HERSTORY IN HISTORY – WOMEN CHARACTERS IN HILARY MANTEL‟S WOLF HALL AND BRING UP THE BODIES
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2017
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
IJARIIE
Abstract
Recovering the lost voices of women in history has been one of the significant endeavors of feminists.
Women writers of the present century also venture to recreate the lives of women long gone and historical fiction is
one of the most convenient genres for such representation. Hilary Mantel in her Tudor historical fiction Wolf Hall
and Bring Up the Bodies charts the rise and fall of Thomas Cromwell, the Chief Minister of Henry VIII. Apart from
featuring an unlikely hero, Cromwell, another striking aspect of the novels is Mantel‟s portrayal of the women
characters. Focusing on the lives of the royal women, especially the first three wives of Henry VIII, Mantel
highlights the predicament of these women, whose only role was to fulfill their biological duty of producing a male
heir, failing which they were not even guaranteed the safety of their lives and much worse, were made victims of
history by the discourse of their own bodies.
Description
Keywords
sphere, body, fertility