The Fairy Tale Enchantment and Metamorphoses in Fay Weldon’s Novel The Life and Loves of a She-Devil

Authors

  • Tatiana Golban Namık Kemal University
  • Özge Karip Namık Kemal University, English Language and Literature Department, Tekirdag

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33182/bc.v7i1.479

Keywords:

Fairy tale, motif, metamorphoses, marvellous narrative, culture of appearances, cosmetic surgery, appearance anxiety

Abstract

This article focuses on enchantment and metamorphoses motifs as used by Fay Weldon in her work The Life and Loves of a She-Devil. Since the encounter with magic is frequently stimulated by the human’s desire for more, the novelist explores these possibilities in order to represent the protagonists’ quest for the self. This study aims at discussing the protagonists’ encounter with marvellous and the way it triggers the process of metamorphoses. The transformation affects primarily the protagonists’ personality, as in the process of enchantment he/she dares to disclose her/his own potential, of which he/she was unaware prior to the exposure to wonder. This article also tries to reveal how Fay Weldon uses and subverts the mechanisms of enchantment because of her awareness that the apparently inoffensive transformations can cause privilege or repression of an individual. 

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Author Biography

Özge Karip, Namık Kemal University, English Language and Literature Department, Tekirdag

Özge KARİP is Research Assistant at Namık Kemal University, English Language and Literature Department.

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Published

2017-01-16

How to Cite

Golban, T. and Karip, Özge (2017) “The Fairy Tale Enchantment and Metamorphoses in Fay Weldon’s Novel The Life and Loves of a She-Devil”, Border Crossing. London, UK, 7(1), pp. 95–107. doi: 10.33182/bc.v7i1.479.

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Articles