Abstract (eng)
The present thesis deals with the representation of women with anorexia nervosa in two fictional texts: Heartstones by Ruth Rendell and The Edible Woman by Margaret Atwood. Firstly, the role of the Western culture’s views on the body, health, and beauty ideals, as well as societal expectations placed on women and gender socialisation in the main characters’ development of anorexia is examined using close reading, narrative analysis, feminist and psychoanalytic approaches. Furthermore, I explore the relationship between the heroines’ mental illness and their narrative style of the texts. I conclude that the main characters’ eating disorders are a direct result of the misogynistic environments they live in, manifest in the lack of choices and positive female role models presented to them. Their narration styles reflect the societal distrust towards, and stigma against, people with mental disorders, all the while offering insight into the traumatic and disempowering experience of mental illness.