Serendip is an independent site partnering with faculty at multiple colleges and universities around the world. Happy exploring!
The Role of Sisterhood in the Goblin Market
Submitted by sara.gladwin on Fri, 02/03/2012 - 7:56pm
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
The Role of Sisterhood in The Goblin Market.docx | 135.72 KB |
Groups:
Remote Ready Biology Learning Activities
Remote Ready Biology Learning Activities has 50 remote-ready activities, which work for either your classroom or remote teaching.
About Student Papers
This paper reflects the research and thoughts of a student at the time the paper was written for a course at Bryn Mawr College. Like other materials on Serendip, it is not intended to be "authoritative" but rather to help others further develop their own explorations. Web links were active as of the time the paper was posted but are not updated. |
Narrative is determined not by a desire to narrate but by a desire to exchange. (Roland Barthes, S/Z)
What's New? Subscribe to Serendip Studio
Recent Group Comments
-
Malena (guest)
-
yandere_chan (guest)
-
Ryan Harley (guest)
-
Serendip Visitor (guest)
-
Ecchi Lover (guest)
-
Nick (guest)
-
Rebecca A.Z. (guest)
-
Lily Isaacs (guest)
-
Serendip Visitor (guest)
-
Lulastic (guest)
Recent Group Posts
A Random Walk
Play Chance in Life and the World for a new perspective on randomness and order.
New Topics
-
5 weeks 4 hours ago
-
5 weeks 3 days ago
-
5 weeks 3 days ago
-
5 weeks 3 days ago
-
5 weeks 3 days ago
Comments
Sororphobia?
sara--
Rosenberg's essay is an analysis of "relations between women in the nineteenth-century America"--is there any reason to doubt its relevance for an English female poet in 1862?
You do a nice job here of showing the important role Jeanie plays in the poem as exemplar of the sisterless (therefore "lost") woman, and the ways in which her position resembles that of Eliza, the coquette.
But I'd like to nudge you to keep on thinking some more about the way in which you see "sisterhood, not marriage or relationship with any man," as the ultimate virtue in the poem, one that offers, moreover, a "form of conditioning" that prevents "Goblin Market" from being read as "a steamy erotic poem." Why the investment in avoiding a sexual reading, and replacing it with a sisterly one?
When we talked about this project, I had suggested that you might complexify your understanding of sisterly bonds by looking @ Helen Michie's book, Sororophobia: Differences among Women in Literature, which examines hte textual representation of differences among women @ a variety of historical moments and in a variety of cultural contexts. According to one review, Sororophobia "designates the complex and shifting relations between women's attempts to identify with other women and their often simultaneous desire to establish and retain difference. Michie argues for the centrality to feminism of a paradigm that moves beyond celebrations of identity and sisterhood to a more nuanced notion of women's relations with other women which may include such uncomfortable concepts as envy, jealousy, and competition as well as more institutionalized ideas of difference such as race and class.
I'd like to nudge you, still, into something of this more nuanced understanding of the "female world of love and ritual" that--following Smith-Rosenberg--you celebrate here. Are there no traces of (say) envy, jealousy and competition in Rossetti's poem?