RUO Home

Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Oviedo

View Item 
  •   RUO Home
  • Producción Bibliográfica de UniOvi: RECOPILA
  • Artículos
  • View Item
  •   RUO Home
  • Producción Bibliográfica de UniOvi: RECOPILA
  • Artículos
  • View Item
    • español
    • English
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Browse

All of RUOCommunities and CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsxmlui.ArtifactBrowser.Navigation.browse_issnAuthor profilesThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsxmlui.ArtifactBrowser.Navigation.browse_issn

My Account

LoginRegister

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

RECENTLY ADDED

Last submissions
Repository
How to publish
Resources
FAQs

Women's self-portrait as self-discovery: Negotiating the gap between seeing and being seen in Drusila Modejeska's "The Orchard" (1994)

Author:
Pérez Ríu, CarmenUniovi authority
Publication date:
2006
Editorial:

Universidad de Valladolid

Citación:
ES: Revista de filología inglesa, 27, p. 151-162 (2006)
Descripción física:
p. 151-162
Abstract:

The Australian author Drusilla Modjeska combines historical and fictional characters to weave the text of her 3rd book, The Orchard (1994), which plays with two genres, the novel and the essay. The lives of women painters and their fight to pursue their careers are used to illustrate the conflicts in which the fictional characters are immersed. These painters' self-portraits become a way to explore their identities and a vehicle to achieve self-express ion by negotiating the gap between seeing and being seen. The difficult relation of women with the visual and with identity is laid down for analysis, while the author proposes a solution, attainable only after a period of solitude.

The Australian author Drusilla Modjeska combines historical and fictional characters to weave the text of her 3rd book, The Orchard (1994), which plays with two genres, the novel and the essay. The lives of women painters and their fight to pursue their careers are used to illustrate the conflicts in which the fictional characters are immersed. These painters' self-portraits become a way to explore their identities and a vehicle to achieve self-express ion by negotiating the gap between seeing and being seen. The difficult relation of women with the visual and with identity is laid down for analysis, while the author proposes a solution, attainable only after a period of solitude.

URI:
http://hdl.handle.net/10651/27072
ISSN:
0210-9689
Collections
  • Artículos [37532]
Files in this item
Compartir
Exportar a Mendeley
Estadísticas de uso
Estadísticas de uso
Metadata
Show full item record
Página principal Uniovi

Biblioteca

Contacto

Facebook Universidad de OviedoTwitter Universidad de Oviedo
The content of the Repository, unless otherwise specified, is protected with a Creative Commons license: Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 Internacional
Creative Commons Image