Del's Growth: A Typical Example of Construction of Female Self-consciousness—A Postmodern Feminist Analysis of Lives of Girls and Women
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.53469/jsshl.2023.06(05).26Keywords:
Lives of Girls and Women, Postmodern feminism, Female subjectAbstract
Alice Munro is a famous contemporary Canadian women writer and the winner of 2013 Nobel Prize in literature. She is known as the ""master of contemporary short stories"". Munro is very concerned about the life experience of ordinary women. She always focuses on the daily trifles and details of ordinary women and describes their journey from a girl to a wife in detail, especially focusing on the psychological fluctuations and twists and turns of women. They seem fragile, but they are persistent. Munro's works are full of postmodern feminism, focusing on women's self-awareness and subjective conscious construction.
From the perspective of postmodern feminism, the thesis focuses on the gradual formation and evolution of the heroine's self-consciousness in Alice Munro's only ""full-length"" novel Lives of Girls and Women in the process of growing up from a girl to a woman, and how female images to jump out of the hierarchy, logical structure and linear narrative surrounded by men's words and begin to express own world.
The introduction gives an overview of Alice Munro and the novel Lives of Girls and Women, literary reviews at home and abroad, some key elements in postmodern feminism, and the significance of this thesis.
The body section consists of three chapters: Chapter One focuses on ""Del observes the adult life"". Through Del's observation, the life of Uncle Benny's wife, two aunts, her mother and the teacher unfolded. Chapter Two analyzes ""Self-consciousness of Del begins to construct"". Del gradually began to grow up. The awakening of sexual consciousness, the doubt of belief and the excavation of herself have gradually become the theme of this adolescent girl's life. Chapter Three revolves around ""Establishment and Perfection of her self-consciousness"". Finally, she got rid of her fantasy and self-deception, her past mistakes and perplexity, and left home to start her real life.
The conclusion part summarizes that from the perspective of postmodern feminism, the self-growth and consciousness awakening of Del is how women break away from the role of ""good women"" who meet the social expectations and find their own real nature. Munro challenges the forces we take for granted and shakes the foundations of our lives. Women perceive the world in a way different from men and resist the grandeur of history with daily trivialities. Munro constructs women's value expresses her voice and embodies her choice of will by transcending feminism and returning to women's ontological experience.
References
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Birbalsingh, Franck. 1984. Women in Alice Munro's Lives of Girls and Women. Studies in Canadian Literature. Aarhus: Aarhus University Press.
De Beauvoir, Simone. 1949. The Second Sex (Le deuxième sexe). Translated by Constance Borde and Sheila Malovany-Chevallier. Vintage Books. (In Chinese)
Mackendrick, Louisk. 1983. Probable Fictions: Munro's Narrative Act. Toronto: ECW Press.
Miller, Jean Baker. 1976. Toward a New Psychology of Women. Beacon Press.
Munro, Alice. 2015. Lives of Girls and Women. Vintage Books London.
Thacker, Robert. 2005. Alice Munro: Writing Her Lives. Toronto: Mc Clelland & Stewart.