En este trabajo, me centro en una lectura feminista de la novela La mujer comestible por Margaret Atwood y la búsqueda de la protagonista de su identidad como mujer. Intento demostrar que la estructura y los elementos de la novela constituyen un paralelismo y una ayuda a la búsqueda de la protagonista, respectivamente. Tras una breve introducción a mi trabajo, he examinado la estructura de la novela cuyas partes reflejan las etapas de la búsqueda de la protagonista. Después, he explicado detalladamente los elementos y símbolos a través de los cuales se lleva a cabo esta búsqueda: sociedad consumista (comida y bebida) y la dicotomía sujeto/objeto, lenguaje, arquetipos de género y los roles de actividad y pasividad, y la normalidad tal y como...
In many respects, The Edible Woman was created during a ‘whirlwind change’. Atwood successfully link...
This study is a critical reading of the fiction of contemporary Canadian novelist and poet Margaret ...
Margaret Atwood’s debut novel The Edible Woman follows protagonist Marian MacAlpin’s life over the s...
<p>Abstract:-A quest for women's identity has been a key idea of contemporary feminist thought. Femi...
The present paper seeks to explore the significance of eating in the process of identity formation i...
Margaret Atwood's The Edible Woman is written in both first-person singular and in the third person,...
My thesis focuses on the way in which a reading of Chatelaine, a Canadian women’s magazine, between ...
This essay examines scholarly discourses about embodiment, and their increasing scholarly currency, ...
The Edible Woman deals with female experience and femininity and challenges the traditional notions ...
Abstract—The concept of self and body has been discussed since the evolution of Modern philosophy by...
Today we live in a world full of various temptations and sensations leading us away from ourselves. ...
The Edible Woman is taken for study, and to look in depth the manner in which the protagon...
Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Florianópolis, 1981
This essay examines scholarly discourses about embodiment, and their increasing scholarly currency, ...
A feminist study of two novels by Margaret Atwood is a study of The Edible Woman and Lady Oracle. Th...
In many respects, The Edible Woman was created during a ‘whirlwind change’. Atwood successfully link...
This study is a critical reading of the fiction of contemporary Canadian novelist and poet Margaret ...
Margaret Atwood’s debut novel The Edible Woman follows protagonist Marian MacAlpin’s life over the s...
<p>Abstract:-A quest for women's identity has been a key idea of contemporary feminist thought. Femi...
The present paper seeks to explore the significance of eating in the process of identity formation i...
Margaret Atwood's The Edible Woman is written in both first-person singular and in the third person,...
My thesis focuses on the way in which a reading of Chatelaine, a Canadian women’s magazine, between ...
This essay examines scholarly discourses about embodiment, and their increasing scholarly currency, ...
The Edible Woman deals with female experience and femininity and challenges the traditional notions ...
Abstract—The concept of self and body has been discussed since the evolution of Modern philosophy by...
Today we live in a world full of various temptations and sensations leading us away from ourselves. ...
The Edible Woman is taken for study, and to look in depth the manner in which the protagon...
Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Florianópolis, 1981
This essay examines scholarly discourses about embodiment, and their increasing scholarly currency, ...
A feminist study of two novels by Margaret Atwood is a study of The Edible Woman and Lady Oracle. Th...
In many respects, The Edible Woman was created during a ‘whirlwind change’. Atwood successfully link...
This study is a critical reading of the fiction of contemporary Canadian novelist and poet Margaret ...
Margaret Atwood’s debut novel The Edible Woman follows protagonist Marian MacAlpin’s life over the s...