Gothic Overtones: The Female Monster in Margaret Atwood’s “Lusus Naturae”

Author:

López Ramírez Manuela

Abstract

In “Lusus Naturae,” Margaret Atwood shows her predilection for the machinations of Gothic fiction. She resorts to gothic conventions to express female experience and explore the psychological but also the physical victimisation of the woman in a patriarchal system. Atwood employs the female monster metaphor to depict the passage from adolescence to womanhood through a girl who undergoes a metamorphosis into a “vampire” as a result of a disease, porphyria. The vampire as a liminal gothic figure, disrupts the boundaries between reality and fantasy/supernatural, human and inhuman/animal, life and death, good and evil, femme fatale and virgin maiden. By means of the metaphor of the vampire woman, Atwood unveils and contests the construction of a patriarchal gender ideology, which has appalling familial and social implications.

Publisher

Universidad Complutense de Madrid (UCM)

Reference44 articles.

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2. Antón-Pacheco, Ana et al., eds. (2008). Estudios de Mujeres: Sites of Female Terror. En torno a la mujer y el terror (vol. VI). Navarra: Aranzadi.

3. Atwood, Margaret (1970). 'Afterword,' The Journals of Susanna Moodie. Toronto: Oxford UP.

4. Atwood, Margaret (1972). Survival: A Thematic Guide to Canadian Literature. Toronto: Anansi.

5. Atwood, Margaret (1982). “Canadian Monsters: Some Aspects of the Supernatural in Canadian Fiction.” In Second Words: Selected Words: Selected Critical Prose 1960-1982. 229-54. Toronto: Anansi, 1982.

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