e-space
Manchester Metropolitan University's Research Repository

    The wounded woman and the parrot: post-feminist girlhood in Alan Warner's "The Sopranos" and Bella Bathurst's "Special"

    Schoene, Berthold (2006) The wounded woman and the parrot: post-feminist girlhood in Alan Warner's "The Sopranos" and Bella Bathurst's "Special". Journal of gender studies, 15 (2). pp. 133-144. ISSN 0958-9236

    File not available for download.

    Abstract

    The essay reads two British novels about teenage girls – Alan Warner's The Sopranos (1998) and Bella Bathurst's Special (2002) – within the context of recent sociological Girls' Studies research. Particular attention is given to processes of self-formation, group dynamics, and twenty-first-century girls' attitudes to both traditional femininity and feminist politics. Contrasting a group of working-class girls with a group of middle-class girls, the essay explores the discourse of ‘girl power’ by pitting the post-feminist ideal of the ‘can-do’ girl against the Ophelian spectre of the ‘at-risk’ girl, thus raising issues of low self-esteem as well as the politics of girls' anger and young female ‘re/sisterhood’. Comparing Bathurst's image of wounded femininity to Warner's carnivalesque symbolism of a parrot on the loose, the essay also interrogates the feminist commitment of both texts, especially in relation to Warner's novel as an example of male ‘cross-writing’.

    Impact and Reach

    Statistics

    Activity Overview
    6 month trend
    0Downloads
    6 month trend
    444Hits

    Additional statistics for this dataset are available via IRStats2.

    Altmetric

    Actions (login required)

    View Item View Item