The Body that Writes: Gender, Class and the Abject Female Body in Hannah Kent’s Burial Rites (2013)
Hannah Kent’s debut novel Burial Rites (2013) is a historical true-crime novel that recovers the story of a female perpetrator, Agnes Magnúsdóttir, sentenced to death for her part in a gruesome double murder in nineteenth-century Iceland. This article reads Kent’s novel, which draws on painstaking r...
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2023
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.16995/c21.8215 |
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ftolhjaneway:oai:c21:id:8215 2024-01-14T10:07:53+01:00 The Body that Writes: Gender, Class and the Abject Female Body in Hannah Kent’s Burial Rites (2013) Massoura, Kiriaki 2023-12-14T05:40:00Z 1 https://doi.org/10.16995/c21.8215 unknown Open Library of Humanities https://doi.org/10.16995/c21.8215 /article/id/8215/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 Volume: 10 Issue: 2 JournalTitle: C21 Literature: Journal of 21st-Century Writings 2045-5224 info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2023 ftolhjaneway https://doi.org/10.16995/c21.8215 2023-12-18T18:49:26Z Hannah Kent’s debut novel Burial Rites (2013) is a historical true-crime novel that recovers the story of a female perpetrator, Agnes Magnúsdóttir, sentenced to death for her part in a gruesome double murder in nineteenth-century Iceland. This article reads Kent’s novel, which draws on painstaking research, as a work of feminist revisionism that is part of a genealogy of historical fiction by and about women that seeks to adopt and indeed adapt the true-crime genre for the recovery of historical women’s voices from the margins, the best-known example of which remains Margaret Atwood’s Alias Grace (1996). However, while Kent’s work shares many features with Atwood’s work, I contend that what sets Burial Rites apart from its predecessors is the way Kent skillfully handles Agnes’s ambiguous body as text. The article consequently models a reading of Kent’s true-crime feminist historical fiction via Julia Kristeva’s theory of abjection and Judith Butler’s theory of gender performance to reveal how the novel unpicks the workings of gender, class and sexuality in nineteenth-century Iceland in a bid to retrieve Agnes from historical archival obscurity and restore her as part of feminist historiography. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Open Library of Humanities (OTH) Journals Hannah ENVELOPE(-60.613,-60.613,-62.654,-62.654) C21 Literature: Journal of 21st-Century Writings 10 2 |
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Hannah Kent’s debut novel Burial Rites (2013) is a historical true-crime novel that recovers the story of a female perpetrator, Agnes Magnúsdóttir, sentenced to death for her part in a gruesome double murder in nineteenth-century Iceland. This article reads Kent’s novel, which draws on painstaking research, as a work of feminist revisionism that is part of a genealogy of historical fiction by and about women that seeks to adopt and indeed adapt the true-crime genre for the recovery of historical women’s voices from the margins, the best-known example of which remains Margaret Atwood’s Alias Grace (1996). However, while Kent’s work shares many features with Atwood’s work, I contend that what sets Burial Rites apart from its predecessors is the way Kent skillfully handles Agnes’s ambiguous body as text. The article consequently models a reading of Kent’s true-crime feminist historical fiction via Julia Kristeva’s theory of abjection and Judith Butler’s theory of gender performance to reveal how the novel unpicks the workings of gender, class and sexuality in nineteenth-century Iceland in a bid to retrieve Agnes from historical archival obscurity and restore her as part of feminist historiography. |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Massoura, Kiriaki |
spellingShingle |
Massoura, Kiriaki The Body that Writes: Gender, Class and the Abject Female Body in Hannah Kent’s Burial Rites (2013) |
author_facet |
Massoura, Kiriaki |
author_sort |
Massoura, Kiriaki |
title |
The Body that Writes: Gender, Class and the Abject Female Body in Hannah Kent’s Burial Rites (2013) |
title_short |
The Body that Writes: Gender, Class and the Abject Female Body in Hannah Kent’s Burial Rites (2013) |
title_full |
The Body that Writes: Gender, Class and the Abject Female Body in Hannah Kent’s Burial Rites (2013) |
title_fullStr |
The Body that Writes: Gender, Class and the Abject Female Body in Hannah Kent’s Burial Rites (2013) |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Body that Writes: Gender, Class and the Abject Female Body in Hannah Kent’s Burial Rites (2013) |
title_sort |
body that writes: gender, class and the abject female body in hannah kent’s burial rites (2013) |
publisher |
Open Library of Humanities |
publishDate |
2023 |
url |
https://doi.org/10.16995/c21.8215 |
long_lat |
ENVELOPE(-60.613,-60.613,-62.654,-62.654) |
geographic |
Hannah |
geographic_facet |
Hannah |
genre |
Iceland |
genre_facet |
Iceland |
op_source |
Volume: 10 Issue: 2 JournalTitle: C21 Literature: Journal of 21st-Century Writings 2045-5224 |
op_relation |
https://doi.org/10.16995/c21.8215 /article/id/8215/ |
op_rights |
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 |
op_doi |
https://doi.org/10.16995/c21.8215 |
container_title |
C21 Literature: Journal of 21st-Century Writings |
container_volume |
10 |
container_issue |
2 |
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1788062300943417344 |