The aim of this dissertation is to critically examine the representation of female madness in The Bell Jar, by Sylvia Plath, Wide Sargasso Sea, by Jean Rhys, and Surfacing, by Margaret Atwood, with a particular emphasis on the depiction of madness as a form of revolt against the oppression of women in patriarchal societies. I focus specifically on the textual construction of female insanity in three twentieth-century reading of these depictions in relation to an influential contemporary example of Western psychological discourse, namely The Divided Self (1960). Drawing on the work of Western feminist scholars such as Elaine Showalter and Lillian Feder, I engage with the broader questions of the female malady and dilemma. I pay attention not...
From the mad heroines of classic Victorian literature to the depictions of female insanity in modern...
The paper analyzes Margaret Atwood’s postcolonial and postmodern feminist novels from the psychologi...
This essay analyzes Esther Greenwood’s identity crisis, mental illness, and recovery in Sylvia Plath...
Many works of women's literature find their purpose by acting as ways to draw attention to what Mari...
Madness has long been regarded as a condition that is commonly associated with the female gender to ...
I have chosen for this study three novels from postwar literature, and all three account the trials ...
It has been claimed that madness is a “female malady”. This claim has been supported by the fact tha...
Charlotte Perkins Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper, Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar and Marge Piercy's Woma...
The portrayal of a woman as ‘mad’ or ‘crazy’ in literary texts is very common. ‘Madness’ is accepted...
When R.D. Laing wrote The Divided Self in 1960, his goal was “to make madness, and the process of go...
In this thesis I will explore the literary tradition of women and hysteria as a smaller facet of the...
Sylvia Plath’s extraordinary novel The Bell Jar is a timeless reminder of the situation of women in ...
“The Bell Jar” by Sylvia Plath, as a semi-autobiographical novel, deals with the issue of female ma...
This thesis is a comparative study exploring the theme of the imprisoned female in the three novels ...
This thesis deals with three works of feminist fiction, two novels and one theatrical play. The thre...
From the mad heroines of classic Victorian literature to the depictions of female insanity in modern...
The paper analyzes Margaret Atwood’s postcolonial and postmodern feminist novels from the psychologi...
This essay analyzes Esther Greenwood’s identity crisis, mental illness, and recovery in Sylvia Plath...
Many works of women's literature find their purpose by acting as ways to draw attention to what Mari...
Madness has long been regarded as a condition that is commonly associated with the female gender to ...
I have chosen for this study three novels from postwar literature, and all three account the trials ...
It has been claimed that madness is a “female malady”. This claim has been supported by the fact tha...
Charlotte Perkins Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper, Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar and Marge Piercy's Woma...
The portrayal of a woman as ‘mad’ or ‘crazy’ in literary texts is very common. ‘Madness’ is accepted...
When R.D. Laing wrote The Divided Self in 1960, his goal was “to make madness, and the process of go...
In this thesis I will explore the literary tradition of women and hysteria as a smaller facet of the...
Sylvia Plath’s extraordinary novel The Bell Jar is a timeless reminder of the situation of women in ...
“The Bell Jar” by Sylvia Plath, as a semi-autobiographical novel, deals with the issue of female ma...
This thesis is a comparative study exploring the theme of the imprisoned female in the three novels ...
This thesis deals with three works of feminist fiction, two novels and one theatrical play. The thre...
From the mad heroines of classic Victorian literature to the depictions of female insanity in modern...
The paper analyzes Margaret Atwood’s postcolonial and postmodern feminist novels from the psychologi...
This essay analyzes Esther Greenwood’s identity crisis, mental illness, and recovery in Sylvia Plath...