The Commonalities of Ecofeminism Writing Between Hemingway and Faulkner -- Based on the Interpretation of Hills Like White Elephants and There Was a Queen
Abstract
this paper adopts the perspective of ecofeminism and specifically elaborates from the three aspects of the intimacy between nature and women, the alienation between nature and men, and the imparity between men and women, with the intention of exploring the commonalities in
the ecofeminism writing wisdom of the two literary creators, who are identical representatives of loss of generation but shares adverse writing
styles.
Keywords
Full Text:
PDFReferences
[1] De Beauvoir, Simone and trans. H. M. Parshley. The Second Sex, London: Lowe and Brydone, 1956.
[2] Han, Qiqun. Women Without Men: A Feminist Approach to William Faulkners Short Story There Was a Queen. Foreign Language and
Literature, 03 (2005): 29-32+46.
[3] Hashmi, Nilofer. Hills Like White Elephants: The Jilting of Jig. The Hemingway Review, 23.1 (2004): 72-83.
[4] Ma, Jianjun. The Lag in the Interaction of Gender Discourse-Analysis of the Dialogue of Hills Like White Elephants. Journal of Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, 04 (2002): 24-27+59.
[5] Milln, Enrique Lafuente. The Use of Pragmatic Politeness Theory in the Interpretation of Hemingways Hills Like White Elephants.
Miscelnea, 21 (2000): 137-148.
[6] Plumwood, Val. Nature, Self and Gender: Feminism Environmental Philosophy and the Critique of Rationalism. Hypatia, 6.1 (1991):
3-27.
[7] Porter, Carolyn. Absalom Absalom!: (Un) Making the Father. In Philip M. Westein (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to William
Faulkner[C]. Shanghai: Shanghai Foreign Language Education Press, 2000.
[8] Qian Jun. A Reading of the Discourse Power in Ernest Hemingways Hills Like White Elephants. Journal of Guangdong University of
Foreign Studies, 20.01 (2009): 88-91.
[9] Zhao Bo. Power and Variation of Conception-On Feminine Narration in William Faulkners There Was a Queen. Journal of Henan Normal University (Philosophy and Social Sciences), 42.04 (2015): 167-169.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.18686/rcha.v2i3.4087
Refbacks
- There are currently no refbacks.