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Metamorphosis and the Emergence of the Feminine

A Motif of «Difference» in Women's Writing

by Paula Smith Allen (Author)
©2000 Monographs VIII, 177 Pages

Summary

Metamorphosis and the Emergence of the Feminine: A Motif of «Difference» in Women's Writing examines a motif of metamorphosis that follows the models of self-awareness proposed in several feminist theories. Women writers from both North and South America, including those from different ethnic groups in the United States, employ the motif of insect and seed metamorphosis, which shows a development of the motif in stages as women increasingly become aware of the existence of a feminine self that is not acknowledged in language. The use of the motif by these writers, separated by both distance and influence, is an attempt by women writers to reject the «casting» of women's experience in the archetypal images of Persephone and Penelope, as was traditionally assigned to the feminine by Western civilization. Instead, the use of the metamorphosis motif promotes the adoption of the image of Psyche's search as appropriate to reflect the feminine quest for autonomy.

Details

Pages
VIII, 177
Year
2000
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820441221
Language
English
Keywords
self-awareness United States self experience autonomy
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., Wien, 1999. VIII, 177 pp.

Biographical notes

Paula Smith Allen (Author)

The Author: Paula Smith Allen is Assistant Professor of English at Southeastern Oklahoma State University and specializes in Twentieth-Century Literature in the Americas. She received her doctorate in Comparative Literature from Texas Tech University. Her articles have been published in Confluencia: revista hispánica de cultura y literatura and Revista de estudios hispánicos.

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Title: Metamorphosis and the Emergence of the Feminine