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Woman as Alien
Author(s) -
Dominika Oramus
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
the anachronist
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2063-126X
pISSN - 1219-2589
DOI - 10.53720/milx4523
Subject(s) - narrative , alien , the holocaust , civilization , binary opposition , literature , history , context (archaeology) , social order , order (exchange) , sociology , aesthetics , art , law , political science , politics , population , demography , archaeology , finance , economics , census
This paper shows how Carter revitalizes the once-popular genre of catastrophic fiction. First I briefly characterize this genre and place Heroes and Villains in its context. Then I discuss decay and entropy depicted in the novel as symptomatic to the decay of pre-holocaust symbolic order. Next, I describe how the protagonist challenges the patriarchal social order based on the set of false binary oppositions and attempts to disrupt the old and to create a genuinely new feminist civilization. Similarly, Carter’s novel disrupts old schemes and set formulas of disaster fiction and creates a radically new fantastic narrative of society ruled by women-aliens.

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