Issue Details: First known date: 2013... 2013 The Disempowerment of Women in the Domestic Sphere : The Fiction of Amy Witting (1918 – 2001)
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'This article examines ways in which the fiction of the acclaimed Australian writer Amy Witting, dubbed Australia’s Chekov and whom Helen Garner acknowledged as her ‘literary mother,’ interrogates the disempowerment of women in the domestic sphere, asserting that the home is a contested space and conflicted place for women. Witting subverts the notion that a ‘woman’s place is in the home’ by demonstrating that many

women are actually displaced and dispossessed in the inhibiting domestic spaces that are their ‘homes.’ In her fiction, women are isolated and excluded because of gender inequity

in regard to women’s rights and duties in the domestic sphere. Women are also marginalised in regard to inadequate financial rewards for domestic productivity and are affected by circumstances underpinned by discourses of poverty, class conflict and domestic violence. Witting asserts that the disempowerment of women in the home often leads to women appropriating masculinist attitudes and behaviours of oppression towards other women less powerful than themselves. In this article, these concepts are explored with close reference to five of Witting’s novels and interviews conducted with the author.' (Author's abstract)

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Last amended 8 Aug 2013 10:39:49
94-103 http://pandora.nla.gov.au/pan/60900/20130720-0027/www.uq.edu.au/crossroads/Archives/Vol%206/Issue%202%202013/Vol6Iss213%20-%2012.Smee%20(p.94-103).pdf The Disempowerment of Women in the Domestic Sphere : The Fiction of Amy Witting (1918 – 2001)small AustLit logo Crossroads : An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Study of History, Philosophy, Religion and Classics
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