![cover of the book The Menstrual Imaginary in Literature: Notes on a Wild Fluidity](/covers/files_200/2821000/6484b8dac855202179b2555203aa5d7d-g.jpg)
Ebook: The Menstrual Imaginary in Literature: Notes on a Wild Fluidity
Author: Natalie Rose Dyer
- Genre: Literature
- Series: Palgrave Studies in (Re)Presenting Gender
- Year: 2021
- Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
- City: Cham
- Language: English
- pdf
This book draws on literary, cultural, and critical examples forming a menstrual imaginary―a body of work by women writers and poets that builds up a concept of women’s creativity in an effort to overturn menstrual prejudice. The text addresses key arbiters of the menstrual imaginary in a series of letters, including Sylvia Plath the initiator of ‘the blood jet’, Hélène Cixous the pioneer of a conceptual red ink and the volcanic unconscious, and Luce Irigaray the inaugurator of women’s artistic process relative to a vital flow of desire based in sexual difference. The text also undertakes provocative against-the-grain re-readings of the Medusa, the Sphinx, Little Red Riding Hood, and The Red Shoes, as a means of affirmatively and poetically re-imagining a woman’s flow. Natalie Rose Dyer argues for re-envisioning menstrual bleeding and creativity in reaction and resistance to ongoing and problematic societal views of menstruation.