The role of mothers / mother figures in Carter's novel "The Magic Toyshop"

“The social order, our culture, want it this way: the mother must remain forbidden, excluded.”


Essay, 2010

10 Pages, Grade: 1,3


Abstract or Introduction

“The social order, our culture, want it this way: the mother must remain forbidden, excluded. The father forbids the bodily encounter with the mother,” claims Luce Irigaray at a conference in 1981 (536). The patriarchal order kept women silent and granted them no identity, being dominated by the law of the father who wants to be the sole creator. Women were confined to the function of reproduction and forbidden to create. (533-37) Angela Carter wrote her novel The Magic Toyshop in 1967. This is a time when many riots were about to take place, for instance concerning politics, class, race or gender issues. Women questioned the chains stopping them from experimenting with their reality and pushing them into stereotypical images such as mother or housewife.

Details

Title
The role of mothers / mother figures in Carter's novel "The Magic Toyshop"
Subtitle
“The social order, our culture, want it this way: the mother must remain forbidden, excluded.”
College
University of Warwick
Grade
1,3
Author
Year
2010
Pages
10
Catalog Number
V270997
ISBN (eBook)
9783656628248
ISBN (Book)
9783656628194
File size
462 KB
Language
English
Keywords
angela carter, magic toyshop, women
Quote paper
Annemarie Kunz (Author), 2010, The role of mothers / mother figures in Carter's novel "The Magic Toyshop", Munich, GRIN Verlag, https://www.grin.com/document/270997

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