My dissertation examines the various ways in which the following novels written by Jeanette Winterson Written on the Body (1992), Gut Symmetries (1997), The.PowerBook (2000), and The Stone Gods (2007) interrogate and denaturalize preexisting power structures by disentangling the body from the discursively inscribed identity categories of gender and sex. Dominant conceptions concerning desire, commonly thought to be an innate byproduct of a wholly natural body, are likewise disrupted in the unraveling of gender and sex from corporeality. Desire is thus opened up to possibilities that exist beyond the limited purview of gendered, heterosexist ideologies. Much like the field of queer theory, this dissertation draws together different bran...
In this dissertation, I examine short stories by Canadian women writers from the 1970s to the 2000s ...
This thesis explores the literary manifestation of patriarchal embodiment in several multicultural n...
Science-fiction writers tend to side either with the flesh, holding that “all is body/matter,” or wi...
This thesis derives from my interest in the way in which we read and understand novels. We may not c...
Jeanette Winterson is an influential and award-winning contemporary British writer whose books combi...
Jeanette Winterson’s novels Sexing the Cherry and Written on the Body are used to explore the unconv...
Much scholarship has been devoted to determining the gender of the narrator in Jeanette Winterson’s ...
The thesis elaborates upon a question which literary techniques Jeanette Winterson applies in her no...
This study focuses on Jeanette Winterson’s conceptualization of sexuality in two of her novels, The ...
With the help of feminist criticism and queer theory, this essay discusses the use of a genderless n...
Since the publication of her first novel, Jeanette Winterson has been acclaimed as one of the most p...
This article is concerned with Jeanette Winterson's use and reworking of postmodern concepts of the ...
"What a strange world it is where you can have as much sex as you like but love is taboo. I'm talkin...
Winterson's Written on the Body (1992) deals with a brief but passionate relationship between its na...
Angela Carter and Jeanette Winterson’s novels contain magical moments in which reality is questioned...
In this dissertation, I examine short stories by Canadian women writers from the 1970s to the 2000s ...
This thesis explores the literary manifestation of patriarchal embodiment in several multicultural n...
Science-fiction writers tend to side either with the flesh, holding that “all is body/matter,” or wi...
This thesis derives from my interest in the way in which we read and understand novels. We may not c...
Jeanette Winterson is an influential and award-winning contemporary British writer whose books combi...
Jeanette Winterson’s novels Sexing the Cherry and Written on the Body are used to explore the unconv...
Much scholarship has been devoted to determining the gender of the narrator in Jeanette Winterson’s ...
The thesis elaborates upon a question which literary techniques Jeanette Winterson applies in her no...
This study focuses on Jeanette Winterson’s conceptualization of sexuality in two of her novels, The ...
With the help of feminist criticism and queer theory, this essay discusses the use of a genderless n...
Since the publication of her first novel, Jeanette Winterson has been acclaimed as one of the most p...
This article is concerned with Jeanette Winterson's use and reworking of postmodern concepts of the ...
"What a strange world it is where you can have as much sex as you like but love is taboo. I'm talkin...
Winterson's Written on the Body (1992) deals with a brief but passionate relationship between its na...
Angela Carter and Jeanette Winterson’s novels contain magical moments in which reality is questioned...
In this dissertation, I examine short stories by Canadian women writers from the 1970s to the 2000s ...
This thesis explores the literary manifestation of patriarchal embodiment in several multicultural n...
Science-fiction writers tend to side either with the flesh, holding that “all is body/matter,” or wi...