“…Since all women, though, also formed potential threats to this national identity through their embodied capacity for impurity—and, importantly, visible and therefore indisputable impurity—the Irish state, with the support of the Catholic Church, developed an aggressive strategy for excising those who “lapsed.” Sexual transgression was to be hidden and punished through a system of often mutually reinforcing institutions, thereby allowing for the continued representation of Ireland to itself and the world as a nation of morally pure superiority. What becomes evident, in this context, is the operation of the gendered politics of shame, as contemporaneous discourses illustrate the rationalization of mass incarceration of gendered Others through the pervasive mobilization of shame (Fischer ). By constructing sexual transgressors as shameful and attracting shame—to themselves, their families, and the wider polity—the gendered politics of shame underpinned a vast system of institutionalization that performed that classic mechanism of shame itself: it covered and hid Ireland's assumed national blemishes.…”