Literary Autobiography and Subject Formation: A Comparative Study of Mona Enamouri’s A Chat upon Thames and Elif Shafak’s Black Milk

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Date

2020-03

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Article

Publisher

Cairo University

Series Info

مجلة وادی النیل للدراسات والبحوث الإنسانیة والاجتماعیة والتربویه;Article 8, Volume 25, 25 - الجزء الثالث, Winter 2020, Page 1-30

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Abstract

The two novels, Mona Enamouri’s A Chat Upon Thames (2014) and Elif Shafak’s Black Milk (2007), are autobiographical writings that depict the process of self-representation revealing a postmodern feminist interest in subject formation. Enamouri, on one hand, reflects on the self between places and voices revealing a construction of awareness and self-definition in reaction to external experiences. Shafak, on the other, interweaves a number of questions on female body and identity within the contextual struggle of patriarchical society and intrinsic emotional-personality struggles. Pregnancy and post-partum depression are discussed in line with questions of what it means to have a family, construct a book and determine self-worth. Negotiating a range of feminist thematic preoccupations with voice, spaces, and body the two novels unravel the critical function of feminist autobiographies in constructing the self from “discordant” voices through a dynamic process of self-representation through creation.

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Keywords

literary autobiography, women studies, post-modern subject, pfeminist autobiography, Aesthetic Subject, literary autobiography, Elif Shafak, Mona Enamouri

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