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El. knyga: Routledge Introduction to American Women Writers

(Claremont Graduate University), (Claremont Graduate University, USA)
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The Routledge Introduction to American Women Writers considers the key literary, historical, cultural, and intellectual contexts of American women authors from the seventeenth century to the present, and provides students with an analysis of the most up-to-date literary trends and debates in women’s literature. This accessible and engaging guide covers a variety of essential topics such as:

  • The origins of American women’s writing
  • The colonial period and the Puritans
  • The early national period and the rhetoric of independence
  • The 19th Century and the Civil War period
  • The 20th Century, including Modernism and the Harlem Renaissance
  • The 21st Century and the future of American women’s writing
  • Feminism, sexuality, regionalism, domesticity, ethnicity, and multiculturalism.

The volume examines the ways in which both canonical and lesser known women writers from diverse class and cultural backgrounds have shaped American literary traditions, addressing key contemporary and theoretical debates, and giving particular attention to the ways writers worked both inside, outside, and around the strictures of their cultural and historical moments to create a space for women's voices and experiences as a vital part of American life. This valuable introduction offers a readable, cohesive narrative of the development of literature by American women and a refreshing range of perspectives. It also includes bullet point summaries and suggestions for further reading at the end of each chapter, making it particularly useful for students.

Recenzijos

"The Routledge Introduction to American Women Writers is a clear, comprehensive, and compact guide to American womens writing from the colonial period to the present. Martin and Williams skillfully locate the literature of American women in the multiple contexts of American history, transnational literary movements, and American cultural movements. They give deft summaries of the controversies and trends in American literary studies, and take note of the current important developments in digital technology, epublishing, social media,graphic fiction, popular genres, and young adult writing. This is an indispensable overview for students and scholars of the American womens literary tradition."--Elaine Showalter, Princeton University

"This book does all it promises and more, presenting a dazzling range and variety of American women's literary expression--and along the way giving a crash course in close to four centuries of American history and culture. Its broad coverage and brisk lucid prose belie literary readings that are consistently subtle and complete. That rare creature, a study of both breadth and depth, The Routledge Introduction to American Women Writers is an invaluable resource and scholarly model for students and teachers alike." Cathryn Halverson, University of Copenhagen, Denmark. "With The Routledge Introduction to American Women Writers, Wendy Martin and Sharone Williams have contributed an authoritative, yet succinct, volume that presents the rich contributions of American women to the literatures of the United States from the seventeenth century to the twenty-first. The accessible prose and impeccable scholarship combine to make this an important study and reference text for both beginning students and seasoned teachers. Martin and Williams place the complex history, literary production, and cultural achievement of women writers seamlessly into the multifaceted fabric of American writing. Informative and engaging, it is one of the best books to guide readers through a gendered understanding of literary and cultural history. What further distinguishes the meticulously contextualized and judiciously focused analytical narrative is the thoughtful inclusion of a broad range of writers from multiple ethnic, racial, social, and political groups. African American, Asian American, Native American, Chicana, and Latina writers are situated, along with American women of British and European descent, as integral to the evolving periods, movements, poetics, and practices characterizing an American literature."

--Thadious M. Davis, University of Pennsylvania

"This book does all it promises and more, presenting a dazzling range and variety of American women's literary expression--and along the way giving a crash course in close to four centuries of American history and culture. Its broad coverage and brisk lucid prose belie literary readings that are consistently subtle and complete. That rare creature, a study of both breadth and depth, The Routledge Introduction to American Women Writers is an invaluable resource and scholarly model for students and teachers alike."

-- Cathryn Halverson, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.

"The Routledge Introduction to American Women Writers is a clear, comprehensive, and compact guide to American womens writing from the colonial period to the present. Martin and Williams skillfully locate the literature of American women in the multiple contexts of American history, transnational literary movements, and American cultural movements. They provide an astute analysis of the controversies and trends in American literary studies, and take note of the current important developments in digital technology, ePublishing, social media, graphic fiction, popular genres, and young adult writing. This is an indispensable overview for students and scholars of the American womens literary tradition."

--Elaine Showalter, Princeton University

"In this remarkably concise and deeply informed survey of America's women writers, Wendy Martin and Sharone Williams beautifully expand our awareness of America's literary history. Moving deftly from Anne Bradstreet to Adrienne Rich, from Harriet Jacobs to Marilynne Robinson, the authors have shown that for the past four hundred years woman authors have triumphed in every literary genre. For students and teachers of world literature, this book is a required text."

Donald Stone, Peking University

Acknowledgments vii
Introduction ix
1 Across the Atlantic: Women in British North America
1(25)
2 Rhetoric and revolution: The women writers of the new republic
26(23)
3 Sentimental poets and scribbling women: The writers of the early nineteenth century
49(37)
4 From True Woman to New Woman: Redefining womanhood at the turn of the century
86(32)
5 Clashes with modernity: Women writers between the world wars
118(34)
6 Literatures of witness: Women writers after 1945
152(42)
Coda: The literatures of the twenty-first century 194(11)
Works cited 205(29)
Index 234
Wendy Martin is Professor of American Literature and American Studies at Claremont Graduate University, USA.



Sharone Williams has a PhD in American Literature and is the Managing Editor of Womens Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal.