Abstract

This essay considers the significance of the Siren figure to Dante's Purgatorio and Alison Bechdel's Fun Home with a focus on the figure's relation to tropes of knowledge, specifically self-knowledge as manifested in the reading, writing, and speaking of the self. The Siren's call pertains not only to the classical notion of a woman's vocal allure, answered by those men for whom it signals the possibility of ultimate experience, but also to the allure of intertextual discourses as a means of foregrounding correlations of subjectivity and desire. Derived from Homeric epic and reinterpreted by philosophers and writers such as Boethius and Cicero, the Siren brings to the narrative a self-reflexive awareness of subjectivity manifest in subject/object positions: the self as it desires and as it knows that it desires what it desires. The Siren operates as a trope of queer subjectivity, complicating the narratives' engagement with issues of subjectivity and desire. In bringing these two texts together in comparison and juxtaposition, I hope to show, via their reciprocal critical lenses, how each draws upon, and contributes to, discourses elucidating subjectivity and its signatures in Western literature and culture.

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