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Consuming desires and the performative female subject in Karin Michaelis's "The Dangerous Age"

Verfasst von: Wood, Madeleine
in: Orbis litterarum : international review of literary studies
Oxford: 2013 , 43 - 71 S.

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Einrichtung: Ariadne | Wien
Verfasst von: Wood, Madeleine
In: Orbis litterarum : international review of literary studies
Jahr: 2013
Sprache: Englisch
Beschreibung:
Despite the ‘sensational’ status of Karin Michaelis’s The Dangerous Age at the time of its original publication in 1910, English-language criticism of the novel is still problematically scarce, and the radicalism of Michaelis’s psychological vision remains unexplored. This essay will create a dialogue between The Dangerous Age, Freudian and post-Freudian psychoanalysis, and Judith Butler’s seminal work, Bodies That Matter, arguing through this dialogue that Michaelis self-consciously negotiates constructivist and essentialist concepts of gender. The essay will examine the narratological, psychological and physical modalities of performance, concluding with an analysis of desire, creativity and sublimation. The image of widow sacrifice recurs throughout the novel as the social and psychological symbol of women’s gendered subordination; however, by refiguring the theme of ‘sacrifice’ through Jeanne, Michaelis simultaneously uses the idea of sacrifice to reassert the potency of female desire and speech. The Dangerous Age plays with the possibilities of subjective dissolution by presenting us with a heroine and narrator at the brink of a bodily crisis: the menopause. Looked at through a patriarchal lens, the menopause is the point at which the female body stops performing its ‘proper’ reproductive function. Exploiting this view, Michaelis uses the ‘crisis’ of the menopause to reflect upon patriarchy as a whole.
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