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Jeanne Hyvrard, Wounded Witness : The Body Politic and the Illness Narrative

Part of the Modern French identities series
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Critical responses to Jeanne Hyvrard have generally categorised her as a writer of 'ecriture feminine' and/or autobiography, due to salient features of her oeuvre such as the use of first-person narrative, a cyclic writing style, and the quest for a 'female' language.

Within these broader considerations, however, a recurrent motif throughout Hyvrard's writing is that of the body, specifically the female body, represented as suffering from different forms of physical/mental illness and emotional/social malaise.

It is this primordial aspect of Hyvrard's work, on which surprisingly little critical analysis has been written, that this monograph explores.

It has been demonstrated that Hyvrard's works can be studied as a unity as well as individually, given that all of her texts form part of her wider theory.

While this theory is often referred to in abstract terms as 'pensee ronde', 'pensee globale' or 'pensee-femme', this study shows that it can be more specifically highlighted as a theory of dis(-)ease (i.e. the intertwining of physical malady and social malaise, medical terms and metaphor), and, particularly, as a social theory of the dis(-)eased female body.

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Product Details
Verlag Peter Lang
3039110179 / 9783039110179
Paperback / softback
844
02/05/2007
Switzerland
243 pages
220 x 150 mm, 370 grams