Peripheries of Girlhood; Erin Bow’s Plain Kate

Autor

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31261/RS.2021.19.09

Słowa kluczowe:

Young Adult Literature, girlhood, liminality, transgression, Erin Bow’s novel

Abstrakt

The focus of this analysis is a representation of girlhood in Erin Bow’s 2010 novel Plain Kate. The novel has been categorized as “Young Adult Literature” which has come to indicate subversive and a transformative potential in that it often evokes traditional narrative models only to de- and re- construct them. The eponymous Plain Kate, therefore, is a prototypical Other: an ugly, orphaned and homeless girl who has to flee her hometown under the accusations of being
a witch. She is a transitional character and a boundary-crosser; as such she does not belong anywhere. Importantly, the story makes it clear that what transforms Kate into an outsider is, among other things, her gender, which is why the protagonist’s evolution from a child into an adult is shown through metaphors of the fluid female body. This paper aims to discuss the topography of girlhood on the example of Bow’s novel, focusing specifically on the questions of marginality, otherness, liminality, and transgression, inscribed in the category of Young Adult Literature.

Bibliografia

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Opublikowane

2021-06-29

Jak cytować

Szatanik, Z. (2021). Peripheries of Girlhood; Erin Bow’s Plain Kate. Romanica Silesiana, 19(1), 105–115. https://doi.org/10.31261/RS.2021.19.09