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Drawing on the Spanish Kabbalah's account of the divine speaking Woman, analysed in terms derived from contemporary feminist stylistics - especially the speculative-cum-theological variety associated with Luce Irigaray's work - this study examines the problem of female self-presentation in two novels from quite different cultural periods and national literary contexts. The study concludes that the two works participate in the long history of kabbalistic-hermetic reflexion on the nature and status of the Divine Feminine and its expression in language. The deft deployment of current French…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Drawing on the Spanish Kabbalah's account of the divine speaking Woman, analysed in terms derived from contemporary feminist stylistics - especially the speculative-cum-theological variety associated with Luce Irigaray's work - this study examines the problem of female self-presentation in two novels from quite different cultural periods and national literary contexts. The study concludes that the two works participate in the long history of kabbalistic-hermetic reflexion on the nature and status of the Divine Feminine and its expression in language. The deft deployment of current French feminist thinking to elucidate both the theme of the Divine Feminine and the stylistic resources available for formal female self-expression not only sharpens our perception of what is being articulated in the novels themselves. It opens up a remarkably illuminating historical dimension stretching back to the origins of Kabbalah, in which contemporary feminism finds its place.
Autorenporträt
The Author: Patricia D. Zecevic was awarded her Ph.D. in German and Hispanic Studies at Glasgow University in 1998. She is Lecturer at the University of Glasgow where she teaches German, Spanish, and Portuguese. Her work, in the form of essays and articles, has concentrated mainly on the area of German-Hispanic cultural relations.
Rezensionen
"Patricia Zecevic's book is intellectually stimulating and daring in tackling several intellectual traditions [...] This rich cross-cultural study is engaging, invigorating, and persuasive." (A. Robert Lauer, Bulletin of Spanish Studies)
"Patricia Zecevic is a noteworthy scholar. Her solidly researched, insightful and engaging book deserves attention." (Edward H. Friedman, Bulletin of Hispanic Studies)