This paper analyses the feminist revisionism of the Circe-myth in the rewritings by Eudora Welty, Margaret Atwood, and Madeline Miller. To that end, the paper first examines three different ways of discussing rewritings: Jeremy M. Rosen’s genre of minor-character elaboration, Linda Hutcheon’s take on postmodern parody, and Alicia Ostriker’s feminist revisionist mythmaking. Then, after positioning itself with the feminist revisionism, the paper conducts a brief reading of the myth as it appears in the Odyssey, followed by readings of the three rewritings: Welty’s short story “Circe,” Atwood’s poetry cycle “Circe/Mud Poems,” and Miller’s novel Circe. Through the reading of these works together, a pattern emerges of criticising former represen...
The paper analyzes Margaret Atwood’s postcolonial and postmodern feminist novels from the psychologi...
Myths have been an undeniable source in both shaping and expressing the values, norms and behavioura...
This thesis examines the way in which modern women writers use non-realistic literary forms in orde...
This paper analyses the feminist revisionism of the Circe-myth in the rewritings by Eudora Welty, Ma...
Circe, by Madeline Miller, introduces readers to a reimagined version of the Greek goddess who hoste...
The word odyssey has become part of the common English vocabulary as “a series of experiences that t...
In this thesis, I explore the textual strategy of feminist revision employed by contemporary women w...
In this paper, I will argue that Madeline Miller, a contemporary writer, reconfigures our imaginatio...
In the past thirty years feminist revisions of fairy tales and myths have proliferated wildly. Two c...
In this article I will focus on the transformation of mythic archetypes in Margaret Atwood’s collect...
The myth of Circe and Odysseus has been told, interpreted and retold from Homer's time to the presen...
The witch as a figment of popular culture has seen an evolution over the past decades, as the role o...
By analysing three different works of transformative literature, this thesis aims to explore the dif...
This thesis examines feminist rewritings of the Penelope myth and the intersections between poetry, ...
The paper tries to focus on the significance of revisionist myth making and how it tries to redefine...
The paper analyzes Margaret Atwood’s postcolonial and postmodern feminist novels from the psychologi...
Myths have been an undeniable source in both shaping and expressing the values, norms and behavioura...
This thesis examines the way in which modern women writers use non-realistic literary forms in orde...
This paper analyses the feminist revisionism of the Circe-myth in the rewritings by Eudora Welty, Ma...
Circe, by Madeline Miller, introduces readers to a reimagined version of the Greek goddess who hoste...
The word odyssey has become part of the common English vocabulary as “a series of experiences that t...
In this thesis, I explore the textual strategy of feminist revision employed by contemporary women w...
In this paper, I will argue that Madeline Miller, a contemporary writer, reconfigures our imaginatio...
In the past thirty years feminist revisions of fairy tales and myths have proliferated wildly. Two c...
In this article I will focus on the transformation of mythic archetypes in Margaret Atwood’s collect...
The myth of Circe and Odysseus has been told, interpreted and retold from Homer's time to the presen...
The witch as a figment of popular culture has seen an evolution over the past decades, as the role o...
By analysing three different works of transformative literature, this thesis aims to explore the dif...
This thesis examines feminist rewritings of the Penelope myth and the intersections between poetry, ...
The paper tries to focus on the significance of revisionist myth making and how it tries to redefine...
The paper analyzes Margaret Atwood’s postcolonial and postmodern feminist novels from the psychologi...
Myths have been an undeniable source in both shaping and expressing the values, norms and behavioura...
This thesis examines the way in which modern women writers use non-realistic literary forms in orde...