SAGE Open | |
From an Obscured Gaze to a Seeing Eye? Iris as Victim, Villain, and Avenger in the Role of Writer-as-Assassin in Margaret Atwoodâs The Blind Assassin: | |
Tara Hembrough1  | |
关键词: Margaret Atwood; Blind Assassin; narration; womenâs writing; feminism; poststructuralism; | |
DOI : 10.1177/2158244016688933 | |
学科分类:社会科学、人文和艺术(综合) | |
来源: Sage Journals | |
【 摘 要 】
In the postmodern period, first-person-limited, unreliable, female narrators may have a greater difficulty in âseeingâ and, thus, depicting their landscapes than previous erasâ storytellers. Iris (Chase) Griffen, narrator-protagonist of Margaret Atwoodâs The Blind Assassin, spins a complicated, self-reflective text exploring her attempts at composing a world vision that consumes the novelâs larger part. Irisâs search for answers about her identity as well as that of other characters may leave readers in the lurch, waiting for their âstory,â in Ross Chambersâs terms, as an agreed-upon product. Nonetheless, having amassed assorted textual materials, Iris stockpiles the ammunition she needs to do her âjobâ as a storyteller-assassin who creates and destroys, as characters suffer a fall. Assuming guises dependent on location, Iris enacts the conflicting roles of a victim, social product, villain, and blind assassin to assault her cultureâs masculinist architectures that bar womenâs points of views in opposition to what Henry James presents as the unending panoramas offered by his metaphorical âHouse of Fiction.â Irisâs struggle to construct her life story mirrors the difficulty many women face more broadly, in which they face competing, irreconcilable values. In the novel, Irisâs ability to play differing parts with equal aplomb compels readers to view her as a complex narrator, constructing and assassinating fellow characters to render her female descendantsâ fates as open ended.
【 授权许可】
CC BY
【 预 览 】
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RO201902021788033ZK.pdf | 105KB | download |