Uncommon women : gender and representation in nineteenth-century U.S. women's writing

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Where to find it

Davis Library (8th floor)

Call Number
PS152 .L34 2009
Status
Available

Authors, etc.

Names:

Summary

Uncommon Women discusses provocative, highly readable, nineteenth-century American texts that complicate notions of self-writing and female agency. This feminist study considers the generic forms, language, and illustrations of a group of complex and often daring texts, including Sarah Kemble Knight's unconventional travel Journal (1825); Fanny Fern's controversial newspaper essays (1851-72); Civil War nurse Louisa May Alcott's Hospital Sketches (1863); and cross-dressed soldier's S. Emma E. Edmonds's Nurse and Spy in the Union Army (1865), along with later women's war reminiscences. The study concludes with a fresh reading of neglected aspects of Harriet Jacobs's Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl (1861), the primary Black female autobiographical text of the century, which fundamentally displays what whiteness enabled. Uncommon Women reveals attempts of white middle-class women to both violate and align themselves with gendered assumptions. In doing so, it makes visible the ways in which these texts disputed restrictive female constructions, tested boundaries of race and class, and anticipated reaction to their disruptive discourses. The resulting conflicted self-representations illuminate the vexed contours of women's autobiography. This study's findings make plain the impact of white/male discourses of gender on women's self-narrativeand illustrate how unconventional women were pressured to embrace domesticity, heterosexuality, marriage, motherhood, and political passivity.

Contents

  • Acknowledgments p. vii
  • Introduction "Without Any Resort to Amazonian Conventions": Women, Writing, Representation p. 1
  • Chapter 1 "A More Masculine Courage": Women's Voice and the Nineteenth-Century Publication of Sarah Kemble Knight's Journal p. 23
  • Chapter 2 "Everything by Turns and Nothing Long": Configurations of Female Selfhood in Fanny Fern's Early Periodical Writing p. 54
  • Chapter 3 "How Could You Leave Me Alone When the Room Was Full of Men!": Gender and Self-Representation in Louisa May Alcott's Hospital Sketches p. 79
  • Chapter 4 "I Am Other than My Appearance Indicates": Sex-Gender Representation in Women's Nineteenth-Century Civil War Reminiscences p. 106
  • Conclusion "I Found It Hard to Preserve My Self-Control": Race, Women, Representation p. 134
  • Notes p. 157
  • Works Cited p. 171
  • Index p. 181

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