Of tails and Tempests : Feminine sexuality and Shakespearean children's texts


Autoria(s): Hateley, Erica
Data(s)

2006

Resumo

This paper reads a range of nineteenth-century texts for children that retell either Shakespeare's The Tempest or mermaid narratives, considering the models of feminine subjectivity and sexuality that they construct. It then moves on to two key contemporary texts — Disney's film adaptation of The Little Mermaid (Clements and Musker 1989) and Penni Russon's Undine (2004) — that combine the Shakespearean heroine with the mermaid, and reads them against the nineteenth-century models. Ultimately, the essay determines that, while these texts seem to perform a progressive appropriation of the two traditions, they actually combine the most conservative aspects of both The Tempest and mermaid stories to produce authoritative (and dangerously persuasive) ideals of passive feminine sexuality that confine girls within patriarchally-dictated familial positions. The new figure for adolescent female subjectivity, the mermaid-Miranda, becomes in turn a model of identification and aspiration for the implied juvenile consumer.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/27272/

Publicador

Depatment of English, University of Georgia

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/27272/2/27272.pdf

http://www.borrowers.uga.edu/cocoon/borrowers/request?id=781420

Hateley, Erica (2006) Of tails and Tempests : Feminine sexuality and Shakespearean children's texts. Borrowers and Lenders : The Journal of Shakespeare and Appropriation, 2(1).

Direitos

Copyright 2003 Dept. of English, University of Georgia

Fonte

Faculty of Education; School of Cultural & Language Studies in Education

Palavras-Chave #200599 Literary Studies not elsewhere classified #190204 Film and Television
Tipo

Journal Article