This essay explores dystopianism and utopianism in Marion Zimmer Bradley’s 'Lady of Avalon', focusing on the tale of Teleri, a subplot in Part II of the text. Invoking feminist theories of Helen Cixous and Luce Irigaray, and the feminist utopianism of Lucy Sargisson, the argument traces the development of the character of Teleri through a progression of complexities of complicity and resistance to a final liberatory act. This radical act creates a space of risk and uncertainty, a utopian/outopian space within which new ways of thinking can be imagined. Finally, this essay argues that the narrative thread of the tale is sufficiently subversive to destabilise the paradigms of established order which permeate the larger text
The aim of this study is to highlight a neglected tradition of women's experimentation with the dyst...
Sarah Hall’s feminist dystopia The Carhullan Army presents a near-future society by using opposition...
Utopia, a genre whose name was first coined by Thomas More in a similarly titled book, carries with ...
In Marion Zimmer Bradley\u27s retelling of the Arthurian legends, The Mists of Avalon, she creates t...
abstract: Feminism has been the focus of many writers throughout the decades but has recently gained...
This present work is a theoretical and qualitative research divided into three chapters that aims to...
Marion Zimmer Bradley\u27s The Mists of Avalon has become one of the very important landmarks and ba...
"Mgły Avalonu" Marion Zimmer Bradley zajmują wyjątkowe miejsce pośród dzieł nawiązujących do mitolog...
An exploration of how modern fantasy revisions of classic historical legends can help reconstruct pr...
This study uses Pearson’s theory of twelve archetypes and the heroic journeys of the ladies of Avalo...
Literature is often a product of its time, though some works can be said to be more indicative of th...
Referring to the discussion on the critical potential of dystopias in fiction, the article examines ...
In this thesis, I attempt to show that Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale is a feminist critical dystopia....
This article examines two recent examples of feminist dystopias: Louise Erdrich’s Future Home of the...
Displaying the probable future and the doom of humanity and the Earth, Margaret Atwood’s The Handmai...
The aim of this study is to highlight a neglected tradition of women's experimentation with the dyst...
Sarah Hall’s feminist dystopia The Carhullan Army presents a near-future society by using opposition...
Utopia, a genre whose name was first coined by Thomas More in a similarly titled book, carries with ...
In Marion Zimmer Bradley\u27s retelling of the Arthurian legends, The Mists of Avalon, she creates t...
abstract: Feminism has been the focus of many writers throughout the decades but has recently gained...
This present work is a theoretical and qualitative research divided into three chapters that aims to...
Marion Zimmer Bradley\u27s The Mists of Avalon has become one of the very important landmarks and ba...
"Mgły Avalonu" Marion Zimmer Bradley zajmują wyjątkowe miejsce pośród dzieł nawiązujących do mitolog...
An exploration of how modern fantasy revisions of classic historical legends can help reconstruct pr...
This study uses Pearson’s theory of twelve archetypes and the heroic journeys of the ladies of Avalo...
Literature is often a product of its time, though some works can be said to be more indicative of th...
Referring to the discussion on the critical potential of dystopias in fiction, the article examines ...
In this thesis, I attempt to show that Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale is a feminist critical dystopia....
This article examines two recent examples of feminist dystopias: Louise Erdrich’s Future Home of the...
Displaying the probable future and the doom of humanity and the Earth, Margaret Atwood’s The Handmai...
The aim of this study is to highlight a neglected tradition of women's experimentation with the dyst...
Sarah Hall’s feminist dystopia The Carhullan Army presents a near-future society by using opposition...
Utopia, a genre whose name was first coined by Thomas More in a similarly titled book, carries with ...