The Antigone Discourse: Zines and Blogs as Articulations of Young Women's Subjectivites

Zines and blogs written by the young women in this study are an important form of inquiry that, if considered by educators, may push us to critically question discourses of young womanhood, questions of subjectivity, and the way we engage with texts. I use readings of Antigone to shape a reading of...

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Main Author: Hochman, Jessica Lee
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.7916/D8PV6SCK
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spelling ndltd-columbia.edu-oai-academiccommons.columbia.edu-10.7916-D8PV6SCK2019-05-09T15:13:39ZThe Antigone Discourse: Zines and Blogs as Articulations of Young Women's SubjectivitesHochman, Jessica Lee2011ThesesEducation--PhilosophyZines and blogs written by the young women in this study are an important form of inquiry that, if considered by educators, may push us to critically question discourses of young womanhood, questions of subjectivity, and the way we engage with texts. I use readings of Antigone to shape a reading of this discourse. I argue following Judith Butler (2000), that her act speaks to the loss of her particular brother, as well as the ungrievable losses resultant from her tragic family life. Her story invites us to question boundaries of public and private, and suggests a space between them that was inaccessible to Antigone. Similarly, young women who publicly articulate their stories in zines and blogs access a hybrid space, between public and private, where they conduct important subjectivity work. Through hermeneutic readings of these texts, I explore the ways in which their authors articulate the importance of hybrid spaces between public and private as where they can do this work. Like Antigone, whose action challenges binaries, young women who posit their personal stories in public reflect on the past in a way that suggests melancholia, or an unwillingness to part with the past completely as they moves toward the future. I conclude by arguing that when academics and educators approach these texts as hermeneutic readers, they engage in a critical process of understanding with these young women that invites consideration of new feminism articulated in these works.Englishhttps://doi.org/10.7916/D8PV6SCK
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Education--Philosophy
spellingShingle Education--Philosophy
Hochman, Jessica Lee
The Antigone Discourse: Zines and Blogs as Articulations of Young Women's Subjectivites
description Zines and blogs written by the young women in this study are an important form of inquiry that, if considered by educators, may push us to critically question discourses of young womanhood, questions of subjectivity, and the way we engage with texts. I use readings of Antigone to shape a reading of this discourse. I argue following Judith Butler (2000), that her act speaks to the loss of her particular brother, as well as the ungrievable losses resultant from her tragic family life. Her story invites us to question boundaries of public and private, and suggests a space between them that was inaccessible to Antigone. Similarly, young women who publicly articulate their stories in zines and blogs access a hybrid space, between public and private, where they conduct important subjectivity work. Through hermeneutic readings of these texts, I explore the ways in which their authors articulate the importance of hybrid spaces between public and private as where they can do this work. Like Antigone, whose action challenges binaries, young women who posit their personal stories in public reflect on the past in a way that suggests melancholia, or an unwillingness to part with the past completely as they moves toward the future. I conclude by arguing that when academics and educators approach these texts as hermeneutic readers, they engage in a critical process of understanding with these young women that invites consideration of new feminism articulated in these works.
author Hochman, Jessica Lee
author_facet Hochman, Jessica Lee
author_sort Hochman, Jessica Lee
title The Antigone Discourse: Zines and Blogs as Articulations of Young Women's Subjectivites
title_short The Antigone Discourse: Zines and Blogs as Articulations of Young Women's Subjectivites
title_full The Antigone Discourse: Zines and Blogs as Articulations of Young Women's Subjectivites
title_fullStr The Antigone Discourse: Zines and Blogs as Articulations of Young Women's Subjectivites
title_full_unstemmed The Antigone Discourse: Zines and Blogs as Articulations of Young Women's Subjectivites
title_sort antigone discourse: zines and blogs as articulations of young women's subjectivites
publishDate 2011
url https://doi.org/10.7916/D8PV6SCK
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