Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access

Quest for Self Identity in Margaret Atwood’s Surfacing


Affiliations
1 Chikkaiah Naicker College, Erode – 638004, Tamil Nadu, India
 

The paper focuses on the nameless narrator’s interaction with nature. She returns to Quebec in search of her missing father. The emotional trauma she undergoes during and after her forced abortion leads to annihilation of her artistic leanings. She is anonymous because she is synonymous with the fragile and powerless women at large who are subjected to male exploitation and commodification. After living at the heart of nature for a while, she realizes that nature is not biased, and as she has discovered the ischolar_mains of her identity in the wilderness, she reintegrates with the society and even she prepares herself to bear a child. In her quest for identity, she comes to terms with the dualities and incongruities in the patriarchal society she lives in through the struggle to reclaim her identity and ischolar_mains, Thus the protagonist’s psychological journey to discover her ischolar_mains and identity enables her to gain access into the world of pristine nature.

Keywords

Dehumanized, Disillusionment, Fragmentation, Metamorphosis, Modernization, Transgression.
User
Notifications
Font Size

  • Atwood M. Surfacing. Toronto: Mc Clelland and Stewart; 1972.
  • Beauvoir S. The Second Sex. Parsley HM, editor. Penguin Books; 1949.
  • Hutcheon L. The Canadian postmodern: A study of contemporary English Canadian fiction. Toronto: OUP; 1988.
  • Other References
  • Plumwood V. Feminism and the mastery of nature. New York: Routledge; 1993.
  • Rich A. Feminine reading and criticism. New York: Routledge; 2008.

Abstract Views: 1978

PDF Views: 1103




  • Quest for Self Identity in Margaret Atwood’s Surfacing

Abstract Views: 1978  |  PDF Views: 1103

Authors

P. Malathy
Chikkaiah Naicker College, Erode – 638004, Tamil Nadu, India

Abstract


The paper focuses on the nameless narrator’s interaction with nature. She returns to Quebec in search of her missing father. The emotional trauma she undergoes during and after her forced abortion leads to annihilation of her artistic leanings. She is anonymous because she is synonymous with the fragile and powerless women at large who are subjected to male exploitation and commodification. After living at the heart of nature for a while, she realizes that nature is not biased, and as she has discovered the ischolar_mains of her identity in the wilderness, she reintegrates with the society and even she prepares herself to bear a child. In her quest for identity, she comes to terms with the dualities and incongruities in the patriarchal society she lives in through the struggle to reclaim her identity and ischolar_mains, Thus the protagonist’s psychological journey to discover her ischolar_mains and identity enables her to gain access into the world of pristine nature.

Keywords


Dehumanized, Disillusionment, Fragmentation, Metamorphosis, Modernization, Transgression.

References





DOI: https://doi.org/10.15613/hijrh%2F2017%2Fv4i2%2F167541