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Food and Femininity in Twentieth-Century British Women’s Fiction

Book

Food and Femininity in Twentieth-Century British Women’s Fiction

DOI link for Food and Femininity in Twentieth-Century British Women’s Fiction

Food and Femininity in Twentieth-Century British Women’s Fiction book

Food and Femininity in Twentieth-Century British Women’s Fiction

DOI link for Food and Femininity in Twentieth-Century British Women’s Fiction

Food and Femininity in Twentieth-Century British Women’s Fiction book

ByAndrea Adolph
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2009
eBook Published 19 April 2016
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315582580
Pages 192
eBook ISBN 9781315582580
Subjects Area Studies, Language & Literature, Social Sciences
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Adolph, A. (2009). Food and Femininity in Twentieth-Century British Women’s Fiction (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315582580

ABSTRACT

In her feminist intervention into the ways in which British women novelists explore and challenge the limitations of the mind-body binary historically linked to constructions of femininity, Andrea Adolph examines female characters in novels by Barbara Pym, Angela Carter, Helen Dunmore, Helen Fielding, and Rachel Cusk. Adolph focuses on how women's relationships to food (cooking, eating, serving) are used to locate women's embodiment within the everyday and also reveal the writers' commitment to portraying a unified female subject. For example, using food and food consumption as a lens highlights how women writers have used food as a trope that illustrates the interconnectedness of sex and gender with issues of sexuality, social class, and subjectivity-all aspects that fall along a continuum of experience in which the intellect and the physical body are mutually complicit. Historically grounded in representations of women in periodicals, housekeeping and cooking manuals, and health and beauty books, Adolph's theoretically informed study complicates our understanding of how women's social and cultural roles are intricately connected to issues of food and food consumption.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |33 pages

Long Division: Surpassing Mind/Body Duality

chapter 1|34 pages

Regimentation of the Private: Hunting Down “Matter out of Place”

chapter 2|36 pages

And the War Taketh Away: Female Embodiment and Sexual Excess in the Era of Austerity

chapter 3|46 pages

Body as Text, Body in Text: Reader Response and the Consuming Body

chapter 4|18 pages

Whole Numbers, Strange Remainders

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