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  1. Chapter 31. The Edible Woman Themes. Next. Gendered Expectations vs. Personal Identity. Themes and Colors. LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in The Edible Woman, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work. Gendered Expectations vs. Personal Identity.

  2. Themes. Background. Publication details. References. 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.

    • Margaret Eleanor Atwood
    • 1969
  3. The two main themes in The Edible Woman are the search for self and gender roles. The search for self: Marian searches for a solid sense of self throughout the novel. By the end of the story,...

  4. The Edible Woman, the premier work of fiction by noted Canadian poet Margaret Atwood, is a forerunner of much of the feminist literature that would follow the theme of woman in search...

  5. 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 various foods after her engagement to Peter due to imagined metaphorical cannibalism, to explore female experiences in society.

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