The Study of Psychoanalytical and Post-Colonial Feminism in Margaret Atwood's Surfacing (original) (raw)

The drive of my article is to study meticulously the notion of societal sarcasm, illuminating and thus modifying the people's disfigurement interconnected to the work of fiction, Surfacing by the Canadian author Margaret Atwood. Feminism is diligently linked to the passage into the centre. There are dualistic possibilities for all-chiefly to breathe alike an ostrich corresponding to the realm of fiction and to walk into the area of realism. Human beings are similar to the blessing on the globe with their impregnable command of intellectualism to shield their personal life as well as the earth where they are breathing. Every human being should appreciate the worth of their life. Anarchism or despotism comes with radical and financial control. Females have been browbeaten in numerous means by the self-styled divine Male. In Surfacing, Margaret Atwood dealt with 'Feminism' or 'Self-discovery' by executing the two types of concepts such as, Psychoanalysis and Post-Colonialism. The novel portrays on probing of their individuality and a woman who comes back to her birthplace, Northern Quebec Bush in Canada to discover her lost father. Escorted by her lover and an added wedded duo, the nameless central character chances upon her bygone days in her juvenile house, recollecting occasions and moods, whereas trying to gather evidences for her father's enigmatic loss. Meticulously, the bygone days surpasses her and pushes her into the realm of wildness and psychosis. Although these types of effects are chanced upon in the novel which marks Surfacing as a psychoanalytic and post-colonial work of fiction.

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