After completing "goodbye weapons" as a feminist's choice against Fetterley 's criticism of "goodbye weapons", I thought it was difficult to coordinate my personal opinion and the feminist' s attack against Judith Feltley 's novel It was. I agree that Hemingway pushed women to the roadside in the process of drawing Katherine, but the reason why I corrected this crime with Hemingway is different from her. Her meaning is very good, but Fetley covers Catherine as a selfless "female end woman" like an angel by covering the disgusting women's attitude and the depth of the XX chromosome We issued a silly statement saying. It is hatred.
For feminist reading, see Judith Fettery of "Resisting Readers: Feminist Approach to American Fiction", reproduced with Praxis' literary theory, edited by Shirley F. Statton (1987). Felter believes that this story reveals "sexual conflict" in the patriarchy (South or North, old order or new order). Emily was imprisoned by his father, respecting women patriarchally. Her tax cut showed female dependence on men. Emily was a "mistake", a woman, a knight's attitude, "a version that made her father's whip more subtle and more inaccurate". The narrator represents a patriarchal thing. Subtle shape. According to Fate Riley, the narrator thinks that she is "beloved, inevitable, opaque, quiet, arrogant"; in fact, something other than human
In her articles "Feminist Reading" and "A Rose for Emily" Judith Fetterley will tell you that your expectations for people are what you are about to happen. She stated that the story of "roses for Emily" is a way to return to men's attitude towards women. "This is a claim that you can not be oppressed if you are not oppressed.If you do not make your own murder condition you can not kill," Fetley says. "The Rose" tells the story of a woman and reports this grotesque identity. Emily is representative of her murderer, Homer who refuses to pay taxes and act as a community, as well as women suffering from around the world. She will be revenge on the behavior of men. If a man does not treat her like her, Emily will not be careless like a fool.
Judith Fetterley's theory is the last analysis I will explain. She is also the nearest person to me. Fetterley thinks Emily was the most damaged from the location of Mr. in her patriarchal society. However, Emily uses this fixed idea to acquire the power of those who appointed her to this role (195). I think Faulkner used his mother's strong and independent attitude as the basis for Emily Grissen. Emily's authority over the town proves that Emily is exempt from tax at Jefferson, as well as escaping murder.