Finding a Way Out: A Study of the Female Image in Anna Christie

Authors

  • Zhen Yang

Keywords:

Anna Christie; Female Image; Self-consciousness.

Abstract

Anna Christie is the second play to win the great American playwright Eugene O 'Neill the Pulitzer Prize. The heroine Anna is oppressed in the patriarchal society. She leads a miserable life, and her self-consciousness and self-independence are gradually aroused. She resists the social injustice and inequality in her own way. Based on the novel text, this paper analyzes the image of Anna from the following aspects: the personality, the absence of paternal love and the awakening of self-consciousness, in a way to show the ability, the trigger and the process of Anna’s finding a way out.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Bogard, Travis and Jackson R. Bryer. Selected Letters of Eugene O'Neill. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1988.

Bhasin, Kamala. Exploring Masculinity. New Delhi: Raj Press, 2004.

Garvey, Sheila Hickey. "Anna Christie and the 'Fallen Woman Genre.'" Eugene O' Neill Review 19 (1995): 67-80.

Gelb, Arthur and Barbara Gelb. O'Neill. New York: Harper, 1960.

Moosavinia, Sayyed Rahim, and Yasaman Kocheili. “Eugene O’Neill and the Celebration of The Other.” International Journal of Applied Linguistics and English Literature 2.2 (2013): 59-64.

O'Neill, Eugene. Anna Christie. State College: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2010.

Ranald, Margaret Loftus. “From Trial to Triumph (1913-1924): The Early Plays.” The Cambridge companion to Eugene O’Neill. Ed. Michael Manheim. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1998. 51– 68.

Trilling, Lionel. Three Plays by Eugene O Neill. New Work: Modern Library, 1974.

Downloads

Published

15-09-2023

How to Cite

Yang, Z. (2023). Finding a Way Out: A Study of the Female Image in Anna Christie. Transactions on Social Science, Education and Humanities Research, 1, 298-301. https://wepub.org/index.php/TSSEHR/article/view/46