Of Fathers and Daughters: Reimaging King Lear in A Thousand Acres
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.64846/t45hsj94Keywords:
Feminist rewriting, Postcolonial criticism, Shakespearean adaptation, Patriarchy, Narrative perspective, Gender and power, IntertextualityAbstract
Aim: The paper examines the feminist and postcolonial reimagining of King Lear in A Thousand Acres, focusing on how canonical narratives are revised to foreground marginalized female perspectives and critique patriarchal authority.
Methodology and Approach: The study adopts a comparative and interpretative approach, drawing upon feminist and postcolonial theoretical frameworks. It analyses narrative strategies, characterization, and thematic shifts in Smiley’s novel in relation to Shakespeare’s original play, with particular attention to narrative voice, gender politics, and intertextual rewriting.
Outcome: The analysis reveals that A Thousand Acres reconfigures the moral and emotional center of King Lear by granting agency and psychological depth to Goneril and Regan through the character of Ginny. The novel exposes suppressed histories of abuse, challenges traditional sympathies aligned with Lear and Cordelia, and reinterprets familial and social power structures through a feminist lens.
Conclusion and Suggestions: The paper concludes that feminist rewritings such as Smiley’s not only contest canonical authority but also expand interpretative possibilities by recovering silenced voices. It suggests that further research may explore similar rewritings across cultures to understand how gender, memory, and narrative perspective reshape literary traditions and challenge entrenched critical assumptions.
Downloads


