Death and Woman: Comparing the Meaning of the Deaths of the Female Main Characters in the Works of Toni Morrison and Alice Munro

https://doi.org/10.22146/lexicon.v6i1.50315

Achmad Munjid(1*)

(1) English Department, Universitas Gadjah Mada
(*) Corresponding Author

Abstract


This paper seeks to explore the meaning of death in two important works by two female Noble Prize winning authors, Toni Morrison and Alice Munro. Hagin’s (2010) theory of role of death in storyline is used to analyze the works. The three deaths found in the story: initial death, intermediary death and story-terminating death all have significant meaningful relation to the past and the future. They have epistemological value of revealing and/or exposing the truth from the past. Death is used as technical instrument to reveal the truth, to transform ignorance into knowledge, dishonesty into accountability, to purify the past from falsehood and lies. Death also inserts its demand in the story by removing obstacle or giving opportunity for the living to set up new goal. The demand of the dead is possible since the deceased is “remembered” by the “cult” who may follow or manipulate their legacy. The two authors articulate “feminist voice” through the struggle of the main female characters. Toni Morrison articulates the dehumanizing consequence of racism, whereas Alice Munro voices her concern on the contradictory nature of orderly neat appearance of the modern people versus scandalous dark secret beneath the surface.

Keywords: dehumanization, feminist voice, initial death, intermediary death, story-terminating death, racism.


Keywords


dehumanization; feminist voice; initial death; intermediary death; story-terminating death; racism

Full Text:

PDF


References

Abram, M.H. (1999). A glossary of literary terms (7th ed.). New York: Heinle & Heinle.

Ariès, P. (1974). Western attitudes toward death from the middle ages to the present. London: Johns Hopkins University Press.

Aspiz, H. (2005). So long! Walt Whitman's poetry of death. Tuscaloosa & London: The University of Alabama Press.

Bellamy, E. (ed.). (2004). Imagining death in Spenser and Milton. New York: Palgrave MacMillan.

Berry, P. (1999). Shakespeare's feminine endings, disfiguring death in the tragedies. London & New York: Routledge.

Bevington, D. (1989). Is this the promised end, death and dying in King Lear. Proceedings of the American philosophical society, 133(3), 404-415.

Bloom, H. (ed.) (2006). Arthur Miller's death of a salesman. New York: Chelsea House Publishers.

Bloom, H. (ed). (2009). Bloom’s literary theme: Death and dying. New York: Bloom’s Literary Criticism.

Cavitch, M. (2007). American elegy, the poetry of mourning from the puritans to Whitman. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Critchley, S. (2004). Almost nothing: Death, philosophy and literature. New York: Routledge.

Cutting, A. (2006). Death in Henry James. New York: Palgrave MacMillan.

Eagleton, T. (2013). How to read literature. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Ellis, D. (2008). Death and the author: How D. H. Lawrence died and was remembered. Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press.

Hagin, B. (2010). Death in the classical Hollywood cinema. New York: Verso.

Hotz, M. E. (2009). Literary remains, representations of death and burial in Victorian England. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.

Kabir, A. J. (2001). Paradise, death and doomsday in Anglo-Saxon literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Kubler-Ross, E. (2008). On death and dying: What the dying have to teach doctors, nurses, clergies and their own families (40th ed.). New York: Routledge.

Mandel, M. (2004). A companion to Hemingway's Death in the Afternoon. Rochester, NY: Camden House.

McMullan, G. (2008). Shakespeare and the idea of late writing: Authorship in the proximity of death. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Morrison, T.(1994).The bluest eye. New York: A Plume Book.

Munro, A. (1998). The love of a good woman. Toronto: Douglas Gibson Book.

Napier, J. (1983). The stages of dying and the death of Ivan Ilych. College Literature, 10(2), 147-157.

Parkes, C. (1997). Death and bereavement across cultures. London & New York: Routledge.

Peveto, C. (ed). (2004). Cultural changes in attitudes toward death, dying, and bereavement. New York: Springer Publishing Company.

Smith, R. R. (2010). Death-drive, Freudian hauntings in literature and art. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, Ltd.

Snyder, S. (1982). King Lear and the psychology of dying. Shakespeare Quarterly, 33(4), 449-460.

Thompson, V. (2004). Dying and death in later Anglo-Saxon England. Woodbridge, England: The Boydell Press.



DOI: https://doi.org/10.22146/lexicon.v6i1.50315

Article Metrics

Abstract views : 1247 | views : 1788

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Copyright (c) 2019 Achmad Munjid

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.


Lexicon Office

English Department
Faculty of Cultural Sciences,
Universitas Gadjah Mada
Soegondo Building, 3rd Floor, Room 306
Yogyakarta, Indonesia 55281
Telephone: +62 274 513096
Email: lexicon.fib@ugm.ac.id

ISSN: 2746-2668 (Online)

Web Analytics View Stats

Creative Commons License
LEXICON is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Lexicon is indexed in

 

About UsSubmissionIssuePoliciesReview