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Book The Change in Female Subjectivity in Women   s Fiction

Download or read book The Change in Female Subjectivity in Women s Fiction written by Hasibe Ambarcıoğlu and published by Cambridge Scholars Publishing. This book was released on 2024-04-02 with total page 155 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This book aims to provide readers with an inclusive reading of Kristevan theories on subjectivity, focusing on semiotic and symbolic phases of the infant, abjection, melancholy, love and revolution. It presents three different types of novels from three well-known female authors in order to study their female characters, who are “subjects in process” trying to overcome their psychological maladies. In each part, different eras have been chosen to see how female subjectivity has changed throughout the Feminist Waves, starting from the Victorian period until the Third Wave. With its feminist stance, this book is expected to appeal to the students, researchers, and academicians, particularly those in the fields of sociocultural studies and literature.

Book CHANGE IN FEMALE SUBJECTIVITY IN WOMEN S FICTION

Download or read book CHANGE IN FEMALE SUBJECTIVITY IN WOMEN S FICTION written by HASIBE. AMBARCIOGLU and published by . This book was released on 2024 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Engendering the Subject

Download or read book Engendering the Subject written by Sally Robinson and published by State University of New York Press. This book was released on 1991-09-20 with total page 270 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Robinson sets up a dialogue between feminist critical theory and contemporary women's fiction in order to argue for a new way of reading the specificity of women's writing. Through theoretically informed readings of novels by Doris Lessing, Angela Carter, and Gayl Jones, the author argues that female subjectivity is engendered in discourse through the woman writer's strategic engagement in representational systems that rely on a singular figure of Woman for coherence. Through this engagement, women's self-representation emerges as a process through which women take up multiple and contradictory positions in relation to different hegemonic discursive systems, and through which they engender themselves as subjects. Finally, Engendering the Subject suggests how women's fiction can provide a model for a feminist practice of reading that would simultaneously work against the historical containment of Woman, and for the empowerment of women as subjects of cultural practices.

Book Subject to Change

    Book Details:
  • Author : Nancy K. Miller
  • Publisher : Columbia University Press
  • Release : 1988
  • ISBN : 0231066619
  • Pages : 300 pages

Download or read book Subject to Change written by Nancy K. Miller and published by Columbia University Press. This book was released on 1988 with total page 300 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: What can reading for the gender of signature tell us about the act of reading as a poetics and politics? In Subject to Change Miller demonstrates the textual effects of female authorship in the production, reception, and circulation of women's writing. In the wake of Roland Barthes's famously Dead Author, Miller argues for the cultural vitality of feminist writing subjects.

Book Female Subjectivity in Women s Writing

Download or read book Female Subjectivity in Women s Writing written by Hatice Yurttaş and published by Cambridge Scholars Publishing. This book was released on 2023-09-21 with total page 138 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This volume discusses how Angela Carter’s Nights at the Circus, Margaret Atwood's The Blind Assassin, and A.S. Byatt’s “Morpho Eugenia” approach the question of female subjectivity and how they relate this question to language and literature. It shows that the conscious intertextuality and genre transgressions in these writings reflect the authors’ awareness of the woman writer’s problematic position in the literary tradition which does not allow woman a subject position. In this discussion, Luce Irigaray’s criticism of language and theory as the producer and ally of the patriarchal order is used as the main reference point. The book reads these in the light of Irigaray’s analyses of how language creates the category of woman. It highlights that Atwood and Carter are more in accord with Irigaray’s insistence on a language that can produce a female subjectivity by acknowledging, representing and symbolizing the desire of, and for, the mother, while Byatt, on the other hand, suffices with deconstructing the male subject without devising a subjective identity for women.

Book Female Subjectivity in African American Women s Poetry

Download or read book Female Subjectivity in African American Women s Poetry written by Tanima Kumari and published by Cambridge Scholars Publishing. This book was released on 2023-04-17 with total page 138 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This book is aimed at constructing the Black female subjectivity of African-American women through the works of chosen poets: Marilyn Nelson, Rita Dove, Elizabeth Alexander, and Patricia Smith. The study delves into the intricacies of African-American women’s issues such as objectification, rape, motherhood, and racism. This work is unique, as it takes up the study of African-American women’s poetry and studies different creative expressions and artistic genres in their struggle for identity. It illuminates Black female aesthetics, and the liberation of self, thus, celebrating their blackness. By examining historical and contemporary issues, the book invites the readers to re-counter the dominance of the established White Order and stimulates the question of the agency of Black women. This book debunks the perceptions and offers a genuine contribution to the discourse on African-American women’s lives. It goes beyond the customary reflections on women’s experiences and addresses the poignant odyssey of ‘women of color’, marking a shift to ‘politics of survival’.

Book Law  Sensibility and the Sublime in Eighteenth Century Women s Fiction

Download or read book Law Sensibility and the Sublime in Eighteenth Century Women s Fiction written by Sue Chaplin and published by Routledge. This book was released on 2017-03-02 with total page 176 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This work offers, firstly, a fresh historical, philosophical and cultural interpretation of the relation between the eighteenth-century discourse of sensibility, the sublime, and the theory and practice of eighteenth-century law. Secondly, the work exposes and explores the influence of this combination of discourses upon the formation of gender identities in this period. The author argues that it is only through a study of the convergence of these key eighteenth-century discourses that changing conceptualisations of femininity can fully be understood. Thirdly, it examines the presence, within eighteenth-century fiction by women, of a new female subject. Novels by women in this period, Chaplin posits, begin to reveal that the female subject position constructed through the discourses of law, sensibility and the sublime gives rise, for women, to a feminine ontological crisis that may be seen to anticipate by two hundred years the trauma of the 'post modern' male subject unable to present a unified subjectivity to himself or to the world. This feminine crisis finds expression within a range of female fiction of the mid-to-late eighteenth century - in Charlotte Lennox's anti-romance satire, Frances Sheridan's 'conduct-book' novels, the Gothic romances of Radcliffe and Eliza Fenwick and the sensationalistic horror fiction of Charlotte Dacre. Concentrating upon these writers, Chaplin argues that their works 'speak of dread' on behalf of women in this period and to varying degrees challenge discourses that construct femininity as a highly unstable, barely tenable subject position. Combining the works of Lyotard and Irigaray to formulate a new feminist reading of the eighteenth-century discourse of the sublime, this study offers fresh insights into the culture and politics of the eighteenth century. It presents highly original readings of well-known and lesser-known literary texts that interrogate from fresh perspectives the complex theoretical issues pertaining to

Book Fictions of the Female Self

Download or read book Fictions of the Female Self written by R. Parkin-Gounelas and published by Springer. This book was released on 1991-10-23 with total page 209 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Women's novels have traditionally been read as 'subjective'. Through an examination of three generations of women's fiction in the post-Romantic period, this book challenges traditional readings of women's novels and argues that fiction writing for women has often been a matter of self-erasure rather than self-inscription. In particular, it examines the changing strategies, sometimes collusive and sometimes rebellious, which Charlotte Bronte, Olive Schreiner and Katherine Mansfield employed in their tentative project of inscribing female subjectivity into the novel and story form.

Book Re mapping the Centre and the Periphery  Studies in Literature   Culture

Download or read book Re mapping the Centre and the Periphery Studies in Literature Culture written by Dr. Niraja Saraswat and published by Shanlax Publications. This book was released on with total page 87 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: With the onset of denationalising wave of globalization, literature and culture feel impelled to locate new arrangements of content and form, resulting in evolved cultural and social paradigm. Globalizing forces are reshaping our cultural, economic, and social landscapes. The literary discourse is also experiencing change at large, including in its migrant, diasporic, postcolonial, and transnational variants. This transfusion leads to identifying new transcultural and transnational approaches, perspectives, and theories. RE-MAPPING THE CENTRE AND THE PERIPHERY: STUDIES IN LITERATURE & CULTURE offers a comprehensive approach toward culture, language, and literature contributing to assess the dynamic of center (s) -periphery(ies) in the various spheres. The book sustains a plethora of themes ranging from adult hegemony, female subjectivity, and diaspora to Ganga Ghat and artificial intelligence. The book critiques the centre and the periphery and provides a fresh approach to the acclaimed oeuvres. The book also offers an unflinching critique of content and inequality through the lens of caste, class, gender, and race. The vivacity and horizons of research articles have been multiplied in curious and exciting ways. Throughout the book, a sense of place or the periphery is shown to be established, negated or supplanted by the literary works which are underpinned by the interlocking trajectories of several literary doctrines, and approaches. Besides literary and subtle observations, there are reflections gleaned from AI and mobile-assisted language learning. Plurality of observations, diversity of themes, and myriad interpretations will divulge an immense appeal to the Indian consciousness. The book posits that the scholarly articles express the confluential cultures which undermine the dichotomies between the colonizer and the colonized, the dominator and the dominated, the native and the (im)migrant, and the national and the ethnic.

Book Rewriting Womanhood

Download or read book Rewriting Womanhood written by Nancy LaGreca and published by Penn State Press. This book was released on 2015-08-26 with total page 198 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In Rewriting Womanhood, Nancy LaGreca explores the subversive refigurings of womanhood in three novels by women writers: La hija del bandido (1887) by Refugio Barragán de Toscano (Mexico; 1846–1916), Blanca Sol (1888) by Mercedes Cabello de Carbonera (Peru; 1845–1909), and Luz y sombra (1903) by Ana Roqué (Puerto Rico; 1853–1933). While these women were both acclaimed and critiqued in their day, they have been largely overlooked by contemporary mainstream criticism. Detailed enough for experts yet accessible to undergraduates, graduate students, and the general reader, Rewriting Womanhood provides ample historical context for understanding the key women’s issues of nineteenth-century Mexico, Peru, and Puerto Rico; clear definitions of the psychoanalytic theories used to unearth the rewriting of the female self; and in-depth literary analyses of the feminine agency that Barragán, Cabello, and Roqué highlight in their fiction. Rewriting Womanhood reaffirms the value of three women novelists who wished to broaden the ruling-class definition of woman as mother and wife to include woman as individual for a modern era. As such, it is an important contribution to women’s studies, nineteenth-century Hispanic studies, and sexuality and gender studies.

Book Female Embodiment and Subjectivity in the Modernist Novel

Download or read book Female Embodiment and Subjectivity in the Modernist Novel written by Renée Dickinson and published by Routledge. This book was released on 2012-08-21 with total page 188 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This study considers the work of two experimental British women modernists writing in the tumultuous interwar period--Virginia Woolf and Olive Moore--by examining four crucial incarnations of female embodiment and subjectivity: female bodies, geographical imagery, national ideology and textual experimentation. Dickinson proposes that the ways Mrs. Dalloway, and The Waves by Virginia Woolf and Spleen and Fugue by Olive Moore reflect, expose and criticize physical, geographical and national bodies in the narrative and form of their texts reveal the authors’ attempts to try on new forms and experiment with new possibilities of female embodiment and subjectivity.

Book Women s Movement

Download or read book Women s Movement written by Heidi Slettedahl MacPherson and published by BRILL. This book was released on 2021-07-26 with total page 272 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Women’s Movement critically explores the transgressive potential of feminist escape narratives and argues that they are, almost by definition, radically different from paradigmatic male escape narratives. While definitions of escape are necessarily broad, they have too often excluded the ambiguous escape – the escape most closely associated with the female. Indeed, feminist escape narratives often resist a happy ending, and Women’s Movement argues that these narrative closures reflect the changing face of feminism, as it sheds its old certainties, is faced with a monumental “backlash” and is refigured as the potentially less threatening “postfeminism”. Resisting the automatic association of “escape” with “escapist,” Women’s Movement analyzes male adventure and quest narratives, including Moby-Dick, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Blood Meridian, and Deliverance, before turning to a range of feminist texts. While being the first book to give critical attention to some postfeminist novels, Women’s Movement more often acts as a channel for offering different ways of approaching familiar feminist texts, including, among others, Marian Engel’s Bear, Atwood’s Surfacing and The Handmaid’s Tale, Joan Barfoot’s Gaining Ground and Dancing in the Dark, Anne Tyler’s Earthly Possessions and Ladder of Years, Marilynne Robinson’s Housekeeping, Erica Jong’s Fear of Flying and Margaret Laurence’s The Diviners.

Book PSAT NMSQT Study Guide

    Book Details:
  • Author : Brian W. Stewart
  • Publisher : Simon and Schuster
  • Release : 2020-07-07
  • ISBN : 1506274250
  • Pages : 648 pages

Download or read book PSAT NMSQT Study Guide written by Brian W. Stewart and published by Simon and Schuster. This book was released on 2020-07-07 with total page 648 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Always study with the most up-to-date prep! Look for PSAT/NMSQT Study Guide, 2023: 4 Practice Tests + Comprehensive Review + Online Practice, ISBN 9781506280110, on sale June 7, 2022. Publisher’s Note: Products purchased from third-party sellers are not guaranteed by the publisher for quality, authenticity, or access to any online entitles included with the product.

Book Food and Femininity in Twentieth Century British Women s Fiction

Download or read book Food and Femininity in Twentieth Century British Women s Fiction written by Professor Andrea Adolph and published by Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.. This book was released on 2013-04-28 with total page 196 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In her feminist intervention into the ways in which British women novelists explore and challenge the limitations of the mind-body binary historically linked to constructions of femininity, Andrea Adolph examines female characters in novels by Barbara Pym, Angela Carter, Helen Dunmore, Helen Fielding, and Rachel Cusk. Adolph focuses on how women's relationships to food (cooking, eating, serving) are used to locate women's embodiment within the everyday and also reveal the writers' commitment to portraying a unified female subject. For example, using food and food consumption as a lens highlights how women writers have used food as a trope that illustrates the interconnectedness of sex and gender with issues of sexuality, social class, and subjectivity-all aspects that fall along a continuum of experience in which the intellect and the physical body are mutually complicit. Historically grounded in representations of women in periodicals, housekeeping and cooking manuals, and health and beauty books, Adolph's theoretically informed study complicates our understanding of how women's social and cultural roles are intricately connected to issues of food and food consumption.

Book PSAT NMSQT Study Guide  2023  4 Practice Tests   Comprehensive Review   Online Practice

Download or read book PSAT NMSQT Study Guide 2023 4 Practice Tests Comprehensive Review Online Practice written by Brian W. Stewart and published by Simon and Schuster. This book was released on 2022-06-07 with total page 649 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: A preparation guide to the 2023 PSAT/NMSQT that covers relevant topics, with a diagnostic test, and four full-length practice tests.

Book Female Subjectivity in African American Women s Narratives of Enslavement

Download or read book Female Subjectivity in African American Women s Narratives of Enslavement written by L. Myles and published by Springer. This book was released on 2009-10-26 with total page 195 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Female Subjectivity in African American Women s Narratives of Enslavement is a new and innovative study of black women s transformation, which focuses on black women writers who support the notion of separate location for a changed female consciousness. This book offers the concept of the "Transient Woman" as a new paradigm and feminist vision for analyzing female subjectivity and consciousness.

Book We Are Not Born Submissive

Download or read book We Are Not Born Submissive written by Manon Garcia and published by Princeton University Press. This book was released on 2023-01-24 with total page 248 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: A philosophical exploration of female submission, using insights from feminist thinkers—especially Simone de Beauvoir—to reveal the complexities of women’s reality and lived experience What role do women play in the perpetuation of patriarchy? On the one hand, popular media urges women to be independent, outspoken, and career-minded. Yet, this same media glorifies a specific, sometimes voluntary, female submissiveness as a source of satisfaction. In philosophy, even less has been said on why women submit to men and the discussion has been equally contradictory—submission has traditionally been considered a vice or pathology, but female submission has been valorized as innate to women’s nature. Is there a way to explore female submission in all of its complexity—not denying its appeal in certain instances, and not buying into an antifeminist, sexist, or misogynistic perspective? We Are Not Born Submissive offers the first in-depth philosophical exploration of female submission, focusing on the thinking of Simone de Beauvoir, and more recent work in feminist philosophy, epistemology, and political theory. Manon Garcia argues that to comprehend female submission, we must invert how we examine power and see it from the woman’s point of view. Historically, philosophers, psychoanalysts, and even some radical feminists have conflated femininity and submission. Garcia demonstrates that only through the lens of women’s lived experiences—their economic, social, and political situations—and how women adapt their preferences to maintain their own well-being, can we understand the ways in which gender hierarchies in society shape women’s experiences. Ultimately, she asserts that women do not actively choose submission. Rather, they consent to—and sometimes take pleasure in—what is prescribed to them through social norms within a patriarchy. Moving beyond the simplistic binary of natural destiny or moral vice, We Are Not Born Submissive takes a sophisticated look at how female submissiveness can be explained.