In this study of three of Barbara Pym's novels, Naghmeh Varghaiyan,
drawing on examinations of women's humour by Eileen Gillooly, Regina
Barreca, and others, shows how the humorous female discourse in Some
Tame Gazelle, Excellent Women, and Jane and Prudence undermines
patriarchal culture and subverts both female and male stereotypes such
as that of the spinster and of the Byronic hero. Varghaiyan reveals how
the rhetoric of women's humour enables Pym's female characters to
survive in the patriarchal culture and to unsettle it.