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2014 | 20 | 56--67
Tytuł artykułu

A Postcolonial Feminist Reading of Evelyn Waugh's A Handful of Dust, Black Mischief and Scoop

Treść / Zawartość
Warianty tytułu
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
Evelyn Waugh is commonly said to be a misogynist. However, his stance toward women was ambiguous. For, though he presents a male world in his fiction and his racialist tendencies, Eurocentricism and class consciousness almost always color his attitude toward women, he also provides the reader with some challenging roles for women. This is echoed in his depiction of the 'sexed subaltern' who often belongs to categories such as Oriental, colonized, non-white and underclass women. The female subaltern, then, is arguably triply colonized, this time by the author. Working from a postcolonial feminist perspective, in the present article an attempt is made to portray the complicity of racism, sexism, colonialism, and even the first world Feminism in the discourse of Western Imperialism in making the colonized women more colonized. To serve this end, representations of Wauvian women in A Handful of Dust, Black Mischief and Scoop are explored to shed light on, firstly, Waugh's attempt to colonize all women literarily and secondly, his biased attitude toward the nonwestern women as alterity. (original abstract)
Słowa kluczowe
EN
PL
Rocznik
Tom
20
Strony
56--67
Opis fizyczny
Twórcy
  • University of Isfahan, Iran
  • University of Isfahan, Iran
Bibliografia
  • [1] Ash Alec. Interview with Selina Hasting. Selina Hastings on Evelyn Waugh and the Bright Young Things. Five Books. Web. 30 July. 2012.
  • [2] Biedermann Malte. Moral Decline and the Bankruptcy of Victorian Humanism in Evelyn Waugh's A Handful of Dust. Ed. Julia Hoydis. Einfuhrungssemenar: The Power and the Glory-British Catholic Novelists. Köln: University of Köln, 2011.
  • [3] Blayac Alain. Technique and Meaning in Scoop: Is Scoop A Modern Fairy-Tale? Evelyn Waugh Newsletters. Volume 6, No. 3. (Winter 1972).
  • [4] Brown Lloyd Raymond. Evelyn Waugh: The Development of a Novelist. Newfoundland and Labrador: Memorial University of Newfoundland, January 29, 1966.
  • [5] Dooley Brendan. Booked Solid: Waugh's 'Scoop' is a Classic, Comedic, Summer Read. The Dartmouth. August 13, 2010.
  • [6] Dugan Lawrence. An introduction to Evelyn Waugh's Helena. Modern Age. Summer 2000. 317-320.
  • [7] Eliot T. S. The Waste Land. Pensylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2000.
  • [8] Greenberg Jonathan. Cannibals and Catholics: Reading the Reading of Evelyn Waugh's Black Mischief. Modernist Cultures Vol.2 (2). 115-137. ---. "Was Anyone Hurt?": The Ends of Satire in A Handful of Dust. Novel. Summer 2003. 352-373.
  • [9] Hitchens Christopher. The permanent Adolescent. The Atlantic Monthly Group. 1 May, 2003.
  • [10] Hollis Christopher. Evelyn Waugh. London: F. Mildner & Sons, 1966. Print.
  • [11] Innes C. L. "The Politics of Rewriting". A Concise Companion to Postcolonial Literature. Eds. Shirly Chew and David Richards. Malden: Blackwell, 2010.
  • [12] Lane Anthony. A Critic at Large: Waugh in Pieces. "Cruelty and Compassion in the short Stories of a Master". The New Yorker, October 4, 1999. PP.98-106. --- Waugh Among Modernists: Allusion and Theme in A Handful of Dust. Connotations: Vol. 13, 1-2 (2003/2004).
  • [13] Lobb Edward. Waugh's Conrad and Victorian Gothic: A Reply to Martin Stannard and John Howard Wilson. Connotations: Vol.15, No.1-3 (2005-2006). 171-76.
  • [14] McDonnell Jacqueline. "Not Quite a Misogynist". Google News. Glasgow Heralds. Saturday, 8 February, 1986. P: 14. ---. Macmillan Modern Novelist: Evelyn Waugh. Hong Kong: Palgrave Macmillan, 1988. Print.
  • [15] McEwan Cheryl. Postcolonilaism, Feminism and Development: Intersections and Dillemas. Progress in Development Studies 1(2) (2001) 93-111.
  • [16] Modernist Anst; Misogyny in Satire. (1969, December 31). DirectEssay.com
  • [17] Moffat Rachel. Perspectives on Africa in Travel Writing: Representations of Ethiopia, Kenya, Republic of Congo and South Africa, 1930-2000. PhD thesis, University of Glasgow. 2009. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/1639.
  • [18] Morton Stephen. Ed. Gayatry Chacravotry Spivak. London: Routledge, 2004.
  • [19] Nagy-Zekmi Sylvia, Journal of Gender Studies 12(4) (2003) 171-180.
  • [20] O'Keefe Emily. The Things That Remain: People, Objects, and Anxiety in Thirties British Fiction. Chicago: Loyola University, 2012.
  • [21] Rajan Rajeswari Sunder and Park, You-me. "Postcolonial Feminism: Postcolonialism and Feminism". A Companion to Postcolonial Studies. Eds. Henry Schwartz and Sangeeta Ray. Malden: Blackwell, 2000.53-71
  • [22] Schwiezer Bernard. "Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited and Other Late Novels". A Companion to the British and Irish Novel. Ed. Brian W. Shaffer. Malden: Blackwell: 2005.
  • [23] Showers Zachary E. Thou Art Unreal, My Ideal: Nostalgia as ideology in the Novels of Evelyn Waugh, Aldous Huxley And George Orwell. Alabama, 2010.
  • [24] Spivak Gayatry Chakravorty. "Can the Subaltern Speak?" Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture. 1988. 66-104. ---. Imperialism and Sexual Difference. Oxford literary review. Vol. 8, No. 1. (1986). 517-529.
  • [25] Stannard, Martin. Debunking the Jungle: The Context of Evelyn Waugh's Travel Books 1930-9. The Art of Travel. 105-126. --- . Evelyn Waugh: A Critical Heritage. London: Routledge, 1984. ---. In Search of a City: Civilization, Humanism and English Gothic in A Handful of Dust. Connotations. Vol. 14, No. 1-3 (2004/2005).183-204.
  • [26] Waugh, Evelyn. A Handful of Dust. London. Penguin Books: 1975. Print. ---. Black Mischief. London. Penguin Books: 1975. Print. ---. Scoop. London. Penguin Books: 1976. Print.
  • [27] Wilson, John Howard. "Evelyn Waugh: A Literary Biography". Evelyn Waugh Newsletters and Studies. Vol. 35, No. 1 (Spring 2004).
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
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bwmeta1.element.ekon-element-000171347467

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