SUFFICIENTLY DECAYED: AGING WOMEN IN DORRIS LESSINGS’S SUMMER BEFORE THE DARK AND LOVE, AGAIN
Date
2023
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Transstellar Journal Publications and Research Consultancy Private Ltd
Abstract
The new narratives of midlife and older women’s ‘journey to age’ have resulted in new
critical responses by age theorists, psychologists, and literary critics in the form of
feminist gerontology. This paper looks upon two such narratives by Doris Lessing, The
Summer Before the Dark and Love, Again, where the protagonists embark on their
internal journeys as they face, confront, and accept their ‘old age.’ Barbara Waxman
names these narratives as ‘Reifungsroman’ or the ‘novel of ripening’ which is defined
as a genre of female fiction that ‘rejects the negative cultural stereotypes of the old
woman and ageing, seeking to change the society that created the stereotypes. The
psychic journey that these protagonists undertake also brings forward the conflict
between the ‘mind’ and ‘body’ ageing. Lessing’s fiction is deeply autobiographical,
much of it emerging out of her experiences in Africa. Drawing upon her childhood
memories and her serious engagement with politics and social concerns, Lessing has
written about the clash of cultures, the gross injustices of racial inequality, the struggle
among opposing elements within an individual’s own personality, and the conflict
between the individual conscience and the collective good. Her stories and novellas are
set in Africa, and published during the fifties and early sixties, decrying the
dispossession of Blacks by White Colonials, and exposing the sterility of the White
Culture in southern.
Description
Book:EMERGING GENRES IN BRITISH FICTION Edited by Dr. Mursalin Jahan & Dr. Aareena Nazneen
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