Skip to the main content

Original scientific paper

Representations of Power in the Novel Malvina by Mirko Kovač

Pavle Goranović ; Montenegrin Academy of Sciences and Art
Tijana Rakočević ; University of Montenegro


Full text: croatian pdf 522 Kb

page 107-124

downloads: 21

cite


Abstract

Characterized as the first lesbian novel in the former Yugoslav space, Malvina – beyond its compositional innovations – also stands out for its thematic and motif-based diversity. It presents a series of fictional paralogues which, according to Lyotard, constitute the very essence of postmodern culture, or “a force that destabilizes explanatory possibilities” (Lyotard). Accordingly, the novel reinterprets the traditional patriarchal model, in which the protagonist’s defection from the church community – similar to the hagiographies of saints – serves a moral-didactic purpose. Embedded within this framework are ideological paradigms governed by various power structures. The trajectory of Malvina Trifković’s fictional life is shaped by both its symbolic differentiation and its concrete manifestations – surveillance, coercion, punishment, and, consequently, violence. The novel ultimately seeks to demonstrate that the protagonist’s moral downfall results as much from an “excess of social power” – or an “excess of narrative” – as from the arbitrary interpretation of norms. Malvina’s escape from the Serbian Orthodox Women's Educational Cooperative, her marriage to a Croat, her homosexual relationship with her sister-in-law, her exploitation of her stepdaughter, and, ultimately, her return to the fold of institutionalized depravity – are all depicted as systemic paradoxes. This analysis identifies them as part of a broader mechanism orchestrated by dominant power structures: the family, religion, state authority, tradition, and gender roles.

Keywords

power; defection; ideology; tradition; gender roles

Hrčak ID:

338359

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/338359

Publication date:

15.11.2025.

Article data in other languages: croatian

Visits: 67 *