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Título
Driven up the Wall: Maternity and Literature in Contemporary Women Writers
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Latin American Literature
Motherhood
Women Writers
Contemporary Narrative
Clasificación UNESCO
6202 Teoría, Análisis y Crítica Literarias
Fecha de publicación
2013
Editor
Routledge
Citación
Jiménez, F. N., & Winks, C. (2013). Driven up the Wall: Maternity and Literature in Contemporary Latin American Women Writers. Review: Literature and Arts of the Americas, 46(1), 13–19. https://doi.org/10.1080/08905762.2013.780893 Copy citation to clipboard
Resumen
Analysis of the anguish a woman suffers as a consequence of the physical, emotional, psychological, and identity changes she is compelled to undergo when she assumes the role of mother. The narratives with which the present essay is concerned are by two acclaimed Latin American authors: the Argentine Ana María Shua ("Como una buena madre" [Like a Good Mother, 1988] and "Te tapa los ojos" [She Covers Your Eyes, 19921) and the Chilean Pía Barros (''Artemisa" [ 1990) and "Madres" [Mothers, 2009]). Prominent in both writers is the assumption of the grotesque as a suitable category both for denouncing the feeling of alienness provoked by giving birth, and for revealing the alienation of which woman is the object when she undertakes a function that others have normativized, and from which she escapes through a violence that sometimes degenerates into outright madness.
URI
ISSN
0890-5762
DOI
10.1080/08905762.2013.780893
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