Feminist Alternatives

About The Book

Feminist Alternatives: Irony and Fantasy in the Contemporary Novel by Womenby Nancy A. WalkerThis analytical survey of contemporary fiction is a study of more than twenty-five novels written by women during a twenty-year period of rapid socio-cultural change resulting from the philosophy and goals of the contemporary women's movement. The author contends that the novels of the period 1969-1988 served as a dialogue among women authors and their readers as they attempted to deal with dramatic alterations in attitudes toward career sexuality and continued tension between personal autonomy and cultural sexism. In readings of novels by American British and Canadian authors including Gail Godwin Toni Morrison Margaret Drabble Doris Lessing Maxine Hong Kingston and Margaret Atwood the author proposes that the narrative devices of irony and fantasy are used commonly in these novels to reflect women's increased detachment from cultural attempts to define women's nature and role and their need to imagine alternative ways of ordering their own lives and the structure of society itself. Rather than a chronological or author-by-author study this insightful book integrates references to and readings of the novels in several areas of emphasis: the novel as a means of communication among women of this period the relationship between irony and fantasy as narrative elements and the authors' concern with language itself the novelists' tendency to use multiple narrative voices that continuously revised the concept of a fixed self and the stories that have traditionally defined the female self the use of dreams fantasies and even madness as means of transcendence and the frequent creation of utopian or dystopian visions of past or future. The author concludes that a pervasive theme in women's novels of the past twenty years from Lessing's The Four-Gated City to Atwood's Cat's Eye is the radical questioning of received tradition. She concludes as well that the alternative society collectively envisioned by these authors would value women's intellectual as well as emotional powers recognize their sexuality reformulate the concept of power and recognize women's full participation in the creation of language and meaning.Nancy A. Walker (deceased) was director of women's studies and an associate professor of English at Vanderbilt University.
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