A Feminist Study of Carol Ann Duffy's Poetry and the Concept of Feminine

Saba Ali Khalaf

Baghdâd Educationnel directorat

DOI: https://doi.org/10.25130/jls.7.1.5

Keywords: Feminine, Carol Ann Duffy, Feminism's Waves, marginalization, females


Abstract

Women's critique has focused on exposing the marginalization of women authors, suppression of the feminine voice, purposeful exclusion of females mostly from literary works, including stereotyping of females within male fiction as angels in heaven or mythical creatures or living creatures born only for kitchen area business in the first place from its inception. Scholars in feminist studies have also been looking into the documents of female authors since the early 1960s. Women's critique has shown that literary sexism can no longer be tolerated or justified. There are presently several great female poets whose poetry deserves to be recognized and appreciated by the general public. However, the female liberation movement sparked the publication of multiple separatist anthologies. It is indeed also behind the painfully shallow and odd attempt to establish those female poems are inherently different. Several commentators regard female poets as much more than poets; they are not just women, and yet simply women poets, saying by doing the same things that men poets have been saying and doing for far longer, as well as having the added opportunity to understand about women. The texts of the poems will be analyzed using feminist methodologies for this research study. As a result, the results linked with these methodologies will serve as the conceptual framework for the present study.