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El. knyga: Female Subjectivity in Women's Writing

  • Formatas: 137 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 21-Sep-2023
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781527528918
  • Formatas: 137 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 21-Sep-2023
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781527528918

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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.
Hatice Yurtta received her BA in English language teaching from Middle East Technical University, Turkey, in 2001. She completed her MA (2009) and doctorate (2014) in English language and literature at Istanbul University, Turkey. Her doctoral research is based on postmodern women's writing and the novel genre. She works as Assistant Professor of English at the Department of Translation and Interpretation (English) at stinye University, Turkey. She has recently completed a two-year project on eighteenth-century women writers and the novel genre supported by the Technological and Scientific Research Council of Turkey (TUBITAK), and continues to work on eighteenth-century fiction.