"She felt it, creeping out of the sky"

madness and death as liberation in nineteenth-century women's fiction

Autores/as

  • Paula Pope Ramos Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro – UERJ – Programa de Pós-Graduação em Letras – Instituto de Letras – Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil.

Palabras clave:

Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Death, Gothic Poetics, Kate Chopin, Madness

Resumen

Women have been deemed mad for centuries. Such a diagnosis leads them to two paths: they either die within themselves, or, more advantageously, they ascend to a different level of freedom. In this paper, focusing on three texts produced in the late nineteenth century, Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wall-Paper” (1892), and Kate Chopin’s “The Story of An Hour” (1894) and The awakening (1899), we argue that, with a Gothic-like morbidity, their self-destructive protagonists, when facing restricting and limited lives, are aroused by a death instinct more satisfying than the unbearable reality they live in. Thus, it is through the annihilation of life, either via madness or death, that they reach liberation.

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Publicado

29/09/2022

Número

Sección

Literaturas de expressão feminina: ecos do século XIX