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Katherine Mansfield and Sexuality. One of the themes that can be found in
the stories of Katherine Mansfield centres upon the role ...
... is so unique that most critics contributing to Jan Pilditch’s The Critical Response
to Katherine Mansfield do not realize how deeply sexuality figures in the ...
... Also the awakening of her sexuality is imaged by the pear tree and thus Bertha is
no longer young ... Works cited: Primary Literature: ???h Mansfield, Katherine. ...
... separatist literature of inner space." Dorothy Richardson, Katherine Mansfield,
and Virginia Woolf worked towards a female aesthetic, elevating sexuality to a ...
... All these questions arise when I was reading "Bliss" by Katherine Mansfield. ... it was
as if she had gained sexual awareness, not just the sexuality of others ...
Submitted by sopharia on September 23, 2007
Category: English
Words: 1598 | Pages: 7
Views: 248
Popularity Rank: 40,690
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One of the themes that can be found in the stories of Katherine Mansfield centres upon the role, status, sexuality, and “place” of women in society. According to Chantal Cornut-Gentille d’Arcy, “Mansfield’s succinct narratives … are triumphs of style, a style which challenged the conventional parameters of nineteenth-century realism, constrained to plot, sequential development, climax, and conclusion” (244). More specifically, maintains that “even though Mansfield never acknowledged any profound engagement with Freudian approaches to sexuality or psychic disorder … Mansfield moved in a context which undoubtedly indicates she was aware of Freud’s ideas and discoveries” (245).
This is evident in ‘Life of Ma Parker’, which describes the life of a widowed charwoman who has experienced nothing more than tragedy throughout her life and who most recently has had the horrible task of burying her loving little grandson (Lohafer 475). Ma Parker is written by Mansfield from both a Freudian psychological and a sociological perspective. Susan Lohafer characterises the story as “a spare iconography of working-class life that makes the story a perfect set-piece for cultural studies” (475). In the story, an aging charwoman must not only cope with the death of her grandson, she must also deal with the fact that she has no place to go where she can be by herself and give way to her grief.
Nothing that she has achieved in her entire working life has resulted in the acquisition of such a private place. Instead, she has buried her husband, a baker who died of “white lung disease” and those children who survived the high rate of infant mortality fell victim to other ills of the late-Victorian underclass: immigration, prostitution, poor health, worse luck (Lohafer 475).
Ma Parker was a woman whose status in society was predetermined and fixed. Similarly, in Mansfield’s ‘Bliss’, the reader is introduced to another fixed character,...
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