Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > Carter, Angela - Betty Moss (essay date 1998)
Carter, Angela - Betty Moss (essay date 1998)
Betty Moss (essay date 1998)
SOURCE: Moss, Betty. “Desire and the Female Grotesque in Angela Carter's ‘Peter and the Wolf’.” Marvels and Tales: Journal of Fairy Tale Studies 12, no. 1 (1998): 175-91.
[In the following essay, Moss analyzes female desire in Carter's wolf tales.]
Angela Carter's artistic evolution moves toward the realization of an alternative vision of creative desire as positive and productive rather than driven by Lack—as in the dominant traditions of Western thought since Plato; Carter develops a fictional idiom adequate to the expression of such desire. This distinctly Carterian idiom participates in the aesthetic of the grotesque and inflects the grotesque in a specifically feminine and feminist way, maximizing its potential as an instrument of social and personal transformation. Integrating the feminist discourse of Hélène Cixous, French writer and critic, with the theory of the grotesque advanced by...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Angela Carter and Anna Katsavos (interview date fall 1988)
- Joanne M. Gass (essay date fall 1994)
- Christina Britzolakis (essay date winter 1995)
- Magali Cornier Michael (essay date 1996)
- Jean Wyatt (essay date 1996)
- Christine Berni (essay date fall 1997)
- Brian H. Finney (essay date spring 1998)
- Stephen Benson (essay date 1998)
- Jack Zipes (essay date 1998)
- Betty Moss (essay date 1998)
- Janet L. Langlois (essay date 1998)
- Peter G. Christensen (essay date 1998)
- Linden Peach (essay date 1998)
- Sarah M. Henstra (essay date spring 1999)
- Robbie B. H. Goh (essay date July 1999)
- Emma Parker (essay date July 2000)
- Mary S. Pollock (essay date July 2000)
- Dee Goertz (essay date 2000)
- Further Reading
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