SUBVERSIVE HEROINES. REDEFINING THE FEMALE HERO’S JOURNEY IN THE SELECTED WORKS OF KATHY ACKER, ANGELA CARTER, AND MARGARET ATWOOD
SUBVERSIVE HEROINES. REDEFINING THE FEMALE HERO’S JOURNEY IN THE SELECTED WORKS OF KATHY ACKER, ANGELA CARTER, AND MARGARET ATWOOD
Author(s): Nicolae BobaruSubject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Studies of Literature, Philology, British Literature, American Literature
Published by: Ovidius University Press
Keywords: empowerment; fragmented identity; journey; patriarchal resistance; self-invention;
Summary/Abstract: This essay will examine the transformative female hero’s journey in the works of Kathy Acker, Angela Carter, and Margaret Atwood, who redefine the concept of heroism in their narratives by challenging patriarchy and cultural archetypes. In Acker’s Don Quixote and Empire of the Senseless, in Carter’s The Bloody Chamber, and in the revisions offered by Atwood in The Handmaid’s Tale and Surfacing, the female protagonists break away from or modify the linear development of the monomyth into journeys of multiplicity, fragmentation, and agonistic reappropriation of agency. Through tropes of violence, sexuality, and metamorphosis, these writers unravel the female journey as a force of destabilisation against conventional frames of femininity and power.This work highlights how each author reconfigures the narrative of heroin by rejecting moral oppositions and rigid gender roles, allowing her protagonists to confront social constraints and inner conflicts. Acker’s protagonists refuse any coherent identity for self-invention; Carter’s heroines reinvent fairy tales through their proactive agency in both seduction and survival, while Atwood’s women, such as Offred, transform personal resilience into acts of political defiance. Taken together, all these different versions suggest a nonlinear, cyclical journey with the main emphasis on self-discovery rather than conquest. By positioning the heroine as both creator and destroyer, these authors challenge the female hero to continually redefine herself, thereby crafting a new archetype for twenty-first-century heroines. This chapter argues that the modern heroine’s journey, as seen in these works, embodies resistance, self-definition, and fluidity, making it a powerful tool for confronting and transcending patriarchal narratives.
Journal: Analele Universităţii Ovidius din Constanţa. Seria Filologie
- Issue Year: XXXVI/2025
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 34-51
- Page Count: 18
- Language: English
