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E-raamat: Pronoun Envy: Literary Uses of Linguistic Gender

(Visiting Assistant Professor of French, University of California at Berkeley, USA)
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Controversy over gendered pronouns, for example using the generic "he," has been a staple of feminist arguments about patriarchal language over the last 30 years, and is certainly the most contested political issue in Western feminist linguistics. Most accounts do not extend beyond policy issues like the official institution of non-sexist language. In this volume, Anna Livia reveals continuities both before and after the sexist language refore movement and shows how the creative practices of pronoun use on the part of feminist writers had both aesthetic and political ends. Livia uses the term "pronoun envy" ironically to show that rather being a case of misguided envy, battles over gendered language are central to feminist concerns.

Livia examines a broad corpus of written texts in English and French, concentrating on those texts which problematize the traditional functioning of the linguistic gender system. They range from novels and prose poems to film scripts and personal testimonies, and in time from the 19th century to the present. Some withhold any indication of gender; others have non-gendered characters. Livia's goal is two-fold; to help bridge the divide between linguistic and literary analysis, and to show how careful study of the manipulation of linguistic gender in these texts informs larger concerns. This fresh and highly interdisciplinary work lies at the intersection of several vital areas, including language and gender, sociolinguistics, and feminist literary analysis.

Arvustused

Pronoun Envy is a delight to read with its use of witty chapter headings which concisely capture the focus of the particular chapter ... highly recommended * Discourse & Society * A valuable contribution to the series with a fascinating study of feminist writers' textual strategies surrounding the 'pronoun' problem and the respresentation of linguistic and cultural gender * Discourse & Society *

``Un homme sur deux est une femme''
Introduction---Pronoun Envy and Phallogocentrism
3(28)
``Sexes meles je ne sus plus rien distinguer''
Nongendered Characters in French
31(27)
``Was I, perhaps, castrato/a?''
Nongendered Characters in English
58(25)
``La sphyngesse, la taure, et les agnelles nouvelles-nees''
Experiments with Lexical Gender in French
83(17)
``On est quatre dans le meme tas''
French Epicene on
100(34)
``Na sat astride Three, na hands on nan throat''
Epicene Neologisms in English
134(26)
``Avant j'etais un transsexuel, maintenant j'etais une femme''
Linguistic Gender and Liminal Identity
160(33)
``Pendue pour des inventions illicites''
Implications
193(10)
Notes 203(14)
Bibliography 217(14)
Index 231
Anna Livia is Visiting Assistant Professor of French at the University of California at Berkeley. She co-edited Queerly Phrased: Language, Gender, and Sexuality (OUP, 1995).