When Women Speak
Author(s) -
Dirce Waltrick do Amarante
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
abei journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2595-8127
DOI - 10.37389/abei.v21i1.3240
Subject(s) - theme (computing) , reading (process) , narrative , wake , literature , aesthetics , history , art , sociology , computer science , philosophy , linguistics , world wide web , engineering , aerospace engineering
I propose here a feminist reading of Finnegans Wake , or rather, another feminist reading of the novel, since this approach is not new: there are some quite solid studies on the theme. It is believed that in Finnegans Wake Joyce brings woman to light, contrary to what happens in Ulysses , a novel in which the writer leaves her (or them) practically mute for more than six hundred pages. My thesis is that Anna Livia is the great narrator of the Wake , but instead of silencing the other voices, she allows everyone to speak, and unites the talk of everybody in a colorful weave, a collage of narrative threads that she is careful not to break, so that they may have a continuity, albeit tenuous.
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