'Towards the new writing': Écriture féminine and women's twenty-first-century modernism
dc.contributor.advisor
Spinks, Lee
dc.contributor.advisor
Lawrie, Alexandra
dc.contributor.advisor
Jones, Carole
dc.contributor.author
Stallard, Carys
dc.date.accessioned
2026-02-25T16:12:29Z
dc.date.issued
2025-12-17
dc.description.abstract
This thesis examines the legacy of écriture féminine and Joycean modernist aesthetics in the work of a number of contemporary women writers. In particular, it explores the continuing influence of James Joyce's Ulysses (1922) on contemporary women's writing.
Despite appearing in some ways as a masculinist text, exploring a day in the lives of two male protagonists, Ulysses has had an enduring impact upon feminist aesthetics, with Hélène Cixous identifying it as an inaugural example of écriture féminine (feminine writing). For Cixous the ‘Penelope’ episode that closes Ulysses develops a style of writing that presents a new understanding of women’s experience and psychology uncircumscribed by the economy of patriarchal discourse. In her essay ‘The Laugh of the Medusa’ (1975), Cixous urged writers to follow Joyce in devising innovative styles of writing that explore the myriad forms and possibilities of women’s experience. This thesis argues that, in responding to Cixous's demand by developing new works of écriture féminine that reimagine the singularity and multiplicity of women’s experience, several key contemporary women writers continue to engage (directly and indirectly) in a creative dialogue with Joyce's modernist novel. Chapter One examines the development of the Joycean stream-of-consciousness technique in Eimear McBride’s A Girl is a Half-formed Thing (2013), Ducks, Newburyport (2019) by Lucy Ellmann and Bernardine Evaristo's Girl, Woman, Other (2020). Chapter Two focuses upon women’s day-in-the-life and life-writing projects to explore the feminist reworking of Joycean forms and styles in Rebecca Watson’s little scratch (2021), Claire-Louise Bennett’s Checkout 19 (2021), and Ali Smith’s seasonal quartet (2016-20). Chapter Three explores the refinement and redetermination of the Joycean mythic method in Circe (2018) by Madeline Miller, Pleasure Beach (2023) by Helen Palmer, and Demon Copperhead (2023) by Barbara Kingsolver.
Each chapter aims to show both how contemporary women's writing promotes new understandings of Joycean modernism and the ways in which twenty-first-century feminist writers have transformed Joyce’s proto-feminist literary practice.
dc.identifier.uri
https://era.ed.ac.uk/handle/1842/44439
dc.identifier.uri
https://doi.org/10.7488/era/6959
dc.language.iso
en
dc.subject
contemporary women's writing
dc.subject
James Joyce
dc.subject
Ulysses
dc.subject
post-Joyceanism
dc.subject
metamodernism
dc.subject
women's writings
dc.subject
Eimear McBride
dc.subject
Lucy Ellmann
dc.subject
Bernardine Evaristo
dc.subject
Rebecca Watson
dc.subject
Claire-Louise Bennett
dc.subject
Ali Smith
dc.subject
Madeline Miller
dc.subject
Helen Palmer
dc.subject
Barbara Kingsolver
dc.subject
Modernism
dc.subject
Cixous
dc.subject
écriture féminine
dc.subject
stream of consciousness
dc.subject
life writing
dc.subject
mythic method
dc.subject
single day novel
dc.subject
day in the life
dc.subject
Feminist Criticism
dc.title
'Towards the new writing': Écriture féminine and women's twenty-first-century modernism
dc.type
Thesis
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
Files
Original bundle
1 - 1 of 1
- Name:
- Sully Stallard2025.pdf
- Size:
- 2.08 MB
- Format:
- Adobe Portable Document Format
This item appears in the following Collection(s)

