O‘zmu xabarlari вестник нууз acta nuuz
particular historical era, at the break of the nineteenth and
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NEMIS VA O‘ZBEK TILLARIDA UY HAYVONLARI NOMI BILAN SHAKLLANGAN DENGIZ HAYVONLARI
particular historical era, at the break of the nineteenth and twentieth century. This is not a random choice, however. As Carter herself observes about Nights at the Circus, it is “set at exactly the moment in European history when things began to change quite deliberately, and Fevvers is the new woman”. This choice gives Carter a suitable opportunity to sustain her purpose which is to exemplify an exceptional and remarkable woman, a character who supports female liberation not only with her attitude and opinions but also with her deeds, both personal and political. In the case of Fevvers, these two levels – personal and political - go hand in hand as she is a well- known person, or, said in today’s words, a celebrity. Thus, she is an influential figure whose views and behaviour are not only watched but they can also be discussed and shared by the public. Carter probably chose Fevvers’ job – a circus artist – intentionally because its possibilities mirror her notion of feminism. This trapeze artist is famous enough to be able to chime her ideas among the public; on the other hand, a circus performer is not too snooty to keep too long a distance from the common people. And it is actually a normal, common person from whom Carter believes the change of liberation should arise. Fevvers’ personal story is marked with the political development, in particular with the strong evolvement of women’s rights that took place towards the end of the nineteenth century. As Day reports, this period of time was crucial for the feminist movement since it planted the topic of women’s rights to the public consciousness.“The late nineteenth century laid the ground for what would be, in part at least, consolidated and crystallised and turned into the British parliamentary legislation in the twentieth century”. [1,16] As Day reports, the issue of women’s suffrage, especially, was at the centre of these aspirations. She mentions John Stuart Mill, for example, who was a great supporter of women’s suffrage and who put this issue in his election Day notes that many amendments aiming for the gain of the franchise upon women were proposed, however, unsuccessfully. As a particularly disappointing case Day mentions the Liberal W.E. Gladstone whose refusal of an amendment to the Reform Bill of 1884 was supposed to grant women with the voting right. It was not until 1920 that female citizens of the United States (of 21 years of age at least) were allowed to vote. This civil right was granted by the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and it banned any United States citizen to be forbidden from the right to vote based on sex.Carter employs other several real political issues and personages in her narrative to disturb the border between the historical and fictional. For example Walser is told by Fevvers that all the prostitutes living and working in Madame Nelson’s brothel identified themselves with women’s franchise: “we were all suffragists in that house; oh, Nelson was a one for ‘Votes for Women’, I can tell you!” and she defiantly adds, “Does that seem strange to you? That the caged bird should want to see the end of cages, sir?”. Or there is a character, despised by Fevvers and called by her as Download 1.91 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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