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Reading the Handmaid's tale /Sarrazin, Timothy M. C. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Hong Kong, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 37-39).
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Dames of Distress: Female Violence and Revised Socio-Cultural Discourses in the Fiction of Margaret AtwoodKapuscinski, KILEY 18 November 2009 (has links)
This study examines the figure of the violent woman in Atwood’s fiction as a productive starting point for the re-evaluation of various socio-cultural debates. Emerging from Atwood’s conviction that art, in its various forms, is often involved in the re-writing of convention, I begin by re-defining traditional constructions of womanhood and violence in order to evince the reformative work and often unconventional forms of brutality employed by women in Atwood’s novels, including Surfacing, The Blind Assassin, Lady Oracle, and Cat’s Eye, and in her collections of short fiction, such as Dancing Girls, Bluebeard’s Egg, The Penelopiad, and The Tent. Throughout, I demonstrate the ambivalence of violence as both destructive and generative, Canadian and un-Canadian, and Atwood’s drawing on this destabilizing ambivalence in order to propose change within her broader social milieu. More precisely, the introductory chapter offers an overview of representations of female violence in Canadian fiction, and of the various responses to this figure as she appears in Atwood’s fiction, that point to the need for a critical vocabulary that addresses women’s capacity to enact harm. The second chapter examines the various mythologies that define Canada and its people, and how the violent woman troubles these mythologies by inciting recognition of national identity as a narrative process open to re-evaluation. The third chapter moves away from this focus on national narratives to highlight the discourses that similarly shape our understanding of art, and those who participate in it. Here, the violent woman can be seen to engage in revisionary work by exposing the limits of the Red Shoes Syndrome that has in many ways come to define the fraught relationship between the female artist and her art. The final chapter examines Atwood’s on-going fascination with various kinds of mythologies and her revisions of Classical and Biblical myths in order to highlight the veritable range of female violence and the possibility, and at times necessity, of responding to these behaviors in ways that circumnavigate traditionally masculine forms of justice ethics. In focusing on how Atwood’s violent women engage these various socio-cultural discourses, this study concludes that traditionally marginal and nonliterary figures can perform central and necessary roles and that Atwood’s fiction responds to, and in turn (re)creates, the social environment from which it emerges. / Thesis (Ph.D, English) -- Queen's University, 2008-07-31 16:21:26.474
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The reality of selfhood : a study of polarity in the poetry and fiction of Margaret AtwoodLaporte Power, Linda January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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Worlds apart? : dualism and transgression in contemporary female dystopias /Mohr, Dunja M., January 2005 (has links)
Univ., Diss.--Trier. / Literaturverz. S. 287 - 303.
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The Machinery of patriarchy: Masculinity in the fiction of Margaret Atwood.Bieber, David C. (David Charles), Carleton University. Dissertation. English. January 1992 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Carleton University, 1993. / Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
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Reading the Handmaid's taleSarrazin, Timothy M. C. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Hong Kong, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 37-39). Also available in print.
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The reality of selfhood : a study of polarity in the poetry and fiction of Margaret AtwoodLaporte Power, Linda January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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Margaret Atwood's transformed and transforming Gothic /Tennant, Colette January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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Heavy with the unspoken : the interplay of absence and presence in Margaret Atwood's Cat's eyeWeinstein, Sheri M. January 1995 (has links)
This study explores the philosophical, linguistic and textual interplay of absence and presence in Margaret Atwood's novel Cat's Eye. The premise of the thesis is that the novel posits language as a problematic communicative medium; as such, language conveys that meanings of words are flexible, mutable and transient. It is through frameworks which both establish states of absence and presence as well as destroy binary oppositions between the two that Cat's Eye conveys its positions about language. Thus, textual and extra-textual discourses about the natures of language and linguistic meaning are situated within recurrent thematic and formal attention to relationships between absence and presence. By exploring the roles of absence and presence in various phenomenological and linguistic contexts, this study concludes that absence/presence is a paradigm in Cat's Eye for the way in which words are (alternately as well as simultaneously) spoken and silent, understood and misunderstood, opposed and united.
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Semantik der Krise - Semantik der Zukunft : die kultursemiotische Funktion der zeitgenössischen Literatur am Beispiel der Biotechnologie /Singh, Stephanie. January 2008 (has links)
Univ., Diss.--München, 2006.
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