This article aims to show that although Doris Lessing
rejects the relatively narrow categorisation of her writing as “feminist”, the
two short stories she wrote in 1963, “To Room Nineteen” and “How I Finally Lost
My Heart”, make the claims of second wave feminism visible. As they illustrate
a wholistic attitude that sees human beings beyond labels, the stories’
emphasis on the need to bridge the artificial gap between public and private
realms supports the second wave feminism’s slogan: “The personal is political!” The article argues that
as social
constructs that conceptualize different realms of everyday life, public and
private spaces are understood as gendered, therefore a separation between them
is part of a patriarchal political structure that imposes a restriction on
women’s personal lives. As a writer who problematizes artificial divides in
social life, Doris Lessing clearly imbues her works with this consciousness
that goes hand in hand with the central discussions of second wave feminism’s
consciousness raising groups.
second wave feminism gender and space private versus public space
Bölüm | Beşeri Bilimler Sayısı |
---|---|
Yazarlar | |
Yayımlanma Tarihi | 30 Eylül 2017 |
Yayımlandığı Sayı | Yıl 2017 Cilt: 15 Sayı: 3 |