首页> 外文学位 >Discourse and psyche: Three women's texts of empire (Mary Kingsley, Olive Schreiner, Flora Annie Steel, South Africa, India).
【24h】

Discourse and psyche: Three women's texts of empire (Mary Kingsley, Olive Schreiner, Flora Annie Steel, South Africa, India).

机译:话语和心理:帝国的三种女性文本(玛丽·金斯利,奥利夫·史莱纳,弗洛拉·安妮·斯蒂尔,南非,印度)。

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例

摘要

While the period of the last fifteen years has seen the publication of numerous analyses of women's writing of empire, the study of colonial women's texts has been limited by critics' working within the theoretical framework of complicity and resistance. Rather than exploring the dynamic psychic processes that give rise to colonial women's representations of the colonized, critics have largely, indeed almost exclusively, identified and categorized the ideological positions of colonial women's texts, concluding that the texts are either complicit with or resistant to (or sometimes both) imperial politics. This study begins to shift the terms of analysis of colonial women's writing away from the ethical binarism of complicity and resistance to explore the dynamic “processes of subjectification” that women's colonial discourse enacts (Bhabha, “Other Question,” 18–19). Taking inspiration from numerous psychoanalytic studies of male-authored imperial texts, this thesis shows how the dynamic forces of aggression, identification, and sexuality inform and shape colonial women's writing. Tracing the currents of desire in women's imperial writing both challenges the implicit association of colonial women with ethics and morality (or lack thereof), and demonstrates how and why, rather than simply that, the colonized are represented in certain ways in their texts. Using a combination of psychoanalysis and discourse theory, I show how three popular colonial writers of the late nineteenth century—Mary Kingsley, Olive Schreiner, and Flora Annie Steel—construct portraits of the colonized that reflect the particular fears and desires generated by the writers' historically and socially specific gendered subject positions within late Victorian society.
机译:在过去的十五年中,发表了许多有关女性帝国写作的分析报告,但由于评论家在同谋和反抗的理论框架内开展工作,对殖民妇女文本的研究受到了限制。评论家没有探索引起殖民地女性对殖民地女性代表性的动态心理过程,而是在很大程度上,实际上几乎是排他性地,对殖民地女性文本的意识形态立场进行了确定和分类,认为这些文本要么是共谋的,要么是反抗的(或有时两者都有)。这项研究开始将殖民妇女写作的分析术语从同谋和抵抗的道德二元主义转向研究妇女殖民话语所制定的动态“主观化过程”(Bhabha,“其他问题”,18-19)。从对男性撰写的帝国文字的众多心理分析研究中汲取灵感,本论文展示了侵略,认同和性行为的动态力量如何影响和塑造殖民地女性的写作。在女性帝国主义写作中追寻欲望的潮流,既挑战着殖民地女性与道德和道德(或缺乏道德和道德)的内在联系,也证明了如何,为什么而不是简单地以某些方式在文本中代表了被殖民者。结合精神分析和话语理论,我展示了十九世纪末期的三位受欢迎的殖民作家-玛丽·金斯利,奥利夫·史莱纳和弗洛拉·安妮·斯蒂尔,是如何构造反映被殖民者特殊恐惧和欲望的殖民者肖像的?在维多利亚时代晚期的社会中,具有历史和社会特定性别的主题职位。

著录项

  • 作者

    Tobin, Jennifer Lynn.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.;

  • 授予单位 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.;
  • 学科 Literature English.; Literature Modern.; Literature African.; Literature Asian.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2000
  • 页码 221 p.
  • 总页数 221
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 世界文学;各国文学;
  • 关键词

相似文献

  • 外文文献
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号