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"Day of the girls": reading gender, power, and violence in Naomi Alderman's The Power

journal contribution
posted on 2020-01-01, 00:00 authored by Alyson MillerAlyson Miller
Naomi Alderman's The Power is a speculative fiction that imagines a dystopia in which women, enabled by the ability to generate electrical power, come to rule a matriarchal world order. Yet the narrative highlights the danger of replicating old paradigms; indeed, critics were quick to highlight the problematic inversions of The Power, noting that whilst a female superpower might offer a reprieve from reality, it is neither optimistic nor feminist. However, the complications of Alderman's narrative are much more nuanced, as it uses representations of extreme violence as a strategy of resistance. It does so through a critical exposure of the means through which patriarchy controls women, and by literalizing those mythic archetypes associated with femininity, specifically the monstrous-feminine and its association with abject and highly sexualized imagery. By drawing upon conceptualizations of the monstrous-feminine and abjection via Barbara Creed and Julia Kristeva, and Linda Hutcheon's theorizations of postmodern parody, this essay argues that by reframing "female monstrosity as a source of physical power" (to quote Casey Ryan Kelly [2016]), The Power offers a scenario in which women are able to "combat a culture of gender violence."

History

Journal

College literature

Volume

47

Issue

2

Season

Spring

Pagination

398 - 433

Publisher

The Johns Hopkins University Press

Location

Baltimore, Md.

ISSN

0093-3139

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

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