feminism and literature

19
FEMINISM AND LITERATURE Llugdar, Patricia Pereyra, Marina Literary Studies II Universidad Tecnológica Nacional FRVM-Regional Villa María Licenciatura en Lengua Inglesa 2012

Upload: adeola

Post on 22-Feb-2016

73 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Feminism and Literature. Llugdar , Patricia Pereyra, Marina Literary Studies II Universidad Tecnológica Nacional FRVM-Regional Villa María Licenciatura en Lengua Inglesa 2012. Feminist Criticism in Literature. Organization Key facts about Feminism Lois Tyson - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Feminism  and  Literature

FEMINISM AND LITERATURE

Llugdar, PatriciaPereyra, Marina

Literary Studies II Universidad Tecnológica Nacional

FRVM-Regional Villa MaríaLicenciatura en Lengua Inglesa

2012

Page 2: Feminism  and  Literature

Feminist Criticism in LiteratureOrganization Key facts about Feminism

Lois Tyson

Stephen Bonnycastle

Analysis of: Story of an Hour Phenomenal Woman

Activity on the Wiki Brick Lane

Page 3: Feminism  and  Literature

Feminism and Feminist theory What is Feminism?

Which are the aims of feminist theory?

Which are the beginnings of Feminism?

Which are the modern western feminist movements?

Page 4: Feminism  and  Literature

Lois Tyson: Critical Theory Today

“Broadly defined, feminist criticism examines the ways in which literature (and other cultural production) reinforce or undermine the economic, political, social and psichological oppression of women.”(Tyson, 81)

“… “habit of seeing”, a way of looking at life, that uses male experience as the standard…”(Tyson,82)

Male point of view: universal, part of the literary canon “Patriarchal woman…..a woman who has internalized the

norms and values of patriarchy…” (Tyson, 83) Traditional Gender Roles ‘Biological essentialism’ Difference between the words ‘gender’ and ‘sex’

Page 5: Feminism  and  Literature

Patriarchal Ideology

Traditional Gender Roles American stereotypes Classical Fairy tales: “good girls” “bad girls” “Prince Charming” Feminist criticims in movies

Page 6: Feminism  and  Literature
Page 7: Feminism  and  Literature

Feminist Premises Patriarcal ideologies

“…woman is other…” (Tyson, 90)

‘phallogocentric thinking’

‘Sex’ and ‘Gender’

‘Feminist Activism’

Gender issues in Literature

Page 8: Feminism  and  Literature

Getting Beyond Patriarchy Programming

Differentiating patriarchal modes of writingand ‘écriture fémenine’ Finding contradictions in ideologies ‘Deconstructing’ Combining theories to be critical on schools of

thoughts Interpreting subjectively

Page 9: Feminism  and  Literature

Multicultural Feminism White feminism vs. black feminism

“Therefore, the promotion of sisterhood --- psychological and political bonding among women based on the recognition of common experiences and goals--- must include respect for and attention to individual differences among women as well as an equitable distribution of power among various cultural groups within feminist leadership” (Tyson, 96)

Page 10: Feminism  and  Literature

Approaches for literary text analysis

“Approaches that attempt to develop a specifically female framework for the analysis of women’s writing are often referred to as gynocriticism.”(Tyson, 101)

- Patriarchal or Feminist agenda - Resistance to patriarchy through sisterhood- Cultural factors and gender- Women and creativity- Author’s style in writing- Historical/Public opinion about the literary work and

its operations of patriarchy- Relationship between the literary work and women’s

literary history

Page 11: Feminism  and  Literature

Stephen Bonnycastle:In Search of Authority

“Patriarchal order”

Sexism in Language, Literature and Criticism

Carl Jung’s view on differences between women and men

Page 12: Feminism  and  Literature

Story of an Hourby Kate Chopin

Whose experience is rendered most fully and faithfully? (page 184, line

9)

Are women presented as stereotypes? Are women seen as locked into

those patterns with no significant freedoms or flexibility?(page 184, line

33)

Are masculine and feminine activities presented differently? Do men

dominate women or vice-versa? Is the text critical to women’s patriarchal

stereotypes? (page 184, line 34)

Based on Bonnyclastle’s theory

Page 13: Feminism  and  Literature

Question for the class to answer

Whose desires and fantasies are driving the novel? When it comes to an end, does the feeling of completion come from the fact that someone’s desires have been achieved?

Page 14: Feminism  and  Literature

Phenomenal Womanby Maya Angelou

Who is the speaker and what is the occasion? What is the central purpose of the poem? By what means is that purpose achieved? What does the history of the work’s reception by

the public and by the critics tell us about the operations of patriarchy?

What role does the work play in terms of women’s literary history and literary tradition?

Based on Tyson’s theory

Page 15: Feminism  and  Literature

Question for the class to answer

What might an examination of the author’s style contribute to the ongoing efforts to delineate a specifically feminine form of writing?

Page 16: Feminism  and  Literature

Activity for Wiki: “Brick Lane”

Read the premises in Tyson’s Critical Theory Today (page 90), watch until minute 12:10 and find as many premises reflected there as possible. Finally, give reasons and examples for your choices.

Page 17: Feminism  and  Literature

Conclusion

Feminism aims at gaining a balance between women and men in all spheres of society, without having anyone undiminished but treated fairly and equally.

Page 18: Feminism  and  Literature

Works Cited and ConsultedAngelou, Maya. The Complete Collection of Poems of Maya Angelou. Random

House,1994.Print.

Barnes &Noble. Meet the Writers Monica Ali.Barnesandnoble.com.lic.2011.Web.2 Mar.2012.

Bonnycastle, Stephen. In Search of Authority: An Introductory Guide to Literary Theory. Ontario. Canada: Broadview Press,1997.Print.

BookRags. Encyclopedia of World Biography on Maya Angelou. Thomson Gale.2006.Web. 2 Mar.2012.

Chopin, Kate. “The Story of an Hour. United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.,1996.Print.

Di Yanni, Robert. Literature. McGraw Hill Higher Education, 2000.

Page 19: Feminism  and  Literature

Works Cited and Consulted“Feminism”. Wikipedia Foundation,Inc. 21 Feb. 2012.Web. 2 Mar

2012.

“Maya Angelou”. The Free Dictionary Farflex,Inc. 2012.Web.2 Mar.2012.

Perrine, Laurence. Literature, Structure, Sound and Sense. Harcourt, Brace & World, 1970.

SparkNotes Editors. “SparkNote on The Story of an Hour.” SparkNotes.com. SparkNotes LLC. 2007. Web. 2 Mar. 2012.

Tyson,Lois. Critical Theory Today. NewYork/London: Garland Publishing,Inc.,1999.Print.