This thesis features a range of texts that exemplify my practice. They
include experimental prose, poetry, hybrid forms of writing that merge theory
and practice, and scripts for live performance and digital film. To these
examples I apply an autobiographical writing method, one that simultaneously
reflects and creates, in an enquiry designed to uncover the detail and
complexity of my writing motivation through a discursive account of its
context.
In a process that acknowledges the centrality of language to the
construction of female identity, I begin by exploring the importance of
autobiography to both my writing and this thesis. Next I give an account of an
artistic project, designed to identify and collect perspectives on the main areas
of debate and concern. I then revisit the writing of significant gender theorists,
including Julia Kristeva, Luce Irigaray and Helene Cixous. The sections that
follow use two scripts for live performance to illustrate the 'predicament' of the
female performer and the importance of myth to women's artistic practice.
My conclusion, and the thesis as a whole, is a demonstration of, and an
enquiry into, a method of 'writing through'. This reflexive strategy questions
how writing functions, how it responds to, and incorporates various influences.
It attempts to understand how such a process, such writing, not only enquires
into context, but also can impact on it, in a methodology less concerned with
representing knowledge and more concerned with releasing it.
Date of Award | 2008 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Supervisor | John Hall (Director of Studies (First Supervisor)) & E. Claid (Other Supervisor) |
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SPEAKING OF GENDER, LANGUAGE AND IDENTITY: WRITING THE PERSONAL
BRIDGER, B. (Author). 2008
Student thesis: PhD