Salman Rushdie, by his own admission, has “repeatedly sought to create female characters as rich and powerful as those [he has] known”. Women are crucial to Rushdie’s novels Shame, The Enchantress of Florence and The Ground Beneath Her Feet. The women of these novels are shown to resist the conventional expectations that are placed upon them, yet for all the disturbances that they cause to their respective social dynamics, they ultimately fail to display positive feminist qualities. This essay will discuss the motives of Rushdie’s supposedly empowered females and find that they typically defy expectations in order to please male figures. That Rushdie’s women, in spite of the author’s efforts to strengthen them, keep falling back to a po...
Bourdieu's work on modern cultural production has certain omissions. It fails to raise the possibili...
My essay intends to analyze the dialectic relationship between historical reality and fiction in the...
This essay is a feminist analysis of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus (1818) t...
Mild psychological effects, such as sleep-deprivation, on an oppressed and tortured human being can ...
This thesis examines how ideologies such as feminism and patriarchy operate within language by provi...
Gender is a notable concept which becomes popular in the twentieth century. It is socially construct...
The institutions within which the characters in the novel are located favour or give emphasis to the...
In The Enchantress of Florence (2008), the story begins with the Mughal past of India, during the re...
This dissertation focuses on the narrative representation of moments of blasphemy in the writings of...
Over the last decade even as Salman Rushdie has been receiving accolades from the literary world, th...
Incest is a widespread theme in literature that continues to grow in frequency (Barnes 3). It is rar...
Feminist literary criticism aims at challenging sexism – as both ideology and practice – in literary...
No one would ever disagree about the superiority of men over women in the society overtime as some m...
Failed Feminism?: Ursula K. Le Guin’s novel Tehanu The purpose of this essay is to show that Ursula ...
This article comprises of woman’s firm growth and feminism in Indian Fiction in English. Commenceme...
Bourdieu's work on modern cultural production has certain omissions. It fails to raise the possibili...
My essay intends to analyze the dialectic relationship between historical reality and fiction in the...
This essay is a feminist analysis of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus (1818) t...
Mild psychological effects, such as sleep-deprivation, on an oppressed and tortured human being can ...
This thesis examines how ideologies such as feminism and patriarchy operate within language by provi...
Gender is a notable concept which becomes popular in the twentieth century. It is socially construct...
The institutions within which the characters in the novel are located favour or give emphasis to the...
In The Enchantress of Florence (2008), the story begins with the Mughal past of India, during the re...
This dissertation focuses on the narrative representation of moments of blasphemy in the writings of...
Over the last decade even as Salman Rushdie has been receiving accolades from the literary world, th...
Incest is a widespread theme in literature that continues to grow in frequency (Barnes 3). It is rar...
Feminist literary criticism aims at challenging sexism – as both ideology and practice – in literary...
No one would ever disagree about the superiority of men over women in the society overtime as some m...
Failed Feminism?: Ursula K. Le Guin’s novel Tehanu The purpose of this essay is to show that Ursula ...
This article comprises of woman’s firm growth and feminism in Indian Fiction in English. Commenceme...
Bourdieu's work on modern cultural production has certain omissions. It fails to raise the possibili...
My essay intends to analyze the dialectic relationship between historical reality and fiction in the...
This essay is a feminist analysis of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus (1818) t...