Performing (In)sanity: Un-Doing Gender in Janet Frame’s An Angel at my Table

Authors

Keywords:

Gender studies, Janet Frame, life writing, performativity, madness

Abstract

This essay explores madness as a performative practice in Janet Frame’s An Angel At My Table (1981) as a way to escape from gender conventions. Following Shoshana Felman and Suzette Henke, I will look at how Frame deconstructs and reconstructs a new identity by giving up female gender conventions—especially sexuality and the normative female body. In the second part of this article I analyse how, by omitting an actual account of her stay in numerous mental institutions in her autobiography, she reshapes and “re-members” the image that she wants to portray of herself.

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Author Biography

Laura de la Parra Fernández, Complutense University of Madrid

Research Fellow

Departamento de Filología Inglesa II

Universidad Complutense de Madrid

References

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Published

2016-12-23

How to Cite

de la Parra Fernández, L. (2016). Performing (In)sanity: Un-Doing Gender in Janet Frame’s An Angel at my Table. The Grove - Working Papers on English Studies, 23. Retrieved from https://revistaselectronicas.ujaen.es/index.php/grove/article/view/2857