Vol. 9 No. 9 (2019): Whose Homelands? Fictions, Facts and Questions of the Irish Diaspora
Miscellanea

Adapting the Story of Suibhne in Neil Gaiman’s “American Gods”

Victoria Yee Wei Wen
Laboratorio editoriale OA / Dip. LILSI

Published 2019-06-12

How to Cite

Yee Wei Wen, V. (2019). Adapting the Story of Suibhne in Neil Gaiman’s “American Gods”. Studi Irlandesi. A Journal of Irish Studies, 9(9), 527–543. https://doi.org/10.13128/SIJIS-2239-3978-25528

Abstract

Neil Gaiman’s depiction of America as a mythic place in American Gods explores “the soul of America” – what immigrants brought with them to America and what they found there. Existing scholarship explores Gaiman’s use of mythology and folklore to create a complex, post-modern narrative that is derived from different sources. This paper will focus specifically on Gaiman’s adaptation and re-creation of the Irish king Suibhne (also known as Sweeney) from different mythic narratives, forming an intertextual narrative that shows the power of storytelling in the formation of cultural identity. Further, he uses the wandering figure of Suibhne to explore the issues surrounding Irish diaspora: their emigration to America, and the implications of this cultural dislocation.

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