Transcending the New Woman: Multiethnic Narratives in the Progressive Era (Volume 1)
معرفی کتاب «Transcending the New Woman: Multiethnic Narratives in the Progressive Era (Volume 1)» نوشتهٔ Charlotte J. Rich، منتشرشده توسط نشر University of Missouri Press در سال 2009. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
The dawn of the twentieth century saw the birth of the New Woman, a cultural and literary ideal that replaced Victorian expectations of domesticity with visions of social, political, and economic autonomy. Although such writers as Edith Wharton and Kate Chopin treated these ideals in well-known literature of that era, marginalized women also explored changing gender roles in works that deserve more attention today.
This book is the first study to focus solely on multiethnic women writersâ responses to the ideal of the New Woman in America, opening up a world of literary texts that provide new insight into the phenomenon. Charlotte Rich reveals how these authors uniquely articulated the contradictions of the American New Woman, and how social class, race, or ethnicity impacted womenâs experiences of both public and private life in the Progressive era.
Rich focuses on the work of writers representing five distinct ethnicities: Native Americans S. Alice Callahan and Mourning Dove, African American Pauline Hopkins, Chinese American Sui Sin Far, Mexican American MarÃa Cristina Mena, and Jewish American Anzia Yezierska. She shows that some oftheir works contain both affirmative and critical portraits of white New Women; in other cases, while these authorsalign their multiethnic heroines with the new ideals, those ideals are sometimes subordinated to more urgent dialogues about inequality and racial violence.
Here are views of women not usually encountered in fiction of this era. Callahanâs and Mourning Doveâs novels allude to womenâs rights but ultimately privilege critiques of violence against Native Americans. Hopkinsâs novels trace an increasingly pessimistic trajectory, drawing cynical conclusions about black womenâs ability to thrive in a prejudiced society. Menaâs magazine portraits of Mexican life present complex critiques of this independent ideal of womanhood. Yezierskaâs stories question the philanthropy of socially privileged Progressive female reformers with whom immigrant women interact. These writersâ works sometimes affirm emerging ideals but in other cases illuminate the iconic New Womanâs blindness to her own racial and economic privilege.
Through her insightful analysis, Rich presents alternative versions of female autonomy, with characters living outside the mainstream or moving between cultures. Transcending the New Woman offers multiple ways of transcending an ideal that was problematic in its exclusivity, as well as an entrée to forgotten works. It shows how the concept of the New Woman can be seen in newly complex ways when viewed through the writings of authors whose lives often embody the New Womanâs emancipatory goals-and whose fictions both affirm and complicateher aspirations.
Introduction: the new woman and progressive America Suffragist or "squaw"? S. Alice Callahan's and Mourning Dove's mediations of feminism and Indian rights From race women to an erased woman: Pauline Hopkins's nonfiction polemic and novelistic ambivalence A view from the border: Sui Sin Far's interrogation of the progressive new woman "The highly original country of the Yanquis": María Cristina Mena and American womanhood Escaping the "Torah-made world": the fiction of Anzia Yezierska Conclusion.