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E-raamat: Women and Water in Global Fiction

Edited by (University of Leicester, UK)
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Symbols and tropes of liquidity have long been connected to notions of the feminine and, therefore, with orthodox constructions of femininity and womanhood. Underpinning these ideas is the vital importance of water as life force, which has given it a central place in cultural vocabularies worldwide. These symbolic economies, in turn, inform the discourses through which positive or negative associations of women with water come to bear impact on the social positioning of female gendered identities.

Women and Water in Global Fiction brings together an array of studies of this phenomenon as seen in writing by and about women from around the world. The literature explored in this volume works to make visible, decodify, celebrate, and challenge the cultural associations made between female gendered identities and all kinds of watery tropes, as well as their consequences for key issues connected to women, society, and the environment. The collection investigates the roots of such symbolisms, examines how they inform womens place in the socio-cultural orders of diverse global cultures, and shows how the female authors in question use these tropes in their work as ways of (re)articulating female identities and their correlative roles.
List of Contributors
vii
Acknowledgements x
Introduction. Women and Water --- Mapping a Fluid Terrain 1(22)
Emma Staniland
PART ONE Mythologies and Spiritualities of Water
23(74)
1 The Atlantis Effect: Aquatic Invocations and the (Re)Claiming of Women's Space in the Works and Archives of Gloria Anzaldua, tatiana de la tierra, and Lydia Cabrera
25(19)
Sarah E. Pina
2 Connecting Women Through Water: Nalo Hopkinson's The Salt Roads (2003) as Matrifocal Speculative Fiction
44(17)
Leighan Rcnaud
3 Grottoes and Mermaids: Fairy Tales and Transformations in Marie Nimier's Sirene (1985) and La Plage (2016)
61(18)
Rebecca Rosenberg
4 "Water, Water, Everywhere, and Not a Drop to Drink": Spiritual Renewal Through Destruction in Jewell Parker Rhodes's Hurricane (2011)
79(18)
Angela Watkins
PART TWO Rivers, Lakes, and Oceans
97(92)
5 Of Deserts and Oceans: Spaces of Womanhood in the Work of Malika Mokeddem
99(17)
Elizabeth H. Jones
6 Re-writing the Colonial River: Fabienne Bayet-Charlton's Watershed (2005) and Murray River Narratives
116(18)
Brigid Manner
Emily Potter
7 Ko wai koe? Identity and Water in Contemporary Women's Writing From Aotearoa New Zealand
134(21)
Paula Morris
8 Time and Tide: Topographies of Trauma in Jhumpa Lahiri's The Lowland (2013)
155(16)
Kamil Naicker
9 Watery Subjectivities: Exploring Female Somali Diasporic Experiences of the Sea in Cristina Ali Farah's Little Mother (2011) and "A Dhow Is Crossing the Sea" (2011)
171(18)
Ayan Salaad
PART THREE Metaphors of Liquidity
189(51)
10 Flowing Along Endlessly: Banana Yoshimoto's Female Protagonists and Water's Guiding Force
191(12)
Carrie Giunta
11 Women, Water, and the House Built on Sand: Tropes of Liquidity in the Feminist Latin American Dictatorship Novel - Cristina Peri Rossi's The Ship of Fools (1984) and Diamela Eltit's Vie Fourth World (1988)
203(20)
Emma Staniland
12 Water Metaphors as Communication Structures in Astrid H. Roemer's Was getekend (Was Marked) (1998)
223(17)
Emma van Meyeren
Index 240
Emma Staniland is a Teaching Fellow in Spanish and Latin American Studies at the University of Leicester, UK, where she also completed her PhD. Her research interests focus on experiences of female selfhood as portrayed in Latin American womens writing, the connections between gender and genre (with a particular interest in global rearticulations of the Bildungsroman and in memoir writing), and US and UK Latinx literature and culture.