An Ecofeminist and Taoist Reading of Louise Glück’s A Village Life

Authors

  • Yeting Hu Universiti Sains Malaysia
  • Agnes Liau Wei Lin Universiti Sains Malaysia
  • Suzana Muhammad Universiti Sains Malaysia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17507/jltr.1503.14

Keywords:

Louise Glück, A Village Life, ecofeminism, Taoism, harmony

Abstract

Born and bred in the Western lands in the context of ecological crisis and feminist movement in the 1970s, ecofeminism views men’s rule over women and human’s rule over nature as two aspects of the same issue, and believes that there is an inherent connection between them. By criticizing the oppressive status of women and nature, and eliminating the dualism rooted in western patriarchy, ecofeminism aims to promote equality and harmony among all things. Taoism, an ancient Eastern philosophy with a history of thousands of years, also places great emphasis on harmony among individuals, nature, society, and the universe. Its principles of “the unity of man and nature”, and balance between “Yin” and “Yang” provide philosophical support for ecofeminism which rejects dualisms and encourages wholeness and harmony. As society and economy develop rapidly, humanity faces a series of crisis, and this paper just intends to combine ecofeminism with Taoism to make an analysis on Louise Glück’s poem collection of A Village Life to explore her ecofeminist consciousness and how she advocates the establishment of a diverse but harmonious world without hierarchical differences in her poems.

Author Biographies

Yeting Hu, Universiti Sains Malaysia

School of Humanities

Agnes Liau Wei Lin, Universiti Sains Malaysia

School of Humanities

Suzana Muhammad, Universiti Sains Malaysia

School of Humanities

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Published

2024-05-08

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