The Ring | Two Locked Caskets: Selfhood and ‘Otherness’ in the Work of Isak Dinesen
In the following excerpt, Burstein suggests that
the conflict between self-identity and social stereotype
is experienced by many of the female characters
in Dinesen’s works. She then explores Lovisa’s
(here called Lise) struggle with her selfhood in
‘‘The Ring.’’
Because the work of Isak Dinesen reflects her patrician inclinations, her skeptical view of ‘‘emancipated’’ women, and her high regard for the symbolic— rather than the sociological or psychological— value of art, her stories often appear fairly remote from contemporary concerns; in a world animated largely by individual striving for equality and self-realization, Dinesen seems to speak, conservatively, for values that many of us have learned to distrust. And yet, Dinesen’s work is deeply rooted in her abiding preoccupation with a problem that is alive in our own time....
[The entire page is 2315 words long]
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