<p>Abstract:-A quest for women's identity has been a key idea of contemporary feminist thought. Feminist literary<br>criticism exposed a serious clash between the traditional view of the women's role in the society and the way women<br>perceived themselves. It is this clash that is of particular interest to Margaret Atwood in her novel The Edible<br>Woman. The heroine of the novel, Marian, is bound by the stereotyped notion of her role in society; she realizes the<br>deficiencies of this concept and try to defy it. The means of her struggle to find her identity, as well as the differences,<br>shifts and similarities in the description of women's experience in relation to the changes of the social climate are<br>the main foci of this paper.<...
In her poetry and novels, Margaret Atwood explores political realities in the relationships " betwee...
Margaret Atwood’s debut novel The Edible Woman follows protagonist Marian MacAlpin’s life over the s...
Thesis (M.A. (English))--Potchefstroom University for Christian Higher Education, 2003.Margaret Atwo...
Margaret Atwood's The Edible Woman is written in both first-person singular and in the third person,...
The Edible Woman is taken for study, and to look in depth the manner in which the protagon...
In many respects, The Edible Woman was created during a ‘whirlwind change’. Atwood successfully link...
Today we live in a world full of various temptations and sensations leading us away from ourselves. ...
The Edible Woman deals with female experience and femininity and challenges the traditional notions ...
Margaret Atwood, the Canadian feminist writer is concerned with the issues and the problems of the C...
Abstract—The concept of self and body has been discussed since the evolution of Modern philosophy by...
In Margaret Atwood's novel The Edible Woman and Anita Desai's novels Cry, the Peacock, Voices in the...
En este trabajo, me centro en una lectura feminista de la novela La mujer comestible por Margaret At...
This essay examines scholarly discourses about embodiment, and their increasing scholarly currency, ...
Background: The development of understanding among women, related to the rise of consciou...
A feminist study of two novels by Margaret Atwood is a study of The Edible Woman and Lady Oracle. Th...
In her poetry and novels, Margaret Atwood explores political realities in the relationships " betwee...
Margaret Atwood’s debut novel The Edible Woman follows protagonist Marian MacAlpin’s life over the s...
Thesis (M.A. (English))--Potchefstroom University for Christian Higher Education, 2003.Margaret Atwo...
Margaret Atwood's The Edible Woman is written in both first-person singular and in the third person,...
The Edible Woman is taken for study, and to look in depth the manner in which the protagon...
In many respects, The Edible Woman was created during a ‘whirlwind change’. Atwood successfully link...
Today we live in a world full of various temptations and sensations leading us away from ourselves. ...
The Edible Woman deals with female experience and femininity and challenges the traditional notions ...
Margaret Atwood, the Canadian feminist writer is concerned with the issues and the problems of the C...
Abstract—The concept of self and body has been discussed since the evolution of Modern philosophy by...
In Margaret Atwood's novel The Edible Woman and Anita Desai's novels Cry, the Peacock, Voices in the...
En este trabajo, me centro en una lectura feminista de la novela La mujer comestible por Margaret At...
This essay examines scholarly discourses about embodiment, and their increasing scholarly currency, ...
Background: The development of understanding among women, related to the rise of consciou...
A feminist study of two novels by Margaret Atwood is a study of The Edible Woman and Lady Oracle. Th...
In her poetry and novels, Margaret Atwood explores political realities in the relationships " betwee...
Margaret Atwood’s debut novel The Edible Woman follows protagonist Marian MacAlpin’s life over the s...
Thesis (M.A. (English))--Potchefstroom University for Christian Higher Education, 2003.Margaret Atwo...