Baglady

Her er vores hjælp til analyse af novellen “Baglady” (1998) af A.S. Byatt. Teksten er fra lærebogen Flux (s. 9).  Ud over hjælp til analyse får du også et summary af teksten samt hjælp til at forstå tema og budskab. Vi giver dig også nogle forslag til perspektivering.

Uddrag

Herunder kan du læse et uddrag af vores study guide:

Symbols

The Good Fortune Mall is a symbol of the upper-class environment. While Lady Scroop sees it as “Aladdin’s Cave of Treasures” (p. 9, l. 3), Daphne sees it as “an army barracks or a prison block” (p. 10, l. 26). The fact that it evokes such different feelings in the two women suggests that it is a place designed to appeal to people like Lady Scroop, who were born and raised in an environment of idleness and sophistication. It is a place where the upper-class people feel at home and enjoy, while people like Daphne, who only try to pass as upper class, perceive it as restrictive and uncomfortable. Ironically, at the end, Daphne does not want to leave the Mall, because, even though she hates it, the Mall is the domain of the upper class, where she has been trying so hard to fit in. By staying in the Mall, she wants to prove to the policeman that she is not a baglady (p. 12, l. 34), but a “lady” (p. 12, l. 28).

Daphne’s transformation into a baglady is another important symbol in the story. A “baglady” is a homeless woman who carries her possessions in shopping bags. Daphne becomes progressively more run-down and unkempt, until her metamorphosis into a “baglady” is complete. When she first stops at a 

Teksten herover er et uddrag fra webbogen. Kun medlemmer kan læse hele indholdet.

Få adgang til hele Webbogen.

Som medlem på Studienet.dk får du adgang til alt indhold.

Køb medlemskab nu

Allerede medlem? Log ind

Baglady

[2]
Bedømmelser
  • 18-02-2024
    Givet af HF-elev på 2. år
  • 13-02-2023