Intertextuality and Dialogism in the Feminine Novel: R. West’s The Return of the Soldier (1918) and D. Lessing’s The Golden Notebook (1962).
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University of Tlemcen
Abstract
Women’s Writing as a literary discipline emerged in the light of the
development of feminism. In the early beginnings women writers were following
the traces of male literature, since it was hard to find writings done by women in the
middle ages or before the Victorian era. The rise of the novel coincides with the
appearance of women’s writing, which made the novel the main literary genre
adopted by women writers. As a first part, this research work deals directly with the
different generations of women’s writing. Then, it delves into the literary discourse
analysis of The Return of the Soldier by Rebecca West and The Golden Notebook
by Doris Lessing. It primarily examines Intertextuality and Dialogism as literary
techniques in the feminine novel. Afterwards it highlights the position of the
woman through the early and the mid nineteenth century, since there was a huge
change in the social, political and economic life of women in this century