Document Type
Essay
Abstract
This essay explores the nuanced relationship between Joyce Carol Oates and feminism, distinguishing between Oates as an individual and “JCO” as the authorial process. Through analysis of novels like Babysitter, the essay argues that Oates’s fiction resists fixed labels, instead foregrounding ambiguity, interpretation, and the limitations of categorization. Drawing on philosophical and literary contexts, it contends that while Oates’s work invites feminist readings, her narrative style deliberately undermines definitive conclusions. Ultimately, the essay suggests that JCO’s writing stimulates inquiry and self-reflection, positioning art as a process of response rather than a vehicle for asserting categorical truths—including those of feminism.
DOI
10.15867/331917.6.8
Citation Information
Cologne-Brookes, Gavin J.
(2025)
"Joyce Carol Oates and Feminism: Facts Found and Foundered,"
Bearing Witness: Joyce Carol Oates Studies: Vol. 6, Article 2.
DOI: 10.15867/331917.6.8
Available at:
https://repository.usfca.edu/jcostudies/vol6/iss1/2