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Throughout her writing career, Jeanette Winterson has experimented with her life experience, revisiting in particular the complex relationship with her adoptive mother, Mrs W, in such works as 1985 Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit, 1989 Sexing the Cherry, and 2011 Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal. This article examines the complex mother-daughter relationship between Jeanette and Mrs W to illustrate the birth of a feminist writer. In answer to her mother’s confiscation of her birth narrative, Jeanette Winterson has fictionalized Mrs W better to alter traditional narrative paradigms she deemed repressive. The process has allowed the daughter to open up an enunciative space for herself through performative utterances: “I’m telling you stories. Trust me.” Finally, the parallel drawn between Mrs Winterson and Mrs Thatcher in the former’s fictional avatars highlights specifically the personal political itinerary of the feminist writer. Key words: rewriting, rereading, mother-daughter relationship, feminism, Thatcher

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This page is a summary of: The Fictional Avatars of Mrs W: The Influence of the Adoptive Mother and the Birth of Jeanette Winterson as a Writer, Prague Journal of English Studies, July 2018, De Gruyter,
DOI: 10.1515/pjes-2018-0008.
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