This important work considers the contemporary movement of "writing in the feminine", by examining the work of five women writers from French and English Canada and the dialogue therein with feminist and psychoanalytic theory and theories of ethics. Informing the author's interpretations are the ideas of French theorists Emmanuel Levinas, Paul Ricoeur, Luce Irigaray, and Julia Kristeva, as well as American feminists Kelly Oliver and Jessica Benjamin.

Marie Carrière explores the unfolding, complex questions of sexual difference, female subjectivity, and mother-daughter relations. She also uncovers and examines the occasional breakdown of the feminist ethics postulated by Nicole Brossard, France Theoret, Di Brandt, Erin Mouré, and Lola Lemire Tostevin. Carrière views these instances of deviation not as a failure of writing in the feminine, but as an inevitability in the relatively new intellectual terrain of feminist ethics.

Writing in the Feminine will be of great interest to scholars of literary theory, women's studies, and Canadian literature in French and English. As a challenging study of the connections between gender and authorship, it will also appeal to those who have a particular interest in women's literature.

Considers the contemporary movement of "writing in the feminine", by examining the work of five women writers from French and English Canada and the dialogue therein with feminist and psychoanalytic theory and theories of ethics.

  • Imprint: University of Toronto Press
  • Published: July 2002
  • Pages: 240

Marie Carrière is an assistant professor in the Department of French at the University of New Brunswick.

Chapters

PDF
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Introduction
Part 1:Poetics, Ethics, and Writing in the Feminine
1Introduction to Writing in the Feminine
2Writing (As) a Feminist Ethics
Part 2:Mothers and Daughters
3Resurrecting the (M)Other: Nicole Brossard
4Questioning the Mother: Di Brandt
5 Performing Hysteria: France Théoret
Part 3:Mothertongues
6Tracing the (M)Other: Erin Mouré
7Mothering Text: Lola Lemire Tostevin
Part 4:Beyond Ethics
8An Ethics of Selfhood: Théoret and Tostevin
9An Ethics of Love: Brandt, Mouré, and Brossard
Conclusion
NOTES
WORKS CITED
CREDITS
INDEX

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