International Journal For Multidisciplinary Research

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Seeing Clearly, Living On: Subtle Feminism in Alice Munro’s Gendered Worlds

Author(s) Ms. Divyadarshini Singh, Prof. Saloni Prasad
Country India
Abstract Alice Munro’s fiction offers one of the most nuanced explorations of gender in contemporary literature, revealing how femininity is not innate but learned, enforced, and continually negotiated within patriarchal rural Canada. Her stories depict girls and women moving between obedience and resistance, gradually recognising that expectations surrounding work, desire, respectability, and domesticity are socially produced rather than biologically ordained. Central to this gender learning is Munro’s use of space: fox farms, small-town kitchens, barns, bedrooms, and thresholds operate as quiet pedagogical structures that teach girls where they may stand, what they may do, and who they should become. These environments constitute an informal curriculum in which daily routines naturalise gender roles, while liminal zones—gates, unfinished rooms, doorways—momentarily open possibilities for alternative identities and small acts of rebellion.
Feminist criticism highlights how Munro maps the psychic costs of this conditioning, portraying women who internalize patriarchal speech, judge themselves through male definitions of worth, and confront marriage and economic dependence as key mechanisms of gendered constraint. Yet her stories also foreground subtle, often hidden resistance: imaginative defiance in childhood, pursuit of education or mobility, and shifts in perception that transform how women understand their own lives. Intersectional readings further emphasise that class and geography shape the intensity of these pressures; rural working-class women experience gender norms as more rigid and punitive than their urban or middle-class counterparts, with reputation and survival closely linked.
Munro’s endings rarely offer liberation; instead, they dramatize altered consciousness rather than altered circumstance. This emphasis on interior clarity—seeing patriarchy without yet escaping it—constitutes her distinctive feminist vision. By attending to the smallest gestures and everyday scenes, Munro exposes the quiet but pervasive structures that define femininity, revealing resistance not as grand revolt but as the incremental re-narration of one’s place within a constrained world.
Keywords Alice Munro, gender learning, space and patriarchy, class and feminism
Field Sociology > Linguistic / Literature
Published In Volume 7, Issue 6, November-December 2025
Published On 2025-12-19
DOI https://doi.org/10.36948/ijfmr.2025.v07i06.64047

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