Abstract

ABSTRACT This essay considers – and seeks to complicate – the critical tendency to gender constrained writing as ‘masculine’ and to read women’s experimental literature as a ‘feminine’ writing of the body. Via readings of Christine Brooke-Rose’s Between and Anne Garréta’s Sphinx (1986), it elucidates how the constraint in each novel actually produces the focus on the body – without thereby simulating a writing of the body – and on questions of gender and desire. In both novels, I suggest, gender itself emerges as a form of ‘constraint’. In so doing, the essay seeks to move beyond any facile polarisation of constraint and excess, the conceptual and the embodied, and to unpick the gender-political possibilities of certain experimental literary strategies.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call