Men Writing the Feminine: Literature, Theory, and the Question of GendersThaïs E. Morgan SUNY Press, 1994 M01 1 - 207 páginas What happens when a male author writes the feminine? Can a male author completely identify with a woman? Or does a male author always write through a woman's voice for purposes of his own? This fascinating collection explores these and other questions about gender and writing from a wide range of theoretical perspectives, including pyschoanalysis, semiotics, deconstruction, feminism, postmodernism, and discourse analysis. The introductory essay provides an overview of current issues and methodologies in gender theory, while the 11 essays in the book discuss novels and poems, from the seventeenth century to the present, by British, American, and French male writers who speak as, through, or like the feminine. Authors considered in this book include George Herbert, William Wordsworth, John Hawkes, Denis Diderot, Paul Verlaine, Randell Jarrell, John Berryman, William Faulkner, Thomas Pynchon, Jacques Derrida, and Jacques Lacan. The collection ends with a piece on the future of men in feminism, a discussion of women's and gay and lesbian studies, and a debate on future directions in gender theory. Also included is a selected bibliography of recent books of interest to scholars and students working on literature, theory, and gender. Men Writing the Feminine is designed for use in advanced undergraduate and graduate courses. It addresses men as well as women and promotes dialogue about the variety of gender positions represented in literature and theory. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 57
Página
... Language of ( Men ) Feeling : Writing Women's Voices 29 Susan J. Wolfson Border Disturbances : D. H. Lawrence's Fiction and the Feminism of Wuthering Heights 59 Carol Siegel " To Write What Cannot Be Written " : The Woman Writer and ...
... Language of ( Men ) Feeling : Writing Women's Voices 29 Susan J. Wolfson Border Disturbances : D. H. Lawrence's Fiction and the Feminism of Wuthering Heights 59 Carol Siegel " To Write What Cannot Be Written " : The Woman Writer and ...
Página 2
... language , especially the power to define " woman " in relation to " man . " As feminist scholarship in both humanities and social sciences since the mid - 1970s has emphasized , " sex , " or the physiology of a male or a female body ...
... language , especially the power to define " woman " in relation to " man . " As feminist scholarship in both humanities and social sciences since the mid - 1970s has emphasized , " sex , " or the physiology of a male or a female body ...
Página 3
... Language of ( Men ) Feeling : Writing Women's Voices . " Significantly , both Herbert and Wordsworth contest the dominant ideals of masculinity in their respective eras by speaking in what were ( and still are ) considered to be ...
... Language of ( Men ) Feeling : Writing Women's Voices . " Significantly , both Herbert and Wordsworth contest the dominant ideals of masculinity in their respective eras by speaking in what were ( and still are ) considered to be ...
Página 6
... language and referent , textual meaning and authorial presence , also applies to the poetics of " voice , " or individual style . Can sexual difference in the author's body be directly represented by voice in the language of the text ...
... language and referent , textual meaning and authorial presence , also applies to the poetics of " voice , " or individual style . Can sexual difference in the author's body be directly represented by voice in the language of the text ...
Página 7
... language from physical presence provokes a continuous state of castration anxiety in the male . writer . In this sense , his signature at the bottom of a literary or theoretical text written in the feminine becomes a displacement of the ...
... language from physical presence provokes a continuous state of castration anxiety in the male . writer . In this sense , his signature at the bottom of a literary or theoretical text written in the feminine becomes a displacement of the ...
Contenido
George Herberts Commemoration of Magdalen Herbert in Memoriae Matris Sacrum | 13 |
Wordsworth Writing Womens Voices | 29 |
D H Lawrences Fiction and the Feminism of Wuthering Heights | 61 |
The Woman Writer and Male Authority in John Hawkess Virginie Her Two Lives | 79 |
Portrait of the Artist as a Transvestite | 91 |
Pornographic Discourses Lesbian Bodies and Paul Verlaines Les Amies | 109 |
Randall Jarrell and John Berryman | 125 |
William Faulkner as Lesbian Author | 141 |
SubjectinSimulationWomaninEffect | 159 |
The Politics of Aversion in Theory | 175 |
Five Propositions on the Future of Men in Feminism | 189 |
Two Conversations on Literature Theory and the Question of Genders | 191 |
For Further Reading | 203 |
205 | |
207 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Men Writing the Feminine: Literature, Theory, and the Question of Genders Thais E. Morgan Vista previa limitada - 1994 |
Men Writing the Feminine: Literature, Theory, and the Question of Genders Thais E. Morgan Vista previa limitada - 1994 |
Términos y frases comunes
Alice Jardine argues artist castration Cathy character construction context critique cultural D. H. Lawrence death deconstruction Derrida desire Diderot discourse discussion Edited Emily Brontë erotic essay fantasy father Faulkner feeling female voice feminism Feminist Criticism femmes fiction Freud George Gubar Gynesis Heathcliff heterosexual homosexuality hysteria identify imagination impersonation Jardine Jarrell Jarrell's Joanna John Berryman language Lawrence Lawrence's lesbian literary literature Lyrical Ballads Magdalen Herbert male author male feminization male writer masculine Memoriae Matris Sacrum men's metaphor mirror narrative nature novel object passion patriarchal phallus poem poet poet's poetics poetry political pornography position postmodern Pynchon question Randall Jarrell reader Renaissance representation rhetorical ROBERT CON DAVIS Sacrum Sappho seems Seigneur sexual difference Showalter social speak speaker story suggests Susan Susan Gubar Suzanne Suzanne's THAÏS THAÏS MORGAN theory tradition Verlaine's Virginie William Faulkner woman writer women Wordsworth Writing the Feminine Wuthering Heights York