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The unspeakable mother : forbidden discourse in Jean Rhys and H.D. / Deborah Kelly Kloepfer.

Van Pelt Library PR6035.H96 Z76 1989
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Kloepfer, Deborah Kelly.
Series:
Reading women writing
Reading women writing.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Rhys, Jean--Criticism and interpretation.
Rhys, Jean.
H. D. (Hilda Doolittle), 1886-1961--Criticism and interpretation.
H. D.
H. D. (Hilda Doolittle), 1886-1961.
Mothers and daughters in literature.
Feminism and literature--History--20th century.
Feminism and literature.
History.
Women and literature--History--20th century.
Women and literature.
Criticism and interpretation.
Physical Description:
xiv, 191 pages ; 24 cm.
Place of Publication:
Ithaca : Cornell University Press, 1989.
Summary:
Moving back and forth between experience and language, The Unspeakable Mother operates out of the intersection of two perspectives: women's immersion in the mother/daughter dyad and the paradoxical absence of the mother in the daughter's discourse. Deborah Kelly Kloepfer calls attention to the repeated allusions to dead mothers, dying mothers, mad mothers, stepmothers, abortions, stillbirths, miscarriages, and infant death in the novels of Jean Rhys and the poems and prose of H.D. Drawing on American and French feminist theory, she suggests that Rhys, H.D., and other modernist women writers, rather than just characterizing women's experience, are encoding the mother in relation to language. The dead mother is a trope for textlessness, a trope that also serves to inscribe the repression of the female speaking/writing subject. Challenging a number of assumptions of critical discourse, in which the father traditionally functions as the guardian of the symbolic, Kloepfer shows how thematic violence toward the female body is accompanied by the rupturing of conventional language, an act that both reconstitutes the abandoned mother and turns the violence against the androcentric discourse that has denied her. In the work of both Rhys and H.D., Kloepfer uncovers a startling and unsettling incestuous language between mother and daughter which relies not only on the unspoken but on the unspeakable. Anyone interested in literary modernism will find The Unspeakable Mother fascinating reading, as will students and scholars in the fields of psychoanalytic criticism and feminist theory.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN:
0801423066
OCLC:
19552991

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