Male Rage, Female Fury: Gender and Violence in Contemporary American FictionUniversity Press of America, 2000 - 305 halaman In four chapters, each dedicated to an experimental American novelist of the postmodern period, Male Rage Female Fury investigates what happens when novels that have defied traditional literary conventions such as temporal chronology, refuse to break with traditional gender-based stereotypes. The result, Maxwell argues, is an ambiguity or "internal tension" that may eventually produce more misogynistic images within the texts. Central to the study is an analysis of the violence, male and female initiated, in the works of the minimalists Barthelme and Didion, and the mythicists Pynchon and Morrison. |
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Halaman 183
... telling him , " They're using you to kill people . That's their only job and you're helping them " ( GR 400 ) . Her astrological leanings and her insistence that existence can be apprehended along an axis different from that of cause ...
... telling him , " They're using you to kill people . That's their only job and you're helping them " ( GR 400 ) . Her astrological leanings and her insistence that existence can be apprehended along an axis different from that of cause ...
Halaman 190
... telling vs. feminine / reading / listening that , like all binary positions , accords a secondary , derivative status to the latter term . Throughout her texts , Morrison's fictional voices , at times , seem to transcend traditional ...
... telling vs. feminine / reading / listening that , like all binary positions , accords a secondary , derivative status to the latter term . Throughout her texts , Morrison's fictional voices , at times , seem to transcend traditional ...
Halaman 229
... tell us , perhaps because it should be so obvious , is that such women who contravene the established mores of a sexist culture , who dare to violate the status quo and raise their supposedly compliant hand against their white , male ...
... tell us , perhaps because it should be so obvious , is that such women who contravene the established mores of a sexist culture , who dare to violate the status quo and raise their supposedly compliant hand against their white , male ...
Isi
Chapter IDonald Barthelme 23 | 23 |
Chapter IIJoan Didion | 51 |
Chapter IIIThomas Pynchon | 115 |
Hak Cipta | |
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Istilah dan frasa umum
aesthetic ambiguity ambivalence American argues Barthelme Barthelme's behavior Beloved Boca Grande Charlotte Charlotte's child Cholly comic contemporary critic culture culture's daughter Dead Father death Democracy depiction discourse Donald Barthelme Dorcas episode fantasies Felski female victimization feminine feminism feminist Feminist Aesthetics fiction fragmented gender Gilbert and Gubar girl Glass Mountain Gravity's Rainbow identity images inanimate Jack Lovett Jane Jazz Joan Didion Joe Trace lesbian Lily literary male aggression Maria masculine Mélanie metaphysical minimalistic misogyny mother murder narrative narrator novel oppressive parody passive patriarchal Pecola perhaps phallic PIAIL Pökler political pornography postmodern postmodernist psychological rage rape reader reflects remains reveals Rocket role second-wave feminism seemingly semiotic Sethe Sethe's sexual silences Slothrop Snow White social society stereotypes story strategies subversive Sula Susan Griffin symbolic Thomas Pynchon Toni Morrison traditional University Press Vheissu violence against women voice vulnerable wife women and violence York young