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2010 | 5 |

Article title

Girlhood, Disability, and Liminality in Barbara Gowdy’s Mister Sandman

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Content

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EN

Abstracts

EN
Barbara Gowdy’s 1996 novel Mister Sandman centers on the mysteriously silent figure of Joan Cannary, a mentally disabled child who yet does not become a spectacle of the grotesque in the mode quite standard for representations of the disabled female figures, as Rosemarie Garland Thomson noticed in her magisterial study Extraordinary Bodies: Figuring Physical Disability in American Culture and Literature. In her disability Gowdy’s Joan does not constitute a metaphor of the condition of her family, either, despite the transgressions they are prone to devote themselves to. The novel offers an open-minded outlook on transgression as a means of liberating oneself from the social constraints and from the self-imposed limitations. Joan’s eternal girlhood makes her a lens for the family members’ tendency to transgress against the norms, which is ultimately received with affirmation. Her figure offers a valuable commentary on other texts by Gowdy, which present a discourse on the liminality of human body and on the boundaries of identity. Key words: Barbara Gowdy, Canadian novel in English, disability, body, gender.

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Year

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5

Physical description

Dates

published
2010

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Publication order reference

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YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.ojs-issn-2353-9887-year-2010-volume-5-article-5775
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