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Playing with fire : Mary Shelley, Elizabeth Barrett Browning and the rewriting of the Prometheus myth

Bibliography: pages xiv-xx.

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Main Author: Belling, Catherine
Other Authors: Marx, Lesley
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of English Language and Literature 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Belling, Catherine
author2 Marx, Lesley
author_browse Belling, Catherine
Marx, Lesley
author_facet Marx, Lesley
Belling, Catherine
author_sort Belling, Catherine
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description Bibliography: pages xiv-xx.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/22095 Playing with fire : Mary Shelley, Elizabeth Barrett Browning and the rewriting of the Prometheus myth Belling, Catherine Marx, Lesley English Language and Literature Bibliography: pages xiv-xx. According to Greek myth, Prometheus stole fire from the gods and gave it to mortals, either in the form of culture, or by using it to bring to life the clay people he had made. Margaret Homans distinguishes between what she calls literal and figurative creativity (1980:223). The woman who is a mother, creating literally and naturally with her body, and who writes, creating figurative offspring, cultural texts, makes use of the Promethean fire in both of its possible senses. Only the literal, however, is seen by patriarchal culture as her rightful realm. Myth dictates that only men received from Prometheus the fire of figurative creativity, of language. The "woman writer," then, as a kind of contradiction in terms, is forced to suffer the conflict imposed by her choice to create, within the dictates of culture, with both forms of "fire." In the face of this conflict, Alicia Ostriker suggests that the project of women writers should be to rewrite the mythology of patriarchy and, in doing so, take from men their sole possession of the fire of culture, an ownership which empowers them in the same way as it did Zeus, the tyrannical father-god. In her words, women writers should become "thieves of language, female Prometheuses" (1986:211). Women who re-write the Prometheus myth may then be seen as both figuratively revising the theft by re-telling its story, and as literally re-enacting the myth itself by rebelling against the limitations of androcentrism. The "female Prometheus" re-creates the myth, bringing together the definitions of herself as woman and writer in what I argue is a disruptive and positive form of hybridism. Chapter One examines the mythic complex which surrounds the figure of Prometheus, concentrating on the versions by Hesjod, Aeschylus and Ovid, and considers the implications of its appropriation and revision by women writers. Chapters Two and Three analyse the way in which two nineteenth century women, Mary Shelley and Elizabeth Barrett Browning, rewrote the myth. Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, presents two Promethean figures - the scientist and the monster - and so embodies the ambivalence of its author. Barrett Browning translated Aeschylus's Prometheus Bound twice, and then wrote Aurora Leigh, a hybrid novel-poem in which the central character is female, a writer and Promethean. I argue that both succeeded, in different ways, in liberating language from the limitations of the patriarchal symbolic, so carrying out a theft of linguistic "fire," the act recognised by Shaftesbury as a ''Breach of Omnipotence." 2016-10-04T10:10:03Z 2016-10-04T10:10:03Z 1991 Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22095 eng application/pdf Department of English Language and Literature Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle English Language and Literature
Belling, Catherine
Playing with fire : Mary Shelley, Elizabeth Barrett Browning and the rewriting of the Prometheus myth
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Playing with fire : Mary Shelley, Elizabeth Barrett Browning and the rewriting of the Prometheus myth
title_full Playing with fire : Mary Shelley, Elizabeth Barrett Browning and the rewriting of the Prometheus myth
title_fullStr Playing with fire : Mary Shelley, Elizabeth Barrett Browning and the rewriting of the Prometheus myth
title_full_unstemmed Playing with fire : Mary Shelley, Elizabeth Barrett Browning and the rewriting of the Prometheus myth
title_short Playing with fire : Mary Shelley, Elizabeth Barrett Browning and the rewriting of the Prometheus myth
title_sort playing with fire mary shelley elizabeth barrett browning and the rewriting of the prometheus myth
topic English Language and Literature
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22095
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