DOI: 10.26650/litera2026-1815706 ISSN: 2602-2117

Distances that Transform in Lucy Caldwell’s Openings (2024)

Burcu Tekin
Lucy Caldwell is a prominent writer within the contemporary Irish literary scene. Following her short story collections like Multitudes (2016) and Intimacies (2021), her latest short story collection, Openings (2024), explores crucial life stages and experiences, focusing on motherhood, ageing, and emotional separation. Although Caldwell’s earlier works have attracted considerable academic analysis, Openings remains a vast literary territory to explore. This study concentrates on three stories from the collection—“If You Lived Here You’d Be Home by Now,” “Dark Matters,” and “Mother’s Day”—to explore how distance and transformation create a unique sense of interdependency among her characters. Here, interdependency denotes how characters’ understanding of themselves is closely tied to their relationships with other people, even when they are not physically together. The protagonists often deal with temporal, spatial, and psychological solitude. The fact that they miss, are separated from, or lose family members leads them to think deeply about their relationships and their own pasts. Whether physical or abstract, these experiences of distance facilitate profound self-exploration and a fuller understanding of their lives. In order to analyse these stories, the study employs the theoretical frameworks of Sara Ahmed and Judith Butler. It uses Ahmed’s concepts of orientation and stickiness to understand how affective ties and emotions shape the characters’ self-perception and their connection to the world. Furthermore, Butler’s work on mourning and performativity sheds light on the enacted nature of gender roles (especially motherhood) and the physical experience of loss. Finally, this study seeks to examine how repeated emotional and physical acts shape and alter the identities of characters, providing an in-depth analysis of the complex link between distance and self-transformation.

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