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Document Description
Title
The
fugitive
feminine
in
early
Canadian
writing
:
vision
,
performance
and
masquerade
Author
Legge
,
Valerie
,
1952-
Description
Thesis
(Ph.D.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1990.
English
Language
and
Literature
Date
1990
Pagination
x, 485 leaves.
Subject
Women
in
literature;
Canadian
literature--History
and
criticism
Degree
Ph.D.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of English Language and Literature
Discipline
English Language and Literature
Language
Eng
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
415-485.
Abstract
Reading
backward
from the
twentieth-century
fictions
of
Margaret
Atwood
,
Margaret
Laurence
,
Sheila
Watson
and
Ethel
Wilson
to
nineteenth-century
writers
like
Rosanna
Leprohon
,
Anna
Jameson
, and
Lily
Dougall
,
it
becomes
evident
that from the
beginning
of
letters
in
Canada
to the
present
time
,
our
literature
is
densely
populated
with a
host
of
oracles
,
diviners
,
magicians
, and
seers.
Although
they
often
occupy
auxiliary
roles
, at
least
in
early
nineteenth-century
texts
, they
perform
, in these
works
,
significant
functions
-
they are
ancestral
shades
,
cartographers
,
mediators
,
healers
,
harbingers
,
guides
,
hysterics
,
magicians
, and
holy
women.
Disrupting
the
dominant
discourse
of the
narratives
, they
mutter
and
malign
,
gesture
and
prophesize.
When
their
voices
are
suppressed
or
ignored
,
chaos
and
loss
abound.
--
As this
study
will
show
, the
oracle
that
appears
so
frequently
in
our
literature
respects
no
boundaries.
Appearing
in
works
written
by
men
and
women
, the
figure
can
be
either
male
or
female.
She
is
minor
and
major
character
,
central
and
peripheral.
She
is
young
and
old
,
innocent
and
experienced.
Most
importantly
, she
is
powerful.
She
voices
her
warnings
,
utters
her
prophecies
in a
number
of
ways:
orally
(through
verbal
articulation);
through
signs
(i.e.
natural
phenonema);
through
dreams
,
fantasies
,
memories
,
epiphanies;
and
through
ancestral
shades
,
ghosts
or
apparitions.
--
Curious
as to
where
this
visionary
figure
originated
in
Canadian
literature
,
I
decided
to
start
at the
beginning
-
in the
journals
and
diaries
of the
early
explorers
and
fur-traders
, and in the
letters
and
sketches
of
women
pioneers.
Restricted
to the
years
prior
to
1900
, this
survey
focuses
on the
movement
of these
sibylline
figures
who
are
so
closely
linked
with their
ancient
foremothers.
They are
active
,
though
often
subversive
agents;
their
messages
,
covert
and
palimpsest
, are
revealed
in
strange
dreams
and
through
mystical
experiences
-
messages
that are
presented
in
enigmatic
forms
that
require
deciphering
,
divining.
These
figures
are
capable
of
strangeness
and
transformation;
they are
associated
with
naming
as a
means
of
knowing;
they are
visionaries
who
possess
a
mysterious
second
sense.
Invariably
they are
connected
to the
cyclical
world
of
nature
, to a
pastoral
world
as
well
as to an
unruly
world
of
darkness
and
despair.
Just
as
often
, they are
found
within
settlements
where
they are
perceived
by the
populace
as
models
of
virtue
and
morality.
By
examining
the
textual
positions
of these
figures
, and the
context
and the
nature
of their
[m]utterances
,
it
is
possible
to
see
how
prophecy
,
heeded
or
ignored
,
contributes
to the
shaping
of a
Canadian
literary
tradition.
Going
back
to the
seventeenth
century
, to the
beginning
of
letters
in
Canada
,
I
discovered
what a
few
critics
have
tentatively
observed
-
that what has
evolved
in
Canada
is
a
distinctly
feminine
tradition
of
writing
, a
tradition
which
,
I
suggest
,
is
intimately
linked
to this
pervasive
prophetic
presence.
--
Most
of the
characters
examined
in this
study
are
feminine.
I
have
deliberately
decided
to
treat
them as
active
agents
who
possess
"middle
voices"
-
that
is
, as
characters
in
which
subject
and
object
positions
are
often
the
same.
Occupying
shifting
spaces
, these
characters
disrupt
the
harmony
of
conventional
binary
systems;
they
act
as
destabilizing
as
well
as
stabilizing
agents;
they
challenge
fundamental
assumptions
,
undermine
established
authorities
,
often
while
under
the
explicit
threat
of
silencing
or
exclusion.
Others
,
through
private
ceremonies
or
rituals
,
create
the
illusion
of
conformity
and
stability.
Assuming
postures
and
positions
which
suggest
openings
rather
than
closure
, these
conservative/radical
figures
create
fissures
,
ruptures
and
raptures
, and
magnificent
transformations.
Moving
erratically
and
elusively
between
confinement
and
freedom
, they
cross
borders
,
violate
cultural
codes
,
transmit
treasonous
messages
,
instigate
revolution
,
create
spectacles
, and
institute
change.
--
This
analysis
of what
I
call
the
"fugitive
feminine"
in
early
Canadian
writing
will
demonstrate
that the
actions
of these
unruly
figures
belie
the
notion
that
Canadian
literature
is
essentially
conservative.
It
will also
negate
the
myth
of the
Canadian
as
either
strictly
law-abiding
or
victimized
by a
profound
fear
of
chaos
or
wilderness.
Janus-like
, these
figures
rebel
while
pretending
to
uphold
the
law.
Often
perceived
by the
status
quo
as
models
of
morality
, they
secretly
transgress
,
defy
, and
revolt.
Their
covert
actions
necessarily
require
some
form
of
subterfuge
or
masquerade.
Like
spies
,
moles
,
voyeurs
, they
perform
their
duplicitous
acts
from
within
shadowy
spheres
as
well
as in
open
spaces.
When
their
performances
are
censured
by a
restrictive
and
regulating
social
order
, they
willfully
become
ex-centric
,
alien
, and
anomalous.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
76072898
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(72.42
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Legge_Valerie.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
76573.cpd