Showing posts with label Wise Blood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wise Blood. Show all posts

Sacrificing Female Bodies for Redemption In Flannery O’Conner’s Wise Blood




There is a tendency among avid novel readers to find a cozy corner and allow themselves the indulgence to savor every moment as the imaginary world in the long fictive work magically comes to life, creeping upon their senses like a gentle breeze. One of the most notable features of any novel that would satisfy such a tendency is its description of women, who are often seductively beautiful and their mysterious presence in the novel is associated in the readers’ mind with an aura of gracefulness accompanied by a trail of sweet aroma which most likely oozes from their long pitch-black or golden hair and supple, sensuous bodies. Wise Blood, however, is not your typical novel. From the moment we board a train with Hazel Motes and observe the ostensibly unnecessary contempt with which he treats a woman (Mrs. Wally Bee Hitchcock), who, though rather intrusive, seems to be of a motherly disposition, a disposition that ought to extract some tenderness out of any orphaned young man away from home but fails to do so, we realize that we can hardly expect an atmosphere of mild pleasure and instructive sorrow in the violently rough journey which leads to a full nothingness at the end of the novel, where the body, male or female, is no longer an impediment for being redeemed by Jesus. Accordingly, O’Conner’s portrayal of women in Wise Blood is marked by a vehemence of tone and a ferocious impatience for worldly temptations connected with the commercialized female body. She is after blood and she does not hesitate to sacrifice elements of popular novel, including the attraction of female bodies, to achieve her transcendent ideals.

داستان دنباله دار: فابیولیست ۴ - قسمت پایانی

زن با نوشتن از خود به لحظه انقلاب و آزادی می رسد (۱۲) وقتی می نویسد تاریخ را در هم می شکند، تاریخی که همواره او را سرکوب کرده است...