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Emma Donoghue’s novel The Wonder (2016) provides a modern day, fictional entry into Ireland’s traumatic history, through the narrative of Anna O’Donnell, an eleven-year-old “fasting girl” living in post-Famine Ireland. The lingering detail on Anna’s body presents a reflection on the Famine, but the novel also evaluates contemporary notions of anorexia as a consequence of Anna’s rejection of food. The management of Anna’s sexually abused body through medical observation (Foucault’s clinical gaze) also provides a reflection on her identity as a pre-pubescent girl heading toward sexual maturity, whilst the logic of this surveillance is also mapped onto the landscape and body politic (through the tourist gaze). The novel therefore identifies broader themes and concerns specific to Ireland, nationhood and Catholicism, as well as how sexual ethics and body image have been imposed on women both in the nineteenth century and the present day.