Home Cooking and Eating Your Own Stories: (Metaphorical) Cannibalism in Margaret Atwood’s The Robber Bride
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Cooking and Eating Your Own Stories: (Metaphorical) Cannibalism in Margaret Atwood’s The Robber Bride

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Published/Copyright: December 5, 2017
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Abstract

The Robber Bride by Margaret Atwood exposes a dangerous protagonist, Zenia, who is metaphorically introduced through images of drinking blood and eating raw meat. Her victims, Tony, Charis, and Roz, are associated with nurturing and nourishing foods: they eat together to comfort each other. Sarah Sceats’s, Fiona Tolan’s, and Jean Wyatt’s studies on feminism and female bonding in the novel have influenced this article, though it also questions the established opposition between the villainess Zenia and her victims: Zenia’s dark appetites are their own tastes for blood, revenge, and power. Zenia acts as a liberating and empowering ingredient. This article discusses the link between storytelling and cooking. I suggest that Zenia’s creative story-telling forces the women to acknowledge the darker dimension of their repressed fragments and past. Thus, they become independent and creative storytellers and cooks, just like Zenia.


Corresponding author: PaedDr. Katarina Labudova, Ph.D., Faculty of Arts and Letters, Department of English Language and Literature, Catholic University in Ruzomberok, Hrabovska 1, Ruzomberok, 034, 01, Slovakia

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Published Online: 2017-12-5
Published in Print: 2017-12-20

©2017 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

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