Female Subordination and Resistance in Joan Barfoot’s Dancing in The Dark
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Abstract
This thesis entitled “Female subordination and resistance in Joan Barfoot’s
Dancing in the Dark" explores the relationship between patriarchy and orthodox
society, and the marginalized and objectified status of women in Canadian
Community. This project shows how and why women become object of exploitation
under the influence of conservative society which compels women to follow the
traditional roles and duties that excludes females from important day to day activities.
It also focuses on the female's realization of their pathetic condition and the sense of
resistance against such dominating ideology. The females in Canadian Society are
compelled to be used according to their husband's desire. They are subjected to
physical and mental abuse in society. The protagonist of the novel, Edna Cormick
lives her twenty years of life with her husband as a submissive wife. She denies the
outer world by devoting herself to the health and welfare of her husband and home.
But when she finds her husband neglecting her and having extra marital affair, she
could not tolerate series of betrayal of her husband and kills him as a slap on the face
of patriarchy.
