Self-fashioning in Margaret Atwood's fiction : dress, culture, and identity

著者

    • Kuhn, Cynthia G.

書誌事項

Self-fashioning in Margaret Atwood's fiction : dress, culture, and identity

Cynthia G. Kuhn

(American university studies, Series XXVII, Feminist studies, v. 9)

Peter Lang, c2005

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 5

この図書・雑誌をさがす

注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. [129]-144)

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This study examines the associations between dressing and storytelling in Margaret Atwood's fiction. As cultural representations operating within a network of codes, clothed bodies are often discussed by theorists as constructed performances or as fabricated texts, inextricably bound up with ideology and power. The clothed body often becomes a battleground in Atwood's fiction as female protagonists respond to divisive cultural scripts through self-fashioning. Furthermore, Atwood seems to collapse the opposition between the material and the spiritual through clothing, to consider dress a fitting metaphor for the space between the natural and the supernatural. While the connections among dress, body, and story are visible from Atwood's earliest novel forward, they achieve their most unified and powerful effect in The Robber Bride (1993) and Alias Grace (1996). In these novels, Atwood draws upon the classical idea that the body clothes the soul to create a postmodern frame for the complex relationships among subjectivity, representation, voice, gender, and culture.

「Nielsen BookData」 より

関連文献: 1件中  1-1を表示

詳細情報

ページトップへ