Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://scholarhub.balamand.edu.lb/handle/uob/4604
Title: The female identity as a discursive construct
Authors: Ayoubi, Ghinan
Advisors: Ayoubi, Peter
Subjects: Feminism in literature
Feminist theory
Issue Date: 2011
Abstract: 
The aim of this thesis is to examine how anti-patriarchal theories such as feminism, postmodernism and poststructuralism see in psychoanalysis, which is a model of human development within patriarchal society, a useful explanation and hence an opportunity to threat the linearity of masculine law. The focus of the thesis is the account of preestablished familial and social structure in which the boy and the girl align themselves with those images and modes of behavior their culture designate as masculine and feminine that has prompted feminists, postmodernists and poststructuralists to reject it. Freuds and Lacans model of male and female development theories, then, is recapitulated, in this thesis, not to be recuperated but rather to be the target of severe objections raised by theorists such as Hélène Cixous, Luce Irigaray, Adrienne Rich, Judith Butler, Linda Hutcheon and others. This thesis contributes significantly to locate a female self that is not bound by castration or lack. It illustrates how the creation of female writing, according to feminists, postmodernists and poststructuralists, breaks the closed circuit of the patriarchal symbolic order to alter rather than to reverse the power balance of patriarchy. If their aim were simply to reverse the order of things, supposing this to be possible, then history would simply repeat itself, would revert to sameness: to phallocentrism. My research also intends to produce a recognizable feminist impact through its specific use of available material, Toni Morrisons Sula and Alice Walkers The Color Purple, in which feminist, postmodernist and poststructuralist criticism and theories are employed.
Description: 
Includes bibliographical references (p.79-82).

Supervised by Dr. Peter Ayoubi.
URI: https://scholarhub.balamand.edu.lb/handle/uob/4604
Rights: This object is protected by copyright, and is made available here for research and educational purposes. Permission to reuse, publish, or reproduce the object beyond the personal and educational use exceptions must be obtained from the copyright holder
Ezproxy URL: Link to full text
Type: Thesis
Appears in Collections:UOB Theses and Projects

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