Grotesque Motif of Madness and Feminist Critique of Enlightenment Reason
Grotesque Motif of Madness and Feminist Critique of Enlightenment Reason
Author(s): Soňa ŠnircováSubject(s): Literary Texts
Published by: Editura Universitatii Transilvania din Brasov
Keywords: grotesque motif of madness; Enlightenment reason; carnivalesque; M. Bakhtin; A. Carter
Summary/Abstract: The paper discusses the motif of madness that Angela Carter employs in her novel Several Perceptions. Romantic and carnivalesque aspects of the motif are analyzed with the aim to examine its role in Carter’s feminist critique of Enlightenment reason. The author argues that the ‘official reason’ that is challenged by the grotesque behaviour of Carter’s ‘mad’ hero acquires the form of the middle-class culture of ‘normality’, rooted in the Enlightenment tradition. Undermining validity of the rationality that itself produces madness of war, Carter at the same time draws attention to its patriarchal nature.
Journal: Bulletin of the Transilvania University of Braşov, Series IV: Philology & Cultural Studies
- Issue Year: 2011
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 17-24
- Page Count: 8
- Language: English