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Student Essay on Humor, Power and Victimization in "Rape Fantasies."

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About 8 pages (2,522 words)
Margaret Atwood Summary

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Humor, Power and Victimization in "Rape Fantasies."

Summary:  

Examines Humor, power and victimization in Margaret Atwood's "Rape Fantasies." Provides biographical detail on the author. Discusses some of her earlier works and details common themes.

One of Canada's foremost contemporary writers, Margaret Atwood is an internationally renowned poet, literary critic, novelist, humanitarian and political activist. Born in Ottawa, Ontario, in 1939, she spent most of her childhood in the Canadian wilderness. She has won praise and acclaim for her ability to incorporate humor, biting wit, irony and symbolism into her writing style. Her themes usually depict the very nature of human behavior and issues of power between men and women as it relates to society ("The Writer." New York Times). Her very first novel, The Edible Women, published in 1970, explored issues of oppression, self-identity and power, as it relates to the broader social content of contemporary urban life and the sexual politics involved. She further explores those issues in "Rape Fantasies" first published in Canada in 1979 in her book.....

This is a free excerpt of 135 words. There are 2,522 words (approx. 8 pages at 300 words per page) in the full essay.

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