liu.seSearch for publications in DiVA
Change search
CiteExportLink to record
Permanent link

Direct link
Cite
Citation style
  • apa
  • ieee
  • modern-language-association-8th-edition
  • vancouver
  • oxford
  • Other style
More styles
Language
  • de-DE
  • en-GB
  • en-US
  • fi-FI
  • nn-NO
  • nn-NB
  • sv-SE
  • Other locale
More languages
Output format
  • html
  • text
  • asciidoc
  • rtf
The Mother Figure in the Surrealist Novel
Linköping University, Department of Culture and Society, Division of Language, Culture and Interaction. Linköping University, Faculty of Arts and Sciences.
2023 (English)In: A History of the Surrealist Novel / [ed] Anna Watz, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2023, 1, p. 152-167Chapter in book (Refereed)
Abstract [en]

In the surrealist revolt against the state, the Church, and the family, the mother figure became a key target, both as custodian of bourgeois-patriarchal values and as symbol of Catholic doctrine. In works such as Georges Bataille’s Story of the Eye (1928), Salvador Dalí and Luis Buñuel’s L’age d’or (1930), and Joyce Mansour’s Jules César (1955), mothers are attacked and violated, suffering a fate similar to those of the detested mother figures in the fiction of the Marquis de Sade. Yet not all mothers in surrealist art and literature are portrayed in such unequivocally negative terms. Focusing on Leonor Fini’s Mourmour, conte pour enfants velus (1976) and Dorothea Tanning’s Chasm: A Weekend (2004), this chapter traces an alternative history of surrealist representations of the mother, one in which this figure is rendered more ambiguous and at times even invested with revolutionary potential. These novels, the chapter suggests, elaborate representations of maternity in critical dialogue with Freudian and Lacanian psychoanalysis. As such they resonate to some extent with the (largely contemporaneous) work of French feminist theorists such as Julia Kristeva, Luce Irigaray, and Hélène Cixous, in which the concept of maternity becomes configured as an alternative to the phallocentric symbolic order.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2023, 1. p. 152-167
National Category
General Literature Studies
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-194076DOI: 10.1017/9781009082648.012ISI: 001066291700010Libris ID: wd3kzrjnt0xhgr42ISBN: 9781009082648 (electronic)ISBN: 9781316514153 (print)OAI: oai:DiVA.org:liu-194076DiVA, id: diva2:1758754
Funder
Swedish Research Council, 2018-01419Available from: 2023-05-23 Created: 2023-05-23 Last updated: 2025-10-13Bibliographically approved

Open Access in DiVA

No full text in DiVA

Other links

Publisher's full textFind book at a Swedish library/Hitta boken i ett svenskt bibliotekFind book at a swedish library/Hitta boken i ett svenskt bibliotek

Authority records

Watz, Anna

Search in DiVA

By author/editor
Watz, Anna
By organisation
Division of Language, Culture and InteractionFaculty of Arts and Sciences
General Literature Studies

Search outside of DiVA

GoogleGoogle Scholar

doi
isbn
urn-nbn

Altmetric score

doi
isbn
urn-nbn
Total: 113 hits
CiteExportLink to record
Permanent link

Direct link
Cite
Citation style
  • apa
  • ieee
  • modern-language-association-8th-edition
  • vancouver
  • oxford
  • Other style
More styles
Language
  • de-DE
  • en-GB
  • en-US
  • fi-FI
  • nn-NO
  • nn-NB
  • sv-SE
  • Other locale
More languages
Output format
  • html
  • text
  • asciidoc
  • rtf