Eating or Being Eaten: Symbolic Reversals in Louise Erdrich’s Poetic Mythology

dc.contributor.advisorCorporaal, M.C.M.
dc.contributor.advisorBak, J.T.J.
dc.contributor.authorEngelen, N.
dc.date.issued2019-10-31
dc.description.abstractThe central claim of this thesis is that the poetry of Louise Erdrich is built on a poetic mythology that reemploys the dynamic of the Trickster and the Wiindigoo on several different levels. I take some characters, plot developments, and even relations between words or phrases to be manifestations or incarnations of these mythical figures. As a whole, the symbolic structure that emerges, I claim, functions as what Roland Barthes calls an “artificial myth” (134)—a certain poetic form that pushes against the hegemony of the dominant myths—in this case the myth or logic of Manifest Destiny. In fact, the mythologies themselves become incarnations of the Trickster and the Wiindigoo. Like the Trickster, the American Indian mythologies are eaten by the consuming force of settler-colonialism—the Wiindigoo incarnate. The way that Erdrich writes against this force, moreover, mirrors the Trickster’s liberation from the belly of the monster—providing personal and communal modes of agency for Erdrich and her characters.en_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://theses.ubn.ru.nl/handle/123456789/8773
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.thesis.facultyFaculteit der Letterenen_US
dc.thesis.specialisationLiterary studiesen_US
dc.thesis.studyprogrammeResearchmastersen_US
dc.thesis.typeResearchmasteren_US
dc.titleEating or Being Eaten: Symbolic Reversals in Louise Erdrich’s Poetic Mythologyen_US
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