Description
Neither narrowly canonical nor exclusively literary, this 1200-page anthology features women's voices as they appear in nontraditional public formats, such as trial transcripts, petitions and criminal confessions. It includes women's writing in public formats other than just print, including speeches and song lyrics. It also features expanded selections from Chicanas, working class women and antebellum Native American women, as well as thematic concerns with disability, women's sexuality, immigration and diaspora, women's suffrage, and lynching. And it offers expanded selections of plays, including temperance and minstrel plays; travel narratives; as well as a broader range of fiction from both women's magazines and literary magazines. The aim of VOLUME ONE: 17TH THROUGH 19TH CENTURIES is to show when and where and how women entered into public discourse pre-20th century, and how that access varied according to race, national origin, class, education, geographical location, physical ability, etc. as well as how it varied over the two centuries. Some of these materials have not been reprinted since their original publication; many have never been available in literature or women writers anthologies.
Author: Lisa Marie Hogeland
Publisher: Aunt Lute Books
Published: 04/01/2004
Pages: 1200
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 3.22lbs
Size: 9.02h x 6.08w x 2.13d
ISBN13: 9781879960688
ISBN10: 1879960680
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Collections | American | General
- Literary Criticism | Women Authors
About the Author
Lisa Maria Hogeland is an Associate Professor of English at the University of Cincinnati. Dr. Hogeland, who holds a B.A. in comparative literature and a Ph.D. in Modern Thought and Literature from Stanford University, is the author of a groundbreaking study on the consciousness-raising novel, Feminism and Its Fictions. Mary Klages is an Associate Professor of English at the University of Colorado at Boulder. She received her Ph.D. in Modern Thought and Literature at Stanford University. She is the author of Woeful Afflictions: Disability and Sentimentality in Victorian America.
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