How Irishness Is Perceived and Weaponized Abroad

by Chief Editor

Author Sheila Armstrong’s latest novel, The Red Mouth, explores the intersection of Irish peatland history and modern societal polarization. By examining the discovery of ancient bog bodies, Armstrong highlights how contemporary political movements often weaponize imagined versions of the past to justify present-day prejudices, a trend she observed while researching the cultural significance of bog landscapes.

How Do Ancient Bog Bodies Influence Modern Political Narratives?

Bog bodies—preserved human remains found in peatlands—have historically been used to advance authoritarian ideologies. According to Sheila Armstrong, Nazi official Heinrich Himmler famously fixated on these findings, incorrectly claiming that most discovered remains were those of gay men. Himmler used this fabrication to argue that “abnormal life” should be treated like weeds and destroyed, providing a pseudo-historical justification for the horrors of the Holocaust. This demonstrates a recurring pattern where political extremists cite distorted versions of history to target vulnerable groups in the present day.

From Instagram — related to Heinrich Himmler, Wintering Out and North
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Seamus Heaney’s poetry collections Wintering Out and North brought global attention to the bog bodies of the Jutland peninsula. Armstrong credits these works as a primary inspiration for her own exploration of how individuals project personal anxieties onto these ancient, peat-brown figures.

Why Does Peatland Conservation Matter for Climate Change?

Peatlands serve as critical carbon sinks, yet their role in climate stability is often overshadowed by their historical associations with fuel and labor. Armstrong notes that her grand-uncle, Thomas Murtagh, worked for Bord na Móna—the Irish semi-state company responsible for peat harvesting—since the 1950s. His life’s work reflects a broader generational shift: moving from the industrial stripping of bogs to the modern urgency of ecosystem conservation. As global temperatures rise, the environmental value of preserving these wet, carbon-rich landscapes has become a priority for climate scientists, shifting public perception from viewing bogs as mere resources to seeing them as essential ecological infrastructure.

Why Does Peatland Conservation Matter for Climate Change?

What Drives the Use of Multiple Perspectives in Fiction?

Armstrong utilizes a multi-narrative structure in The Red Mouth to mirror the way historical perception changes over time. By alternating chapters between different characters, she avoids the limitations of a single, subjective viewpoint. According to Armstrong, this approach is partly born of her own short attention span, but it serves a functional purpose: it allows readers to connect disparate events across a timeline. This method illustrates how truth is often fragmented, and how different generations may interpret the same physical discovery—such as a 2,000-year-old body—through entirely different cultural lenses.

Small Pleasures Episode 4: Sheila Armstrong 'Red Market'

Pro Tip: The Power of Editing

Armstrong credits her 10,000 hours of professional editing experience as the primary driver of her writing success. She argues that the “hard work” of refining language is the essential craft of writing, warning against the trend of using AI to generate creative content. For aspiring authors, the takeaway is clear: expertise is built through the deliberate, slow process of revision rather than automated shortcuts.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What is the core premise of The Red Mouth? The novel follows characters surrounding the discovery of a female bog body in Ireland, eventually connecting to themes of radicalization, conspiracy theories, and the weaponization of history.
  • Are bog bodies still being discovered? Yes, archaeological discoveries in peatlands continue to occur globally, providing new insights into ancient cultures, though their interpretation remains subject to the biases of the era in which they are found.
  • Why is the bog landscape significant to Irish literature? The bog acts as a “memory bank” in Irish culture, serving as a site for both physical labor and myth-making, as evidenced by the works of Seamus Heaney and Sheila Armstrong.

The Red Mouth by Sheila Armstrong is published by Bloomsbury Circus. Have you read Armstrong’s previous works or explored the history of peatlands? Join the discussion in our comments section below or subscribe to our newsletter for more deep dives into the intersection of history and literature.

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