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Rachel Cusk's New Realism: Gender, Power, Voice, and Genre in the Outline Trilogy

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CONTEMPORARY WOMENS WRITING
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OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/cww/vpad017

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Rachel Cusk introduces a new narrative form in the Outline trilogy, employing a distanced and displaced first-person point of view. This allows her to express truths about marriage and motherhood, subjects for which she has faced criticism in her nonfiction work. By rejecting a linear plot and dominant perspective in favor of overheard stories, these novels also present a new form of social realism that showcases the power of listening and collaborative storytelling to communicate social critique. Cusk intertwines elements of her own life and nonfiction in the trilogy, creating a fusion of autobiography, fiction, essay, and memoir. Through this fusion, the suffering of women and the realities of misogyny are portrayed as visible and undeniably real, reshaping social reality by rewriting the forms that represent it.
Rachel Cusk creates a new narrative form in the Outline trilogy-distanced, displaced first-person point of view-to create a safe position from which to speak truths about marriage and motherhood that she has been criticized for expressing in her nonfiction work. Eschewing linear plot and dominating perspective in favor of overheard stories, the novels also represent a new form of social realism that illustrates how listening and collaborative storytelling can communicate social critique. By incorporating elements of her life and nonfiction in the trilogy, Cusk creates a nexus of autobiography, fiction, essay, and memoir in which the suffering of women and the cruelty of misogyny register as visible and undeniably real, changing the fabric of social reality by rewriting the forms that represent it.

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