Feminist and Racial Discourses in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and Ann Radcliffe's The Mysteries of Udolpho
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Department of English
Abstract
The present dissertation entitled "Feminist and Racial Discourses in Mary
Shelley'sFrankensteinand Ann Radcliffe'sThe Mysteries of Udolpho"focuses on the
minor, marginal (female and race) protagonists who struggle in search of their
identity, equality and rights as other in the society. I have chosen two different texts
with same issues to make my research more comprehensive and effective. I have
taken the ideas from Michael Foucault, M.H. Abrams and many prominent feminist
thinkers. I've tried to prove feminism and racism as a discourse from the perspective
of Foucault's power discourse. Power plays vital role in creating different discourses
in society. My study has tried to challenge such power and discursive meaning given
to females and races who are regarded as secondary, subordinate, inferiorand sub-
human, passive, savage, unintelligent or as a whole 'other' and 'marginal'. I've
analyzed the power structure which has destroyed the real identity by imposing new
identity as 'other' and 'marginal' despite the reality. Thus, the present study analyzes
how females and races are marginalized and made other. How it has become the
feminist and racial discourses in the light of present situation. It as a whole rejects the
hierarchical structure of patriarchy and masterminded discourse as a master over
servant or as a white over black.