MARRIAGE PLOT AS A CHALLENGE TO GENDER CONVENTIONS IN AURORA LEIGH BY ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING
MARRIAGE PLOT AS A CHALLENGE TO GENDER CONVENTIONS IN AURORA LEIGH BY ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING
Author(s): Soner KayaSubject(s): Social history, Gender history, Theory of Literature, British Literature
Published by: Bingöl Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü
Keywords: Gender roles; Aurora Leigh; Victorian society; Elizabeth Barrett Browning;
Summary/Abstract: Elizabeth Barrett Browning in her long narrative poem titled Aurora Leigh portrays a heroine that struggles to be a poetess rather than a submissive wife in accordance with gender conventions. Her struggle shows that women attempting to go beyond domesticity to pursue a career encounter certain obstacles because marriage is regarded supreme career for them. Despite those obstacles and gender-specific applications, Aurora Leigh, the heroine, becomes a poet and marries her cousin. Her poetic career and marriage display that womanhood is not an obstacle to pursuing a career. By such a plot, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, challenged patriarchal society and the attribution of both frailty and certain fixed roles to women. Rather than presenting a conventional marriage in the end, Browning utilizes an unconventional marriage as a challenge to the patriarchal Victorian society because she underlined the fact that a marriage is not a career for women but a necessity. Discussing unconventionality of the marriage in Aurora Leigh, this study investigates how Browning problematizes conventional gender roles and presents marriage as a part of women’s powerful side rather than as a sign of subjection.
Journal: Bingöl Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Dergisi (BUSBED)
- Issue Year: 11/2021
- Issue No: 22
- Page Range: 683-695
- Page Count: 13
- Language: English