Description

New research on Freeman's fiction that challenges and expands earlier feminist readings of the female realm Contextualizes key developments in Freeman criticism since 1991 Moves beyond an analysis of the short stories for which Freeman is best known to examine her novels Pembroke (1894), Madelon (1896), and The Portion of Labor (1901); stories for youths and uncollected stories; and post-1902 fiction from her late career Updates approaches to Freeman by considering ecocriticism, race, labor and class, transnationalism Reconsiders periodization: Freeman is read as a modernist and a World War One writer whose long, evolving career questions critical readings of her work within the confines of turn-of-the-century realism and regionalism Raises important questions about single-author scholarship and argues for new critical views that go beyond the single author Involves a transatlantic array of scholars (based in the US, the UK, Finland, France, Turkey, Lithuania) at different stages of their career from some long-time specialists of Freeman to some international PhD students Freeman is best known today for her short regionalist fiction. Recently, Freeman studies have taken new turns including ecocriticism, trauma studies, the Gothic, and queer theory. The essay collection pushes these developments further. Contributors aim at revisiting and going beyond Freeman's regionalism. They challenge earlier feminist readings of the female realm by arguing that her short fiction and novels depict women and girls as violent and criminal, suffocating as well as nurturing; they bring to light questions of race and ethnicity that have been conspicuously absent from scholarship on Freeman, as well as issues of class. Because questions of women's work are central to Freeman's oeuvre, this collection discusses Freeman's acumen as a businesswoman herself, a participant as well as a castigator of turn-of-the-century US capitalism. Finally, essays reconsider the periodization of Freeman by exploring her little acknowledged post-1902 and therefore post-marriage fiction her war stories and her urban stories.

New Perspectives on Mary E. Wilkins Freeman: Reading with and Against the Grain

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Hardback by Stephanie Palmer , Myrto Drizou

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New research on Freeman's fiction that challenges and expands earlier feminist readings of the female realm Contextualizes key developments in... Read more

    Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
    Publication Date: 21/02/2023
    ISBN13: 9781399504478, 978-1399504478
    ISBN10: 1399504479

    Number of Pages: 312

    Non Fiction , ELT & Literary Studies , Education

    Description

    New research on Freeman's fiction that challenges and expands earlier feminist readings of the female realm Contextualizes key developments in Freeman criticism since 1991 Moves beyond an analysis of the short stories for which Freeman is best known to examine her novels Pembroke (1894), Madelon (1896), and The Portion of Labor (1901); stories for youths and uncollected stories; and post-1902 fiction from her late career Updates approaches to Freeman by considering ecocriticism, race, labor and class, transnationalism Reconsiders periodization: Freeman is read as a modernist and a World War One writer whose long, evolving career questions critical readings of her work within the confines of turn-of-the-century realism and regionalism Raises important questions about single-author scholarship and argues for new critical views that go beyond the single author Involves a transatlantic array of scholars (based in the US, the UK, Finland, France, Turkey, Lithuania) at different stages of their career from some long-time specialists of Freeman to some international PhD students Freeman is best known today for her short regionalist fiction. Recently, Freeman studies have taken new turns including ecocriticism, trauma studies, the Gothic, and queer theory. The essay collection pushes these developments further. Contributors aim at revisiting and going beyond Freeman's regionalism. They challenge earlier feminist readings of the female realm by arguing that her short fiction and novels depict women and girls as violent and criminal, suffocating as well as nurturing; they bring to light questions of race and ethnicity that have been conspicuously absent from scholarship on Freeman, as well as issues of class. Because questions of women's work are central to Freeman's oeuvre, this collection discusses Freeman's acumen as a businesswoman herself, a participant as well as a castigator of turn-of-the-century US capitalism. Finally, essays reconsider the periodization of Freeman by exploring her little acknowledged post-1902 and therefore post-marriage fiction her war stories and her urban stories.

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