Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://eibrary.ratnarajyalaxmicampus.edu.np:8080/handle/123456789/120
Title: Rupturing the Boundary in Caryl Churchill's Top Girls
Authors: Sharma, Pradip
Lama, Sita
Keywords: M.A. English
Abstract: play is nonlinear in its structure, highlighting the different sides of being a thriving career woman in the 1980s. In the opening act, Marlene hosts a dinner party for several famous, female figures from history and literature, including the Victorian British explorer Isabella Bird, Pope Joan, and Patient Griselda from Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales. The unlikely group discuss their own histories and reflect on what being a female meant for them in their own time. As the play moves on to focus on high-flying Marlene, it becomes clear that her professional success has irreparably damaged her personal life. Her relationship with her sister, Joyce, is strained and distant, while Joyce’s daughter, Angie, does not realize that Marlene is actually her mother. Leaping back and forth in time, Marlene attempts to make sense of her life and come to terms with the mistakes she has made in the past.
URI: http://202.45.147.228:8080/handle/123456789/120
Appears in Collections:English

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