Cosmogynesis: The female hero in Tanith Lee’s <i>The winter players</i>

The mass appearance of female heroes in popular culture in recent decades may encourage the opinion that the female hero has achieved the same credibility as her male counterpart. This article demonstrates, however, that she continues to generate ambivalence and that the primary reservation of most...

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Main Author: Eileen Donaldson
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: AOSIS 2017-11-01
Series:Literator
Subjects:
Online Access:https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/1413
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spelling doaj-27dd1c0c5bac49aeb744632258aa16ae2020-11-24T22:15:59ZafrAOSISLiterator0258-22792219-82372017-11-01381e1e1010.4102/lit.v38i1.14131229Cosmogynesis: The female hero in Tanith Lee’s <i>The winter players</i>Eileen Donaldson0Department of English Studies, University of South AfricaThe mass appearance of female heroes in popular culture in recent decades may encourage the opinion that the female hero has achieved the same credibility as her male counterpart. This article demonstrates, however, that she continues to generate ambivalence and that the primary reservation of most scholars is that a female hero either cannot or should not perform the masculinity of the archetype. Scholarly arguments tend towards two positions: that a female hero is an oxymoron; or that she should be limited to battles on behalf of women in which she champions feminine characteristics and challenges the belief that femininity is not heroic. Neither of these positions take archetypal heroism into account. Advocating a return to Jungian archetypal theory, I argue that the masculinity of the archetype may be as successfully performed by a female hero as by a male hero. Once this premise is accepted, the female hero should be expected to undergo the same trials and perform the same function as a male hero, in short, she should navigate the heroic monomyth outlined by Joseph Campbell. I illustrate this point through a literary analysis of Tanith Lee’s 1976 fantasy novella The winter players.https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/1413female heroarchetypal heroTanith Leefeminist fantasyJoseph Campbellmonomyth
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eileen Donaldson
spellingShingle Eileen Donaldson
Cosmogynesis: The female hero in Tanith Lee’s <i>The winter players</i>
Literator
female hero
archetypal hero
Tanith Lee
feminist fantasy
Joseph Campbell
monomyth
author_facet Eileen Donaldson
author_sort Eileen Donaldson
title Cosmogynesis: The female hero in Tanith Lee’s <i>The winter players</i>
title_short Cosmogynesis: The female hero in Tanith Lee’s <i>The winter players</i>
title_full Cosmogynesis: The female hero in Tanith Lee’s <i>The winter players</i>
title_fullStr Cosmogynesis: The female hero in Tanith Lee’s <i>The winter players</i>
title_full_unstemmed Cosmogynesis: The female hero in Tanith Lee’s <i>The winter players</i>
title_sort cosmogynesis: the female hero in tanith lee’s <i>the winter players</i>
publisher AOSIS
series Literator
issn 0258-2279
2219-8237
publishDate 2017-11-01
description The mass appearance of female heroes in popular culture in recent decades may encourage the opinion that the female hero has achieved the same credibility as her male counterpart. This article demonstrates, however, that she continues to generate ambivalence and that the primary reservation of most scholars is that a female hero either cannot or should not perform the masculinity of the archetype. Scholarly arguments tend towards two positions: that a female hero is an oxymoron; or that she should be limited to battles on behalf of women in which she champions feminine characteristics and challenges the belief that femininity is not heroic. Neither of these positions take archetypal heroism into account. Advocating a return to Jungian archetypal theory, I argue that the masculinity of the archetype may be as successfully performed by a female hero as by a male hero. Once this premise is accepted, the female hero should be expected to undergo the same trials and perform the same function as a male hero, in short, she should navigate the heroic monomyth outlined by Joseph Campbell. I illustrate this point through a literary analysis of Tanith Lee’s 1976 fantasy novella The winter players.
topic female hero
archetypal hero
Tanith Lee
feminist fantasy
Joseph Campbell
monomyth
url https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/1413
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