Working from the premise that the Puritan construction of
America as a return to Eden endures into American literature of the
20th century, Medoro focuses on the rhetoric of cyclical
regeneration, blood, and damnation that accompanies this
construction. She argues that a semiotics of menstruation infuses
this rhetoric and informs the figuration of a feminine America in
the nation's literary tradition: America, as a New World Eden, is
haunted not only by the Fall, but also by the Curse of Eve. Placing
Thomas Pynchon, William Faulkner, and Toni Morrison within this
tradition, this book demonstrates that their novels link variations
on the figure of the menstruating woman both to the bloody history
of the United States and to a vision of the nation's redemptive
promise.
Detailed readings of 9 novels--3 by each author--track
references to menstruation and illuminate its tropological
prevalence. The readings then develop a theory of menstruation as a
kind of antidote functioning within narratives of violently spilled
blood and blood purity. Each chapter draws on a range of
disciplines--from medical history and mythography to anthropology
and psychoanalysis--and situates its analysis of menstruation in
relation to contemporary theories of female sexuality, human
evolution, and the sacred.
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