Centered Fluidity and the Horizons of Continuity in Djuna Barnes' Nightwood Thesis

(2012). Centered Fluidity and the Horizons of Continuity in Djuna Barnes' Nightwood . 10.25148/etd.FI12112802

thesis or dissertation chair

authors

  • Sepulveda, Maria C

abstract

  • Modern writers like Djuna Barnes allow for the post-modern fluidity and explosion of sex and gender without finalizing either in a fixed form. Whereas the classical, archetypal androgyne is made up of two halves, one man and one woman; the deconstructed androgynous figure is not constituted of oppositional terms which would reflect an essential and unimpeachable truth. I reveal the way Djuna Barnes’ Nightwood not only thematizes the fluid androgyne, but also cleverly verbalizes David Wood’s perpetual and un-dischargable “debt” to extra-discursivity while poetically critiquing gender “appropriateness,” societal constraints, and the constitution of identity. Barnes presents a decentralized, ungrounded and non-prescribed world in Nightwood not only through her cross-dressing and androgynous characters, but also in her poetics, her assertion of the open-ended quality of language, and a strong imperative to negotiate our physical existence in a world of fluid gender and sexual boundaries.

publication date

  • November 6, 2012

keywords

  • Deconstruction
  • Derrida
  • Djuna Barnes
  • Modernism
  • Nightwood
  • androgyny
  • feminism
  • gender
  • queer theory
  • sex

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)