one-off collaborations and singles. She is a hero (as this book makes clear) to Fiona Apple and other influential women in music. McCabe plans to address both triumphs and struggles, to offer "a fresh look at Sinéad O'Connor's life through the lenses of music criticism, cultural analysis, and personal reflection." The book works through O'Connor's life and career in chronological order, from her abused childhood to initial success, stardom, and the ensuing fallout. McCabe compares O'Connor with Madonna, digs into how she aspires to be a protest singer rather than a pop star, and McCabe explores O'Connor's attempts to de-stigmatize mental illness"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

781.66092/O'Connor
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 781.66092/O'Connor Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Criticism, interpretation, etc
Published
Austin, TX : University of Texas Press 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Allyson McCabe (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
209 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 189-209).
ISBN
9781477325704
  • Prologue
  • Framing
  • Take I
  • The Lion and the Cobra
  • As Seen on MTV
  • Rock-'n'-Roll Cassandra
  • SPINning Sinéad
  • She'll Talk but You Won't Listen
  • The Takedown
  • Is She Not Your Girl?
  • This Means War
  • We Do Not Want What She Has Got
  • Wrecking Ball
  • Things Need to Change
  • We Need to Talk about Prince
  • Hurt People Hurt
  • Truthful Witness
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Journalist McCabe debuts with a revealing reappraisal of singer Sinéad O'Connor. Born in 1966 in Glenageary, Ireland, O'Connor endured a traumatic childhood filled with physical and verbal abuse at her mother's hands, fueling her take-no-prisoners approach to music--"She didn't just want to sing," McCabe writes. "She needed to scream"--and determination to champion progressive causes. After the release of her breakout 1987 debut album The Lion and the Cobra, O'Connor harnessed her platform to denounce racism and support Black artists--for example, publicly criticizing MTV for refusing to air rap videos due to verbal "obscenity," which she viewed as "racism disguised as censorship." In 1992, she appeared as a musical guest on SNL and tore up a picture of Pope John Paul II to deliver a message about child abuse in the Catholic church--a "scandal" that attracted widespread vitriol, McCabe notes, even though O'Connor was "sound the alarm about something was actually happening and, in fact, evil." McCabe skillfully renders the artist's rise and ahead-of-her-time activism against the sociopolitical landscape of the 1980s and '90s, persuasively rescuing O'Connor's reputation from a mainstream media narrative that "all too often dismissed as a slow-motion train wreck." Fans will be riveted. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Music and culture writer McCabe defends the controversial career and lifelong activism of Irish singer/songwriter Sinéad O'Connor in this very personal and thought-provoking account of the media's role in her stratospheric rise and ultimate implosion. McCabe's own story parallels O'Connor's--she too suffered childhood abuse and struggled with her sexual identity. She turned to music as therapy and eventually discovered the prolific catalog of O'Connor through Fiona Apple's hero-worshipping video. McCabe marvels at O'Connor's ability to take control of her career by creating her own image and rebelling against the sex-symbol ideal that others wanted from her. Her brilliance and downfall were both a result of her desire to be an activist artist when her actions and views were considered taboo and shocking at the time. The author argues that O'Connor was fundamentally correct about everything, from the Catholic Church's role in covering up child abuse to the music industry's blatant racism and misogyny. VERDICT A touching tribute. O'Connor has been the subject of recent and numerous articles, a documentary, and books (including her own), but McCabe's take is unique in its critical analysis of the media and its attempts to silence and cancel O'Connor.--Lisa Henry

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.