Negotiating Identity in Historiographic Metafiction: The Case of Margret Atwood’s Alias Grace (1996)
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University of Ammar Theledji -Laghouat
Abstract
Historiographic metafiction is a postmodern genre that holds the features of
postmodernism such as intertextuality, parody and pastiche. It does not only hold the
features of postmodernism but also embraces its themes; among these themes is
identity. In this context, Identity is one of the predominant and recurrent themes in
postmodern writings. The Canadian novelist Margret Atwood dedicated her writings to
postulate a satisfactory concept of identity. Atwood in her novel Alias Grace (1996)
interrogates how both personal and social prompts could mold one’s identity. It is
eminent to consider that identity construction is an essential endeavor that the individual
seeks to clarify along the process of understating the self. Following this line of thought,
this dissertation attempts to explore the quest for identity construction as it examines
how an individual can be the product of what was experienced in combination of the
social repertoires that establish one’s identity. The main interrogation raised is how the
protagonist’s identity was constructed. In fact, the main character, Grace Marks,
manages to have an identity that is an amalgamation of all the experiences she went
through. In other words, her identity can be read via the patchwork that she stiches by
the end of the story as she uses the clothes' shreds of the most influential figures in her
life such as Nancy Montgomery and her friend Mary Whitney in order to express the
extent to which her past shaped her current identity
