#smrgKİTABEVİ American Indıvidualism And Female Autonomy In American Women's Writing - 2025
Editör:
Kondisyon:
Yeni
Sunuş / Önsöz / Sonsöz / Giriş:
Basıldığı Matbaa:
Dizi Adı:
ISBN-10:
6256627994
Kargoya Teslim Süresi (İş Günü):
3&7
Hazırlayan:
Cilt:
Amerikan Cilt
Ciltçi:
Boyut:
16x24
Sayfa Sayısı:
105
Basım Yeri:
İstanbul
Baskı:
1
Basım Tarihi:
2025
Kapak Türü:
Karton Kapak
Kağıt Türü:
Enso
Dili:
İngilizce
Kategori:
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634280
https://www.simurgkitabevi.com/american-individualism-and-female-autonomy-in-american-womens-writing-2025
American Indıvidualism And Female Autonomy In American Women's Writing - 2025 #smrgKİTABEVİ
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In the United States, where individualism is upheld as both a civic virtue and a cultural birthright, its conditional access for women turns it into a complex and persistent paradox. For women, it has never been a straightforward pursuit, but a path marked by struggle, compromise, and negotiation. Across the six texts examined in this study, Mary Wilkin's Freeman's “A New England Nun,” Charlotte Perkins Gilman's “A Yellow Wallpaper,” Kate Chopin's The Awakening, Anne Beattie's “Janus,” Ellen Gilchrist's “Revenge,” and Octavia Butler's Parable series, one thing becomes clear. For many women, the ideal of individualism is not a goal, but a response, and how they respond—whether by retreating, adapting, resisting, or rebuilding—reveals the different forms autonomy can take in a society that often denies female agency. Ultimately, what emerges from these women's writings is not the image of the triumphant self-made individual, but of women who redefine strength through endurance, autonomy through relation, and identity through the difficult work of adaptation.
In the United States, where individualism is upheld as both a civic virtue and a cultural birthright, its conditional access for women turns it into a complex and persistent paradox. For women, it has never been a straightforward pursuit, but a path marked by struggle, compromise, and negotiation. Across the six texts examined in this study, Mary Wilkin's Freeman's “A New England Nun,” Charlotte Perkins Gilman's “A Yellow Wallpaper,” Kate Chopin's The Awakening, Anne Beattie's “Janus,” Ellen Gilchrist's “Revenge,” and Octavia Butler's Parable series, one thing becomes clear. For many women, the ideal of individualism is not a goal, but a response, and how they respond—whether by retreating, adapting, resisting, or rebuilding—reveals the different forms autonomy can take in a society that often denies female agency. Ultimately, what emerges from these women's writings is not the image of the triumphant self-made individual, but of women who redefine strength through endurance, autonomy through relation, and identity through the difficult work of adaptation.
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