Breaking the Bounds: British Feminist Dramatists Writing in the Mainstream Since C. 1980Breaking the Bounds focuses on second-wave feminism as a rupture in an unbroken episteme of Western patriarchy analyzed with regard to British dramatic discourse. The theoretical framework is a genealogy of patriarchy deploying and developing Foucault's ideas on discourse to apply to a deconstruction of Western patriarchy. An analysis of feminist drama texts is used to support the argument that Western patriarchy consists of one unbroken episteme as the patriarchal impulse substrates the epistemological breaks indicated by Foucault. The theoretical text speaks of the twentieth-century feminist rupture from patriarchy, analyzing in detail the texts of five mainstream feminist dramatists who have successfully effected an intervention in the British grand récit of undeniably male dramatic discourse. |
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Page 8
Ninth - Century C.E. to 1980 ) Characterized by The Patriarchal Impulse In this section I use my reading of Caryl Churchill's Top Girls to continue exploring Foucauldian thought and to help explicate my thesis ' statement further .
Ninth - Century C.E. to 1980 ) Characterized by The Patriarchal Impulse In this section I use my reading of Caryl Churchill's Top Girls to continue exploring Foucauldian thought and to help explicate my thesis ' statement further .
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CHAPTER TWO hé — EFFECTING A RUPTURE WITH MALE DRAMATIC DISCOURSE Caryl Churchill [ In a minor or revolutionary ... rupture in the order of things . a 1 CARYL CHURCHILL'S STAGEPLAYS can be quite clearly divided into plays written on her ...
CHAPTER TWO hé — EFFECTING A RUPTURE WITH MALE DRAMATIC DISCOURSE Caryl Churchill [ In a minor or revolutionary ... rupture in the order of things . a 1 CARYL CHURCHILL'S STAGEPLAYS can be quite clearly divided into plays written on her ...
Page 120
She compares her to Churchill and Wertenbaker ( whose plays have also largely played at studio venues similar to the venues at which Daniels has played , apart from the fact that they are all Royal Court writers ) .
She compares her to Churchill and Wertenbaker ( whose plays have also largely played at studio venues similar to the venues at which Daniels has played , apart from the fact that they are all Royal Court writers ) .
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