Myth and violence in the contemporary female text : new Cassandras

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書誌事項

Myth and violence in the contemporary female text : new Cassandras

edited by Sanja Bahun-Radunović and V.G. Julie Rajan

Ashgate, c2011

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

How various mythologies challenge, enable, and inspire women artists and activists across the globe to communicate personal and historical experiences of violence is the central concern of this collection. Beginning with the observation that twentieth- and twenty-first century female writers and artists often use myth to represent their social and artistic struggles, the distinguished international scholars and writers consider mythic fabulations as spaces for contested meanings and resistant readings. The identified resistance of the mythic material to repression-working, as it were, in opposition to another celebrated drive/role of myth, that of containment-makes the use of myth particularly stimulating for twentieth-century and contemporary female artists; and it is an interest in the aesthetic and political consequences of such resistances that animates this book. Exemplifying the diverse types of engagement with myth and femininity, literary criticism, discussions of film and art, artwork, as well as original creative writing, could all be found within the boundaries of this innovative volume. Femininity, myth, and violence are here explored in contexts such as female mythopoiesis in the early twentieth century; the politics of representation in contemporary writing; revision of old myths; and creation of new myths in multicultural female experiences. Keeping the focus on the actual works of art, the editors and contributors offer scholars and teachers an inclusive way to approach literature and the arts that avoids the limits imposed by genre or national and regional boundaries.

目次

  • Contents: Introduction: Cassandra's gift, Sanja Bahun-Radunovic and V.G. Julie Rajan
  • Part I Myth, Violence, Border-Crossing: Global Expressions of Self and Society: 'A terror to gods and men' and themselves: the Furies collective, the myth of the angry lesbian, and theatrics of terrorism, Sara Warner
  • Monkey remnants: paternity, ancestry, and Chineseness in Patricia Chao's The Monkey King, Belinda Kong
  • The ethics of animal-human existence: Marie Darrieussecq's Truismes, Sanja Bahun-Radunovic
  • 'Whom did you lose first, yourself or me?' The feminine and the mythic in Indian cinema, Shreerekha Subramanian
  • The fatal effects of Phaedra's Love: Sarah Kane, Anja MA1/4ller-Wood. Part II Of Archetypes, Creativity and Ethics: Inscribing the Feminine in Mythistory: The body and the voice: Marina Tsvetaeva's The Sybil and Phaedra, Olga Peters Hasty
  • Re-writing myth, femininity and violence in Margaret Atwood's The Penelopiad, Elodie Rousselot
  • Making patriarchal history women's own: Eugenia Fakinou's The Seventh Garment, Tatjana Aleksic
  • Flawed heroes, fragmented heroines: the use of myth in cinema writing, Sue Clayton. Part III Instead of an Afterword
  • Lot's wife, Kiki Smith
  • Introduction to Cancellanda, Marina Warner
  • Cancellanda, Marina Warner
  • Index.

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