The captive body nineteenth- and twentieth-century American women writers redefine pregnancy and childbirth /
Abstract (Summary)
The last ten years have borne witness to a proliferation of pregnancy narratives in
literature, popular texts and Internet sites that treat the subject realistically and often
graphically. This has not always been the case. The publication of Kate Chopin’s The
Awakening in 1899 was a turning point, marking the beginning of serious contemplation
of how the pregnant condition has affected and continues to affect women’s participation
in both social and intellectual endeavors. Since the publication of Chopin’s novel,
American women writers, in contrast to their male counterparts, have often sought an
understanding of pregnancy that defies the notion of the condition as an idyllic one. My
dissertation will attempt to study how images of pregnancy differ according to the nature
of the subjectivity of the writer and of the discourse. Therefore, I will consider multiple
works from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in fiction and the autobiographical
memoir written by American women. By referencing certain qualities of historical female
captivity narratives, I will also argue that images of pregnancy in literature portray the
condition as a type of captivity. While classifying the pregnant condition as a state of
captivity may connote a negative evaluation, in this dissertation I will underscore how
these writers have used the condition of captivity as one in which the pregnant woman
can realize, perhaps even find power in, this challenging and disturbing loss of
subjectivity. Therefore, I will explore the use of the term “captive,” locating in it a
multivalent meaning. To be captive in pregnancy will be understood as reaching a kind
of sublime, a rapturous experience that has both negative and positive effects on the
experiencing subject. In working with various American writers and their valuable
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studies of this condition, I hope to reveal a genre of “pregnancy literature” that might
validate this subject as one worthy of intellectual study and critical attention.
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Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
School Location:USA - Tennessee
Source Type:Master's Thesis
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