Toplumsal Cinsiyet, Anlatı Türü ve Kadın Gotiği: Angela Carter’ın “Kanlı Oda” ve Charlotte Perkins Gilman’ın “Sarı Duvar Kağıdı” Öykülerinde Ataerkil Normlara Direniş

Kadın gotik, feminizmi ve gotik edebiyat çalışmalarını bir araya getirerek ve yazar kadınların eserlerini yeniden yorumlayara kgotik edebiyatta cinsiyetin incelenmesinde önemli bir ilerleme temsil eder. Kadınlar tarafından gotik tarzda yazılan eserlerde, ataerkil toplumda kadınların yaşadığı baskılar ve ataerkil tahakküm altında maruz kaldıkları tahripler vurgulanır; bu anlamda, kadın gotik kahramanların zorluklarla yüzleşirken gösterdikleri direnç, kadın olarak olgunlaşmalarının bir sembolüdür. Bu bağlamda, bu araştırma, Angela Carter'ın "Kanlı Oda" ve Charlotte Perkins Gilman'ın "Sarı Duvar Kağıdı" eserlerini kadın gotik kurgu açısından karşılaştırmayı amaçlamaktadır. Ataerkil kültürde kadınları bekleyen karanlık trajediler, Carter ve Gilman tarafından gotik türün normal sınırlarının ötesinde keşfedilir. Bu çalışma, iki öyküyü karşılaştırarak, kadın kahramanların ataerkil şovenizmi sorgulamaya ve hatta yıkmaya başladığını; ataerkil toplumdaki ast konumlarından uzaklaşmaya başladığını göstermeyi amaçlamaktadır.

Gender, Genre and the Female Gothic: Resisting Patriarchal Norms in Angela Carter’s “The Bloody Chamber” and Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper”

The female gothic reinterprets works by female authors by fusing feminism and the study of gothic literature. In actuality, it represents a significant advancement in the study of gender in Gothic literature. In works written in the gothic style by women, the oppression of women in patriarchal society is reflected, and the destruction of women at the hands of patriarchy is emphasized throughout gothic art; in this sense, the resilience of the female gothic protagonists in the face of adversity symbolizes their maturation as women. Based on this context, this research attempts to compare "The Bloody Chamber" by Angela Carter with "The Yellow Wallpaper" by Charlotte Perkins Gilman from the standpoint of the feminine Gothic fiction. The dark tragedies that await women in patriarchal culture are explored by Carter and Gilman in ways that transcend beyond the normal boundaries of the gothic genre. By contrasting the narratives, this study aims to show how women begin to question and even demolish patriarchal chauvinism and move away from their subservient position in patriarchal society.

___

  • Abbasoğlu, A., Alban, G. M. E. (2018). Angela Carter’s deconstruction of traditional tales. International Journal of Media Culture and Literature, 4 (1), 7-24.
  • Abrams, M. H. (2009). A glossary of literary terms, Boston: Wadsworth Publishing.
  • Arıkan, S. (2016). Angela Carter’s The Bloody Chamber: a feminist stylistics approach. The Journal of International Social Sciences, 26 (2), 117-130.
  • Aswathy, R. (2016). Re-conceptualizing the gender and the gothic mode in Angela Carter’s The Bloody Chamber. International Journal of English Language, Literature and Humanities, 5 (7), 81-89.
  • Baniceru, A. C. (2018). Gothicizing domesticity: the case of Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Edgar Allan Poe. Romanian Journal of English Studies, (15), 9-16.
  • Blackie, M. (2004). Reading the rest cure. Arizona Quarterly: A Journal of American Literature, Culture, and Theory, 60 (2), 57-85.
  • Bork, R. (2019). Gothic and design: the geometrical roots of gothic aesthetics in the Cologne Cathedral Choir. in The Edinburgh companion to gothic and the arts (Ed. D. Punter) Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, Edinburg, 52-68.
  • Boonpromkul, P. (2014). Rewriting genders, revising genres: reading Angela Carter’s “The Bloody Chamber” as a female bildungsroman. MANUSYA: Journal of Humanities Regular, 17 (2), 50-72.
  • Brownstein, R. (1982). Becoming a heroine: reading about women in novels, New York: Viking.
  • Carter, A. (1993). The bloody chamber and other stories, New York: Penguin Books.
  • Clergy, E. J. (2002). The genesis of gothic fiction. In J. E. Hogle (Ed.), in The Cambridge companion to gothic fiction (Ed. J. E. Hogle) Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 21-39.
  • Cuddon, J. A. (2013). A dictionary of literary terms and literary theory, West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • Çokay Nebioğlu, R. (2019). A feminist post-narratological inquiry into Angela Carter’s “The Company of Wolves”. Dil ve Edebiyat Araştırmaları, (19), 325-337.
  • Davison, C. M. (2009). Gothic literature 1764-1824, Cardiff: University of Wales Press.
  • Davison, C. M. (2004). Haunted house/haunted heroine: female gothic closets in “The Yellow Wallpaper”. Women’s Studies, (33), 47-75.