'Her lion-red body, her wings of glass' : iconography of the Gothic body in Carter, Tennant, and Weldon

This thesis examines the varied references to the gothic genre in the work of three contemporary British women writers: Angela Carter, Emma Tennant, and Fay Weldon. It illustrates that the use of gothic imagery in their fiction concedes with feminist revisions of representations of the female body a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Johnson, Heather L.
Published: University of Edinburgh 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.653029
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-653029
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6530292018-04-04T03:15:56Z'Her lion-red body, her wings of glass' : iconography of the Gothic body in Carter, Tennant, and WeldonJohnson, Heather L.1997This thesis examines the varied references to the gothic genre in the work of three contemporary British women writers: Angela Carter, Emma Tennant, and Fay Weldon. It illustrates that the use of gothic imagery in their fiction concedes with feminist revisions of representations of the female body and that this appearance of the gothic is more complex than the scope generally allowed by the critical term "Female Gothic". Whereas most critical approaches to the gothic are grounded in a depth hermeneutics, this thesis develops Sedgwick's attention to the surfaces of gothic imagery by focusing on the iconography manifest in representations of the female body. The novels under consideration increase the possibilities of the genre through a combination of traditional and innovative gothic tropes. Such innovation is achieved through postmodernist conventions including the use of genre fragments, intertexuality, and pastiche, as well as the self-conscious invocation of modern theories of identity. Most significant is the practice of transforming metaphor into narrative, whereby static culture images depicting the female body are mobilised in an exposure of their inherent humour and violence, the nexus of which is characteristically gothic. In this literature, three female figures may be discerned which are identifiable as gothic in their expression of entrapment both within the body and within a practical system of cultural representation, and thus focus a number of feminist and postructuralist concerns. The figure of the 'chokered' woman is read through a feminist critique of the gendered mind/body dichotomy central to Western culture. Next the presentation and subversion of the black female body is discussed as a figure of erotic alterity and the abject within colonialist discourse. The 'posthuman' body is explored as a product of the contemporary age of simulation and technological innovation, and is positioned in relation to the poetics of camp and the postructuralist notion of the spectral presence of absence. In this fiction the female body functions as a 'screen' onto which these writers project their diverse inscriptions of the gothic.820.90091University of Edinburghhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.653029http://hdl.handle.net/1842/26648Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 820.90091
spellingShingle 820.90091
Johnson, Heather L.
'Her lion-red body, her wings of glass' : iconography of the Gothic body in Carter, Tennant, and Weldon
description This thesis examines the varied references to the gothic genre in the work of three contemporary British women writers: Angela Carter, Emma Tennant, and Fay Weldon. It illustrates that the use of gothic imagery in their fiction concedes with feminist revisions of representations of the female body and that this appearance of the gothic is more complex than the scope generally allowed by the critical term "Female Gothic". Whereas most critical approaches to the gothic are grounded in a depth hermeneutics, this thesis develops Sedgwick's attention to the surfaces of gothic imagery by focusing on the iconography manifest in representations of the female body. The novels under consideration increase the possibilities of the genre through a combination of traditional and innovative gothic tropes. Such innovation is achieved through postmodernist conventions including the use of genre fragments, intertexuality, and pastiche, as well as the self-conscious invocation of modern theories of identity. Most significant is the practice of transforming metaphor into narrative, whereby static culture images depicting the female body are mobilised in an exposure of their inherent humour and violence, the nexus of which is characteristically gothic. In this literature, three female figures may be discerned which are identifiable as gothic in their expression of entrapment both within the body and within a practical system of cultural representation, and thus focus a number of feminist and postructuralist concerns. The figure of the 'chokered' woman is read through a feminist critique of the gendered mind/body dichotomy central to Western culture. Next the presentation and subversion of the black female body is discussed as a figure of erotic alterity and the abject within colonialist discourse. The 'posthuman' body is explored as a product of the contemporary age of simulation and technological innovation, and is positioned in relation to the poetics of camp and the postructuralist notion of the spectral presence of absence. In this fiction the female body functions as a 'screen' onto which these writers project their diverse inscriptions of the gothic.
author Johnson, Heather L.
author_facet Johnson, Heather L.
author_sort Johnson, Heather L.
title 'Her lion-red body, her wings of glass' : iconography of the Gothic body in Carter, Tennant, and Weldon
title_short 'Her lion-red body, her wings of glass' : iconography of the Gothic body in Carter, Tennant, and Weldon
title_full 'Her lion-red body, her wings of glass' : iconography of the Gothic body in Carter, Tennant, and Weldon
title_fullStr 'Her lion-red body, her wings of glass' : iconography of the Gothic body in Carter, Tennant, and Weldon
title_full_unstemmed 'Her lion-red body, her wings of glass' : iconography of the Gothic body in Carter, Tennant, and Weldon
title_sort 'her lion-red body, her wings of glass' : iconography of the gothic body in carter, tennant, and weldon
publisher University of Edinburgh
publishDate 1997
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.653029
work_keys_str_mv AT johnsonheatherl herlionredbodyherwingsofglassiconographyofthegothicbodyincartertennantandweldon
_version_ 1718618430034149376