A volume of scholarly essays to be collected under the title: Bitch or
Badass: Anti-heroines of Contemporary Literary Media, Television, and Cinema
(working title). Edited by Melanie A. Haas (Texas Woman's University) and N.
A. Pierce (Old Dominion University)
As the general public’s need for more complex plotlines and edgier
characters has increased in recent years so has the portrayal of
self-determining, sometimes villainous, crafty, wily, independent women who
seek lives or identities predicated on goals beyond the social prescriptions of
heteronormativity, docility, domesticity, submission, and other characteristics
stereotypically attributable to women in literature and film. These are flawed
characters, struggling with both internal and external conflicts and
circumstances. These women are not
Disney perfect princesses; they are more human, more relatable, perhaps even a
bit wicked, and they often take unconventional routes to achieve their aims. We
cheer their deviousness, pettiness, malevolence, and artifice. We admire their
cunning and determination. And we recognize that they’re not looking for a
prince on a white steed to come and save them that they’re perfectly willing
and able to do the work of saving themselves (or seizing their own crowns).
These are women who do not hesitate to go their own way: women who claim it’s
my way or no way.
Some of the most famous, enduring, and popular female characters are
anti-heroines. These anti-heroines are represented from classic Western
literature all the way through to current popular television series and films.
Literary characters such as Medea, Lady Macbeth, Scarlett O’Hara, Lisbeth
Salander and Amy Dunne, as well as film and television characters such as
Thelma and Louise, Beatrix Kiddo, Cersei Lannister, Claire Underwood, Olivia
Pope, Annalise Keating, and Nancy Botwin are primarily known for such traits as
selfishness, scheming, deviousness, and manipulation. However, the argument
could, and probably should, be made that these women are merely using the
skills and tools available to them to protect themselves and to create the life
that they desire. Depending on their specific circumstances, these women might
lie, cheat, steal, manipulate, and even kill, to achieve their goals. Clearly,
these women are no shrinking violets, and instead take an active part in
controlling their own destinies. These anti-heroines are those characters we
love to hate, but who we also respect and may even wish to emulate, even though
they work outside of the bounds of traditional morality in order to achieve
their own ends.
This collection will offer well researched, scholarly essays exploring
representations of anti-heroines in twentieth- and twenty-first century
literary media (including graphic novels), television, and film. The deadline
for abstracts is 21 June 2019. Please send queries or a 250-word abstract
outlining your topic and methods to both editors: mhaas@twu.edu and
npier002@odu.edu. Completed essays for those proposals accepted will be due on
1 November.
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