Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on contributors
- Introduction
- 1 The stories we tell: American Indian women's writing and the persistence of tradition
- 2 Women writers and war
- 3 American women's writing in the colonial period
- 4 Religion, sensibility, and sympathy
- 5 Women's writing of the Revolutionary era
- 6 Women writers and the early US novel
- 7 Women in literary culture during the long nineteenth century
- 8 Moral authority as literary property in mid-nineteenth-century print culture
- 9 The shape of Catharine Sedgwick's career
- 10 Writing, authorship, and genius: literary women and modes of literary production
- 11 Nineteenth-century American women's poetry: past and prospects
- 12 Transatlantic sympathies and nineteenth-century women's writing
- 13 Nineteenth-century African American women writers
- 14 Local knowledge and women's regional writing
- 15 Women and children first: female writers of American children's literature
- 16 US suffrage literature
- 17 American women playwrights
- 18 Turn-of-the-twentieth-century transitions: women on the edge of tomorrow
- 19 Accidents, agency, and American literary naturalism
- 20 The geography of ladyhood: racializing the novel of manners
- 21 Self-made women: novelists of the 1920s
- 22 Recovering the legacy of Zara Wright and the twentieth-century black woman writer
- 23 Jewish American women writers
- 24 Women on the breadlines
- 25 Modern domestic realism in America, 1950–1970
- 26 Lyric, gender, and subjectivity in modern and contemporary women's poetry
- 27 Contemporary American women's writing: women and violence
- 28 Asian American women's literature and the promise of committed art
- 29 Straight sex, queer text: American women novelists
- 30 Latina writers and the usable past
- 31 Where is she? Women/access/rhetoric
- 32 Reading women in America
- Index
- References
27 - Contemporary American women's writing: women and violence
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on contributors
- Introduction
- 1 The stories we tell: American Indian women's writing and the persistence of tradition
- 2 Women writers and war
- 3 American women's writing in the colonial period
- 4 Religion, sensibility, and sympathy
- 5 Women's writing of the Revolutionary era
- 6 Women writers and the early US novel
- 7 Women in literary culture during the long nineteenth century
- 8 Moral authority as literary property in mid-nineteenth-century print culture
- 9 The shape of Catharine Sedgwick's career
- 10 Writing, authorship, and genius: literary women and modes of literary production
- 11 Nineteenth-century American women's poetry: past and prospects
- 12 Transatlantic sympathies and nineteenth-century women's writing
- 13 Nineteenth-century African American women writers
- 14 Local knowledge and women's regional writing
- 15 Women and children first: female writers of American children's literature
- 16 US suffrage literature
- 17 American women playwrights
- 18 Turn-of-the-twentieth-century transitions: women on the edge of tomorrow
- 19 Accidents, agency, and American literary naturalism
- 20 The geography of ladyhood: racializing the novel of manners
- 21 Self-made women: novelists of the 1920s
- 22 Recovering the legacy of Zara Wright and the twentieth-century black woman writer
- 23 Jewish American women writers
- 24 Women on the breadlines
- 25 Modern domestic realism in America, 1950–1970
- 26 Lyric, gender, and subjectivity in modern and contemporary women's poetry
- 27 Contemporary American women's writing: women and violence
- 28 Asian American women's literature and the promise of committed art
- 29 Straight sex, queer text: American women novelists
- 30 Latina writers and the usable past
- 31 Where is she? Women/access/rhetoric
- 32 Reading women in America
- Index
- References
Summary
. . . what feminist thought can and has put into question is the capacity for any
map to represent more than a fiction of the world’s contours. The line traced
along the eastern edge of North America, for example, the line following the
extreme border of an American context, for all its inlets and protrusions, its islands
and peninsulas, still can only demarcate with the fiction of an arbitrarily traced line
the point at which land moves out to sea and the ground slips from beneath us.
Peggy Kamuf, “Replacing Feminist Criticism,” 46Peggy Kamuf offers an important caution in relation to mapping a nation's literature, and her caution also holds for mapping a generation's literature, or a gender's literary enterprise. Despite her warnings, it is, of course, also necessary to try to limn the linkages between texts and writers, to establish a literary history and a way of approaching disparate (though in many ways connected) texts. Such a mapping cannot hope to include all the terrain, nor show in details its “inlets and protrusions.” However, if the mapping exercise is not undertaken, women's literature may become invisible in critical terms. Elaine Showalter argues that women writers need “a critical jury of their peers to discuss their work, to explicate its symbols and meanings, and to demonstrate its continuing relevance to all readers” (Jury, xi). In this call, she is not alone. Joanna Russ contends that "[i]f women's experience is defined as inferior to, less important than, or 'narrower' than men's experience, women's writing is automatically denigrated. If women's experience is simply not seen, the effect will be the same" (How to Suppress Women's Writing, 47- 8). Hear me could well be the cry of many of the women characters who populate contemporary American women's fiction, whether they reside in classic (though now perhaps unfairly derided) consciousness-raising novels from the 1970s such as Erica Jong's Fear of Flying (1973) or Marilyn French's The Women's Room (1977) or novels from the early part of the twenty-first century which reiterate the request to be heard and taken seriously (even when adopting a comic tone).
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- The Cambridge History of American Women's Literature , pp. 539 - 556Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2012