‘I hate Women. They get on my Nerves’Dorothy Parker’s Poetry of Female Sympathy

  1. Cortés Vieco, Francisco José 1
  1. 1 Universidad Complutense de Madrid
    info

    Universidad Complutense de Madrid

    Madrid, España

    ROR 02p0gd045

Revista:
ES Review. Spanish Journal of English Studies

ISSN: 2531-1654 2531-1646

Ano de publicación: 2017

Número: 38

Páxinas: 65-88

Tipo: Artigo

DOI: 10.24197/ERSJES.38.2017.65-88 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openDialnet editor

Outras publicacións en: ES Review. Spanish Journal of English Studies

Resumo

In her poetry, Dorothy Parker uses parody as a literary device to detect and denounce gender inequalities and sexist prejudices in New York during the early twentieth century. Despite the pressures of popular magazine culture on women, and her amusing jabs at her own sex in presumed complicity with the prevailing patriarchal ideology, Parker laughs last because her parodic verses, intertwining humor and faultfinding, are not only intended to entertain her male readers, but also to build a virtual village of female sympathy within a hostile male New York. She encourages sisterly bonding and welcomes real women, who are misrepresented by compulsory feminine images of happy domesticity or deviant sexual availability. Her poems offer her secret female addressees weapons of survival to live beyond their submission to male authority and repressive stereotypes of femininity.

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