Margaret Eleanor Atwood is a versatile artist in the Canadian literature. This book is an assessment of Atwood’s belief about the condition of women, her portrayal of women and their status in Canadian patriarchal society. She has not overestimated the problems of women but holds a mirror to actual social status of women through her female characters who are true to life. She pleads for a healthy, harmonious and balanced man-woman relationship in which two sexes are viewed as complementary, not as a battle of sexes or a winning or losing game. The study of Atwood’s novels creates an awareness that no Gods from above but women themselves have to raise their inner self and make an effort to find their freedom. Through her female characters Margaret Atwood presents a different concept of feminism and challenges the unjust traditional role assigned to women. She proposes image of woman not just a "two-legged womb" but a dynamic human, different from male but no less significant in any manner. The book also explores that Atwood’s feminist vision in neither male-centered nor female-centered but it offers a fresh perspective on women’s problems based on humanitarian ground. She fulfills the role of a torchbearer to society. The book analyses seven of Atwood’s major novels that belong to the postmodern literary genre of "feminist protest" and reveal an intense awareness of the relationship between bonding and bondage, i.e. between a woman’s need for connection with others and her equally strong need for freedom. The book will be extremely useful to the students and teachers of English literature and researchers in this field.
Margaret Atwood: A Jewel in Canadian Writing
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Title
Margaret Atwood: A Jewel in Canadian Writing
Author
Edition
1st ed.
Publisher
ISBN
8126910151
Length
xii+226p.
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