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Book ChapterDOI

Ghosts and (Narrative) Ghosting: Margaret Atwood, Jeanette Winterson and Toni Morrison

Lucie Armitt
- pp 102-129
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TLDR
For Freud, the mother's body is the ultimate taboo which deflects us away from a recurrent confrontation with the dead, the genitals forming the all-pervasive embodiment of the uncanny: "what was once heimisch, familiar; the prefix 'un' ['un-' is the token of repression".
Abstract
A great deal of work has, by now, been published on the gothic (including the female gothic), but until recently relatively little of that has focused upon the role played by the contemporary ghost story as a way of exploring female subjectivity. From the start this task may appear an atavistic one. In one of his characteristically sweeping statements, Freud confidently asserted in 1919, “All supposedly educated people have ceased to believe officially that the dead can become visible as spirits”, but this is not to say that he advocates their redundancy as objects of phantasy. On the contrary, he acknowledges: … the primitive fear of the dead is still so strong within us and always ready to come to the surface on any provocation … Considering our unchanged attitude towards death, we might rather inquire what has become of the repression, which is the necessary condition of a primitive feeling recurring in the shape of something uncanny.2 As is well known, what Freud goes on to argue in his essay is that the mother’s body is the ultimate taboo which deflects us away from a recurrent confrontation with the dead, the mother’s genitals forming the all-pervasive embodiment of the uncanny: “what was once heimisch, familiar; the prefix ‘un’ [‘un-’] is the token of repression”. Though the origins of life, for Freud the castration complex reconfigures the mother’s body as the space of death to the phallus and hence death in general.3 Freud’s analysand/protagonist in this essay is presumed to be male. What happens in the context of fiction when both protagonists (the alive and the dead) are female?

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Apparitional Lesbian: Female Homosexuality and Modern Culture@@@Masquerade and Gender: Disguise and Female Identity in Eighteenth-Century Fictions by Women

TL;DR: In this article, Castle shows how a lesbian presence can be identified in literature, history, and culture of the past three centuries, from Defoe and Diderot to Virginia Woolf and Djuna Barnes, and on the homosexual reputation of Marie Antoinette, on the lesbian writings of Anne Lister, Sylvia Townsend Warner, and Janet Flanner.
References
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Book

The Politics of Postmodernism

TL;DR: In this article, the postmodernist representation is de-naturalized the natural, Photographic discourse, Telling Stories: fiction and history, Re-presenting the past: 'total history' de-totalized, Knowing the past in the present, The archive as text.
Book

The Apparitional Lesbian: Female Homosexuality and Modern Culture

Terry Castle
TL;DR: In this article, Castle shows how a lesbian presence can be identified in literature, history, and culture of the past three centuries, from Defoe and Diderot to Virginia Woolf and Djuna Barnes, and on the homosexual reputation of Marie Antoinette, on the lesbian writings of Anne Lister, Sylvia Townsend Warner, and Janet Flanner.
Book

Lurking Feminism: The Ghost Stories of Edith Wharton

Jenni Dyman
TL;DR: Lurking Feminism as discussed by the authors explores Edith Wharton's legacy as a writer of supernatural fiction through her subversive use of the ghost story to express feminist concerns, and explores the complexities facing both men and women in defining gender roles and experiencing sexuality, in overcoming power struggles in relationships, and in resolving internal conflicts between debilitating, but often safe, attitudes and behaviors, and the desire for growth.