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  1. 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 ...

    • Margaret Eleanor Atwood
    • 1969
  2. The Edible Woman Summary. Marian McAlpin, the narrator, has just settled into the routines of her post-graduate Toronto life. Every morning, Marian makes herself coffee and a soft-boiled egg in the apartment she shares with her flirtatious, chaotic roommate, Ainsley. The women try to avoid their self-righteous landlady ( the lady down below ...

  3. The Edible Woman, Margaret Atwood’s debut novel, is a slightly topsy-turvy inverted fairytale, with shades of Mad Men in its focus on consumer culture and the stifling social conventions of the mid-Sixties. Published in 1969 but written a few years earlier, Atwood’s sly humour elevates this story of one woman’s identity crisis amid the ...

    • (37.1K)
    • Paperback
  4. Oct 15, 2019 · A feminist novel by Margaret Atwood about a young woman who struggles with food, love, and identity. Learn about the plot, the characters, and the themes of this 1969 classic, such as consumerism, sexuality, and motherhood.

    • Linda Napikoski
  5. Historical Context of The Edible Woman. Atwood wrote The Edible Woman at the height of second-wave feminism, a movement catalyzed in large measure by landmark texts like Simone DeBeauvoir’s The Second Sex and Betty Friedan’s The Feminine Mystique. Friedan’s text in particular emphasized the ways society’s emphasis on marriage and ...

  6. Mar 16, 1998 · The Edible Woman. Paperback – March 16, 1998. The novel that put the bestselling author of The Handmaid's Tale and The Testaments on the literary map. The Booker Prize winner's first novel is both a scathingly funny satire of consumerism and a heady exploration of emotional cannibalism. Marian McAlpin is an “abnormally normal” young woman ...

    • Margaret Atwood
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  8. The Edible Woman revolves around Marian McAlpin, a young woman who experiences a crisis of identity after her boyfriend, Peter, proposes to her. Set in an unnamed city in Canada, the novel focuses on themes of gender, expectations of women, masculinity and femininity, and female agency. It uses food, and Marian's growing inability to consume ...

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