"A View from 'Elsewhere' ": Subversive Sexuality and the Rewriting of the Heroine's Story in The Color Purple

By telling the story of the "invisible woman"-a character traditionally silenced and effaced in fiction-The Color Purple challenges patriarchal constructions of femininity and female desire and makes representation itself a compelling issue. Initially, the great twentieth-century cultural...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Abbandonato, Linda (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Cambridge University Press 1991
In: PMLA
Year: 1991, Volume: 106, Issue: 5, Pages: 1106-1115
Further subjects:B Girard, René (1923-2015)
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Summary:By telling the story of the "invisible woman"-a character traditionally silenced and effaced in fiction-The Color Purple challenges patriarchal constructions of femininity and female desire and makes representation itself a compelling issue. Initially, the great twentieth-century cultural narratives of sexuality and socialization, Freud's oedipal theory and Lévi-Strauss's theory of kinship systems and the exchange of women, are played out in the drama of Celie's life. But this differently crafted, quilted novel is also differently sexual; it replots the heroine's text within an alternative framework of desire and disrupts the symbolic order with its carnivalesque celebration of polymorphously perverse pleasure.
ISSN:1938-1530
Contains:Enthalten in: Modern Language Association of America, PMLA
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.2307/462683