The Sense of Self and Muting the Voice:Aida in the “Symphony of the Dead”

سال انتشار: 1400
نوع سند: مقاله کنفرانسی
زبان: انگلیسی
مشاهده: 208

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شناسه ملی سند علمی:

MTCONF07_114

تاریخ نمایه سازی: 19 دی 1400

چکیده مقاله:

This paper seeks to analyse the character of “Aida” in Abbas Maroufi’s greatest work “Symphony of theDead” according to Carol Gilligan’s feminist theory of self. Gilligan, the contemporary American psychoanalyst,carried out research concentrating on the women’s sense of self in connection with the others. It is, in fact, based onthe argument that the development of women’s patterns of morality is related to their feelings of care for and therelationships with others. Known as the “ethics of care”, the theory illuminates how the women define themselves in apatriarchal tradition beyond the prescribed perspective of the essentialism. Within the binary force of genders whichkeeps the women in the Freudian continuous envy and weakness leading to their voicelessness, Gilligan shows that girlsand women possess a transformative faculty which empowers them in dealing with the false messages of the maledominant society. Women’s ability and capacity to connect to others in terms of sympathizing, empathizing, supportingand providing etc., which generally means caring, is contributing to their development of morality. ObservingMaroufi’s female character in “Symphony of the Dead” and analysing her development from a young girl at herparents’ home to her marriage and living with her husband challenge the existing perspective toward women and theirvoice.Keyw

نویسندگان

Marziyeh Farivar

Department of English Language and Literature University of Gonabad Gonabad, Iran