Abstract:In their feminist and postmodern readings of Angela Carter's fiction, critics have often eclipsed the presence of nature in her writings and the significance of non-human forms of life. This article addresses this critical gap, focusing on Carter's employment of birds and the greenwood in her story The Erl-King as a metaphor for gender roles and power relations. Hence, the alliance between her ecopoetics and feminist vision forms a case of "ecofeminism." In her defense of "minor" and oppressed forms of life, C… Show more
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