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Some wild visions: autobiographies by female itinerant evangelists in nineteenthth-century America

معرفی کتاب «Some wild visions: autobiographies by female itinerant evangelists in nineteenthth-century America» نوشتهٔ Elizabeth Elkin Grammer، منتشرشده توسط نشر Oxford University PressNew York در سال 2003. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.

## Abstract This literary study concerns the spiritual autobiographies of seven nineteenth‐century American women who found themselves called, often by way of wild visions, to become itinerant evangelists. Jarena Lee, Zilpha Elaw, Nancy Towle, Lydia Sexton, Laura Haviland, Julia Foote, and Amanda Berry Smith, though living and writing in an age which perfected the ideology of domesticity, chose literal homelessness for long periods of their lives, thus renouncing their claim upon the paradigm by which many northern women, black and white, measured their lives. Such itinerant lives were no doubt hard to live; they were even harder to write. All autobiographies, of course, attempt to make a story out of the welter of remembered events which constitute the writer's raw material; they attempt, that is, to discover the pattern and the meaning in experience. But if the experiences in question are new and unfamiliar, where will the autobiographer find the cultural reference points which can reveal, or impose, pattern and meaning? The autobiographies which these women wrote are remarkable documents—sometimes artless, often long, and nearly always desperate attempts to assemble, out of familiar cultural materials, plausible representations of lives which were anything but familiar. Invoking in quick succession different and even contradictory models of self—the biblical paradigm of the suffering servant, the domestic ideal of the nurturing mother, and the capitalistic image of the fantastically productive entrepreneur—they attempt to patch together comprehensible Lives which would somehow be equal to their radically original lives. Literally, psychologically, and ideologically, these female preachers were “out of place,” both in the world of nineteenth‐century evangelicalism and in American culture generally. It was in the hope of situating themselves in that culture, of assuring their readers and themselves of their place in nineteenth‐century America, that they wrote their books. Ultimately, however, these women would write somewhat anxious narratives, itinerant autobiographies still in search of their endings and meanings, books which attempt to summon up the interpretive communities capable of understanding strangers and pilgrims. These are, then, stories about the poetics of itinerancy and also about gender and genre, about the particular predicament of women negotiating with their culture for identity. This Book Is A Study Of Seven Autobiographies By Women Who Defied The Domestic Ideology Of Nineteenth-century America By Serving As Itinerant Preachers. Literally And Culturally Homeless, All Of Them Used Their Autobiographies To Construct, From An Array Of Materials, Plausible Identities As Women And Christians In An Age That Found Them Hard To Understand. Introduction: Stirring And Strange: Autobiographies Of Nineteenth-century Female Itinerant Preachers -- 1. Breaking Up Housekeeping: Female Evangelists And Domestic Ideology -- 2. Feverish Restlessness And Mighty Movement: Female Evangelists In The Marketplace Of Salvation -- 3. Nothing Succeeds Like Failure: Singularity And The Uses Of Opposition -- 4. Poetics Of Itinerancy: Evangelical Women Writers And The Form Of Autobiography -- Afterword: The Call Of The Preachers, The Cry Of The Faithful: Evangelical Women Writers And The Search For An Interpretive Community. Elizabeth Elkin Grammer. Includes Bibliographical References (p. 171-194) And Index. A study of seven autobiographies by women who defied the domestic ideology of 19th-century America by serving as itinerant preachers. Literally and culturally homeless, all of them used their autobiographies to construct plausible identities as women and Christians In 1855, having joined the African Methodist Episcopal Church, Amanda Berry experienced a remarkable vision: she saw herself preaching the gospel before a large crowd.
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