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The Edible Woman is the first novel by Margaret Atwood, published in 1969, which helped to establish Atwood as a prose writer of major significance. It is the story of a young woman, Marian, whose sane, structured, consumer-oriented world starts to slip out of focus. Following her engagement, Marian feels her body and her self are becoming separated. Marian begins endowing food with human qualities that cause her to identify with it, and finds herself unable to eat, repelled by metaphorical cannibalism. In a foreword written in 1979 for the Virago edition of the novel, Atwood described it as a protofeminist rather than feminist work.

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  • المرأة الصالحة للأكل (ar)
  • La mujer comestible (es)
  • La donna da mangiare (it)
  • The Edible Woman (en)
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  • المرأة الصالحة للأكل (بالإنجليزية: The Edible Woman)‏ هي رواية للكاتبة الكندية مارغريت آتوود، نشرت عام 1969. (ar)
  • La donna da mangiare (The Edible Woman) è il primo romanzo di Margaret Atwood, pubblicato nel 1969. (it)
  • La mujer comestible (The Edible Woman, 1969), novela de la escritora Margaret Atwood. Narra la historia de Marian MacAlpin, una joven con estudios universitarios que, hallándose en un marasmo de su vida, comienza a tener una serie de inquietudes existenciales debido a la conjunción de tres eventos en su vida: su próximo casamiento, la aparición de un extraño sujeto con el que comienza a llevar una relación no menos extraña, y la gradual pérdida del apetito por todo tipo de alimentos. * Datos: Q7731579 (es)
  • The Edible Woman is the first novel by Margaret Atwood, published in 1969, which helped to establish Atwood as a prose writer of major significance. It is the story of a young woman, Marian, whose sane, structured, consumer-oriented world starts to slip out of focus. Following her engagement, Marian feels her body and her self are becoming separated. Marian begins endowing food with human qualities that cause her to identify with it, and finds herself unable to eat, repelled by metaphorical cannibalism. In a foreword written in 1979 for the Virago edition of the novel, Atwood described it as a protofeminist rather than feminist work. (en)
foaf:name
  • The Edible Woman (en)
name
  • The Edible Woman (en)
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/EdibleWoman1stEdition.jpg
dc:publisher
  • McClelland and Stewart
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  • First edition (en)
congress
  • PR6051.T9 E3 PR6051.T9 (en)
country
  • Canada (en)
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language
  • English (en)
media type
  • Print (en)
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