Oriana Fallaci: The Rhetoric of FreedomBerg Publishers, 01.10.1996 - 224 Seiten Oriana Fallaci (b. 1930) is an awkward presence on Italian bookshelves, in world journalism and among feminists. This book, the first literary study of Fallaci, examines the implications of the storms and silences that she keeps rousing. A fully emancipated and successful woman in the man's world of political journalism, she has antagonised many feminists by her championship of motherhood and her idolization of heroic manhood. In journalism, her critics have felt that she has outraged the conventions of interviewing and reporting. As a novelist, she shatters the invisible diaphragm of literariness and is accused of betraying, or simply failing, literature. This book focuses on Fallaci's direct engagement as a writer with major political and social issues such as women's liberation, Vietnam, Islamic fundamentalism and the space programme. A distinctive and controversial feature of her writing is the way in which she blurs the interface between reportage and fiction in an attempt to obliterate the gap that separates the word from the world. |
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Seite 62
... child . The male doctor , the child's father , and the mother's employer , each combining the roles of legal counsel , witness , juror and judge , find her guilty . Alternating with them , the female doctor , the mother's female friend ...
... child . The male doctor , the child's father , and the mother's employer , each combining the roles of legal counsel , witness , juror and judge , find her guilty . Alternating with them , the female doctor , the mother's female friend ...
Seite 63
... child who is then abruptly dissolved in retrospect . - We have here a placental text ingested via the umbilical cord , not by the fictive " tu " ( " thou " or " you " ) , the child , but by the virtual , or potential , “ tu ” – you ...
... child who is then abruptly dissolved in retrospect . - We have here a placental text ingested via the umbilical cord , not by the fictive " tu " ( " thou " or " you " ) , the child , but by the virtual , or potential , “ tu ” – you ...
Seite 83
... child , making " him " visible , lending him the objectivity vouchsafed by photography and science . Petchesky has written on such photographic representations of the foetus as strategies tending to personalize the foetus while ...
... child , making " him " visible , lending him the objectivity vouchsafed by photography and science . Petchesky has written on such photographic representations of the foetus as strategies tending to personalize the foetus while ...
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