REPOZYTORIUM UNIWERSYTETU
W BIAŁYMSTOKU
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dc.contributor.authorFeldman-Kołodziejuk, Ewelina-
dc.date.accessioned2024-06-07T07:25:43Z-
dc.date.available2024-06-07T07:25:43Z-
dc.date.issued2021-
dc.identifier.citationÉtudes canadiennes / Canadian Studies, n° 90, 2021, s. 29-47pl
dc.identifier.issn0153-1700-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11320/16640-
dc.description.abstractDrawing on psychoanalysis, Atwood’s second novel, Surfacing, masterly depicts the suppression of trauma and the mechanisms that allow it to reconfigure. The article investigates the implications of the protagonist’s abortion for her concept of self, as well as manifests the objectification of a pregnant woman during both labouring and abortive procedures. It scrutinizes what role the relationship between the heroine and her late mother plays in the identity formation and the healing process of the former, emphasizing the importance of intergenerational transmission.pl
dc.description.abstractEn s’appuyant sur la psychanalyse, le deuxième roman d’Atwood, Surfacing, décrit magistralement la suppression du traumatisme et les mécanismes qui permettent de l’accepter. L’article montre comment l’avortement de la protagoniste influence sa vision d’elle-même, ainsi que le fait de traiter une femme enceinte comme un objet pendant les procédures de travail et d’avortement. Il analyse le rôle que joue la relation entre l’héroïne et sa défunte mère dans la formation de l’identité et le processus de guérison de la première, soulignant l’importance de la transmission intergénérationnelle.pl
dc.language.isoenpl
dc.publisherAssociation française des études canadiennes (AFEC)pl
dc.subjecttraumapl
dc.subjectAtwood (Margaret)pl
dc.subjectabortionpl
dc.subjectintergenerational transmissionpl
dc.subjectmotherhoodpl
dc.subjecttraumatismepl
dc.subjectavortementpl
dc.subjecttransmission intergénérationnellepl
dc.subjectmaternitépl
dc.titleEmbracing the maternal: the importance of intergenerational transmission in Margaret Atwood’s Surfacingpl
dc.title.alternativeAccepter le maternel: l’importance de la transmission intergénérationnelle dans le roman Surfacing de Margaret Atwoodpl
dc.typeArticlepl
dc.identifier.doi10.4000/eccs.4568-
dc.description.Emaile.feldman@uwb.edu.plpl
dc.description.BiographicalnoteEwelina Feldman-Kołodziejuk is an assistant at the University of Białystok, Poland. She has just completed her doctoral dissertation devoted to the intergenerational transmission of motherhood in the fiction of Margaret Atwood. Her primary area of academic interest is North American literature. She is a member of the Polish Association for Canadian Studies and an author of several articles that oscillate around motherhood and geopoetics. She has also co-edited two volumes of collected essays The Fantastic and Realism (2019) and Jews of Eastern Poland: Between Odessa and Vilnius (2019). In 2015 she was awarded a scholarship from the Corbridge Trust in Cambridge.pl
dc.description.AffiliationUniwersytet w Białymstokupl
dc.description.referencesATWOOD, Margaret. 1998. The Edible Woman. New York: Anchor Books.pl
dc.description.referencesATWOOD, Margaret. 1984. Surfacing. London: Virago. Print.pl
dc.description.referencesATWOOD, Margaret. 1972. Survival. Thematic Guide to Canadian Literature. Toronto: House of Anansi.pl
dc.description.referencesBUSS, Helen. 1989. “Maternality and Narrative Strategies in the Novels of bMargaret Atwood.” Atlantis 15 (1): 76–83.pl
dc.description.referencesCHODOROW, Nancy J. 1999. The Reproduction of Mothering. Berkeley: University of California Press.pl
dc.description.referencesCOOLEY, Dennis. 1994. “Nearer by Far: the upset ‘I’ in Margaret Atwood’s Poetry.” In Margaret Atwood: Writing and Subjectivity, edited by Colin Nicholson, 68–93. New York: St Martin’s Press.pl
dc.description.referencesFREUD, Sigmund. 1933. New Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis. Translated by W.J.H. Sprott. New York: W.W. Norton & Company.pl
dc.description.referencesGRACE, Sherrill. 1988. “In Search of Demeter: the Lost, Silent Mother in Surfacing.” In Margaret Atwood: Vision and Forms, edited by Kathryn VanSpanckeren and Jan Garden Castro, 35–47. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press.pl
dc.description.referencesHOWELLS, Coral Ann. 2005. Margaret Atwood. Second Edition. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. Print.pl
dc.description.referencesIRVINE, Lorna. 1980. “A Psychological Journey: Mothers and Daughters in English-Canadian Fiction.” In The Lost Tradition. Mothers and Daughters in Literature, edited by Cathy N. Davidson and E. M. Broner, 242-253. New York: Frederic Ungar Publishing.pl
dc.description.referencesMCNALLY, Richard J. 2003. Remembering Trauma. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.pl
dc.description.referencesMARTIN, Emily. 2001. The Woman in the Body: A Cultural Analysis of Reproduction. Boston: Beacon Press.pl
dc.description.referencesOAKLEY, Ann. 1979. “A Case of Maternity: Paradigms of Women as Maternity Cases.” Signs 4 (4): 607-631.pl
dc.description.referencesO’REILLY, Andrea. 2016. Matricentric Feminism: Theory, Activism and Practice. Bradford: Demeter Press.pl
dc.description.referencesPRATT, Annis. 1981. “Surfacing and the Rebirth Journey.” In The Art of Margaret Atwood. Critical Essays, edited by Arnold E. Davidson and Cathy N. Davidson, 139–157. Toronto: House of Anansi Press.pl
dc.description.referencesQUARTERMAINE, Peter. 1994. “Margaret Atwood’s Surfacing: Strange Familiarity.” In Margaret Atwood: Writing and Subjectivity, edited by Colin Nicholson, 119–132. New York: St. Martin’s Press.pl
dc.description.referencesPIERCY, Marge. 1973. “Margaret Atwood: Beyond Victimhood.” The American Poetry Review 2 (6): 41–44.pl
dc.description.referencesRICH, Adrienne. 1995. Of Woman Born: Motherhood as Experience and Institution. New York: W.W. Norton & Company.pl
dc.description.referencesROTHMAN, Barbara Katz. 1982. In Labor: Women and Power in the Birthplace. New York: W. W. Norton.pl
dc.description.referencesRUBENSTEIN, Roberta. 1976. “‘Surfacing’: Margaret Atwood’s Journey to the Interior.” Modern Fiction Studies 22 (3): 387–399.pl
dc.description.referencesTHOMAS, Sue. 1988. “Mythic Reconception and the Mother/Daughter Relationship in Margaret Atwood’s Surfacing.” Ariel 19 (2): 73–85.pl
dc.description.referencesTHURER, Shari L. 1994. The Myths of Motherhood: How Culture Reinvents the Good Mother. New York: Penguin Books.pl
dc.description.referencesWARD, David. 1994. “Surfacing: Separation, Transition, Incorporation.” In Margaret Atwood: Writing and Subjectivity, edited by Colin Nicholson, 94–118. New York: St. Martin’s Press.pl
dc.identifier.eissn2429-4667-
dc.description.number90pl
dc.description.firstpage29pl
dc.description.lastpage47pl
dc.identifier.citation2Études canadiennes / Canadian Studiespl
dc.identifier.orcid0000-0003-1205-1510-
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