Women As An Island: A Feminist Re-Reading Of Aritha Van Herk’s Places Far From Ellesmere

R. Preethi Vaishnavi, Dr. S. Ramya

Abstract


This paper delves into the boundaries of fiction writing and beyond, examining how geography impacts the entire plot of the novel, Places Far From Ellesmere, by attributing human characteristics to physical areas. The enthralling fact revealed in Aritha Van Herk’s Places Far From Ellesmere is that geography allows for the re/reading of gender. The novel enables emancipation from servitude and establishes connection. The geographical locale transforms into the physical space that makes the unseen visible, so allowing for freedom of choice and action in an environment devoid of intervention. “Women as an island” is a fictitious concept that articulates a possible alternative for women in forging female identity through shared experiences and bonding through mental mapping and dream geography, which resulted in the establishment of a feminine utopia. The imagined construct of Ellesmere gives place to the growing concept of “woman as an island.” Ellesmere, with its unreachability and cartographic portrayal, beckons self-fulfillment and self-expression.


Keywords


Women, Geography, Identity, History, Gender, Feminism, Desire.

Full Text:

PDF

References


Beeler, Karin.“Re-creating Cassandra and Anna Karenina: Unheard Voices in Christa Wolf’s,

Cassandra and Aritha van Herk’s Places Far From Ellesmere.” Critique: Studies in

Contemporary Fiction 36.4 (Summer 1995): 227-236.

Beer, Ann. “Thinking Too Precisely on Some Events.” Review of Places Far From

Ellesmere. Border Crossings 10.3 (July 1991): 35-36.

Gom, Leona. “Places Far From Home.” Review of Places Far From Ellesmere. Event,

2 (Summer 1991): 125-27.

Mott, Asta. “Aritha Van Herk’s Places Far From Ellesmere: The Wild and Adventurous

North.” Canadian Literature 157 (Summer 1998): 104.

Tolstoy, Leo. Anna Karenina. Raduga Publishers, 1978.

Van Herk, Aritha. Places Far From Ellesmere. A Geografictione: Explorations on Site. Red

Deer College Press, 1990.

Verduyn, Christl. Aritha Van Herk: Essays on her Works. Guemica, 2001.


Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies
ISSN 1305-578X (Online)
Copyright © 2005-2022 by Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies