The
University of Maryland University College Asia
David
Norris, Associate Professor
English
303
Critical
Approaches to Literature
Some
Points on Feminism
1.
What is wrong with the Cinderella story?
2.
Do women allow society to shape them? “Sell-by date” and “Wedding
cake” and similar terms illustrate this.
3.
Are the women in the text portrayed as dependent and blindly accepting
or as active in creating and determining their own lives and futures?
4.
Is marriage a woman’s ultimate goal? How often are women portrayed as
being on a quest for a husband, a mate or a benefactor?
5.
Is a woman’s life portrayed as meaningful without a man in it?
6.
Are the women oppressed by a patriarchal society? Are they marginalized
and playing secondary roles? Is the power imbalance reflected in the
text?
7.
Does the text give voice and value to women’s opinions, or are they
instead trivialized?
8.
The Space of the Other. Are the women objects whose existence is defined
by men?
9.
Can we find misogyny in the text? “The Catbird Seat” and
“A&P” immediately come to mind.
10.
Does the text expose patriarchal premises and the resulting prejudices?
11.
Sex is biologically determined and gender is a psychological concept
referring to culturally acquired sexual identity. True?
12.
Male writers seem more interested in closure; female writers often
respond with open endings. Feminine logic in writing is often
associational, male logic sequential, i.e., goal oriented. Male
objectivity is challenged by feminine subjectivity.