Unhappy women in literature are by no means a novelty, but they are newly trendy. Over the last few years, there has been a surge in fiction written by female authors, centered on women in their 20s and 30s who seem unable, and sometimes reluctant, to reconcile themselves to ‘life’. Regardless of their different backgrounds and present circumstances, an elusive yet unassailable malaise has taken hold of them. The protagonists in these novels are mired in a state of unbelonging, as estranged from others as they are from themselves, always on the periphery of any group, the perpetual ‘outsider’. As they engage in dissociative and self-destructive behavior, they drift between disaffection, anhedonia, and hypersensitivity. In addition to their thematic similarities, these books share a tonal and stylistic likeness, as they are written in proses routinely described as ‘clipped’, ‘sharp’, and ‘incisive’, and characterized by a wry yet detached sense of humor, which, as Jess Bergman suggests, imbues their narratives with ‘a kind of anhedonic equanimity’. Their narratives present us with a glimpse into their ‘nominally’ adult lives, which often proceed by ‘rote’, as these young women do not so much ‘navigate’ modern life as half-heartedly drift.
I like to see this 'trend' as a subset of the The Female Malaise subgenre.
Related lists: She's Nasty: Amoral, Manipulative, and Disruptive Female Characters.
List inspired by Jess Bergman's 'I’m Not Feeling Good at All' piece where she discusses "the perplexingly alienated women of recent American fiction". According to Bergman, they tend to have boring jobs in offices, they aren't close to their family (or they have no living relatives), they are anhedonic, self-destructive, possibly masochists, the "remote avatars of contemporary malaise".
Although Bergman's piece focuses on fiction with American protagonists, this list is not solely reserved for American fiction.
If you want to add books to this list make sure that it has a fairly 'modern' setting (i'm thinking 90s onwards). DO NOT ADD "classics" such as Bell Jar or books with historical settings, thanks
Other articles discussing this subgenre/trend are:
- Lucinda Rosenfeld, ‘Heroines of Self-Hate’, The New York Times, 27 Feb 2021
- Sara Batkie, ‘2020 is the Year of the “Catastrofemale”’, Chicago Review of Books, 5 Oct 2020
- Rebecca Liu, ‘The Making Of A Millennial Woman’, Another Gaze, 12 June 2019
I like to see this 'trend' as a subset of the The Female Malaise subgenre.
Related lists: She's Nasty: Amoral, Manipulative, and Disruptive Female Characters.
List inspired by Jess Bergman's 'I’m Not Feeling Good at All' piece where she discusses "the perplexingly alienated women of recent American fiction". According to Bergman, they tend to have boring jobs in offices, they aren't close to their family (or they have no living relatives), they are anhedonic, self-destructive, possibly masochists, the "remote avatars of contemporary malaise".
Although Bergman's piece focuses on fiction with American protagonists, this list is not solely reserved for American fiction.
If you want to add books to this list make sure that it has a fairly 'modern' setting (i'm thinking 90s onwards). DO NOT ADD "classics" such as Bell Jar or books with historical settings, thanks
Other articles discussing this subgenre/trend are:
- Lucinda Rosenfeld, ‘Heroines of Self-Hate’, The New York Times, 27 Feb 2021
- Sara Batkie, ‘2020 is the Year of the “Catastrofemale”’, Chicago Review of Books, 5 Oct 2020
- Rebecca Liu, ‘The Making Of A Millennial Woman’, Another Gaze, 12 June 2019
199 books ·
333 voters ·
list created October 2nd, 2020
by luce (cry bebè's back from hiatus) (votes) .
luce (cry bebè's back from hiatus)
8431 books
836 friends
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Carson
1043 books
32 friends
32 friends
Peach
3679 books
29 friends
29 friends
Saturday's
2248 books
67 friends
67 friends
Alison
2924 books
148 friends
148 friends
C
3084 books
53 friends
53 friends
Beckie
64 books
0 friends
0 friends
Ksenia
795 books
126 friends
126 friends
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C
(last edited Sep 10, 2021 08:43AM)
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Sep 10, 2021 08:42AM
LOVE this list, it's my jam. Does Wally Lamb's 'She's Come Undone' count for this list? I read it quite a while ago, so I'm not sure/don't remember.
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C wrote: "LOVE this list, it's my jam. Does Wally Lamb's 'She's Come Undone' count for this list? I read it quite a while ago, so I'm not sure/don't remember."I don't think so. Here's a link to the article this list was inspired by, if you're interested: https://thebaffler.com/salvos/im-not-...
Carson wrote: "C wrote: "LOVE this list, it's my jam. Does Wally Lamb's 'She's Come Undone' count for this list? I read it quite a while ago, so I'm not sure/don't remember."I don't think so. Here's a link to t..."
I'm aware of the article, but thank you for your opinion if 'She's Come Undone' counts or not.
I might be misremembering, but I thought There's No Such Thing as an Easy Job by Kikuko Tsumura was previously on the list? If it was removed from the list, I'd love to know why? I haven't read it yet, but if any books are moved from the list it would help me understand what fits better. There are also a handful of books that I *think* would fit this list, but I have to read them first.
Convenience Store Woman isn't about a sad woman, she is happy - everybody else thinks she is sad. That and my year of Restless... are the two stand out books on this list.
aster ❦ wrote: "convenience store woman is the opposite of a sad woman... delete ts"I agree as I thought she was content with her life. I noticed that The Bell Jar got added even tho the list creator asked us not to add it. I hope someone can delete it after all she was far more than just sad. She was seriously depressed!!!!
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