This paper employs Leech and Shorts stylistic framework to conduct a detailed analysis of Katherine Mansfields The Singing Lesson, integrating narrative strategy with feminist critique. It systematically examines lexical patterns encoding psychological shifts, syntactic structures amplifying emotional tension, and graphological markers signaling tonal transitions. Concurrent analysis of rhetorical devices and dual narrative perspectives reveals how linguistic mechanisms construct the heroines victimization under patriarchal constraints. The findings demonstrate that Mansfields stylistic economyprioritizing linguistic precision over plot complexitytransforms quotidian scenarios into incisive social commentary on female subjugation. The heroines emotional volatility functions as a metonym for systemic gender oppression. This study advances Mansfield scholarship by demonstrating the symbiotic relationship between stylistic techniques and thematic depth, proposing a methodology for decoding feminist subtexts in modernist narratives beyond biographical interpretations.
Lei Tong (Mon,) studied this question.