Description

Book Synopsis

From 1850-1932, American women artists found their bodies and desires narrowly defined by cultural, social, and legal patriarchal systems. Women were typically depicted as “abnormal” for harboring desires that lay outside of motherhood, yet female coming-of-age stories complicate this rhetoric by revealing how the roles of wife and mother are themselves “abnormal” in their self-sacrificial demands. The Artist Embodied: The Development of Women Artists in American Literature from 1850-1940 contends that in the female Künstlerromane, or artist novels, the protagonist’s body demands an outlet to articulate desires that defy restricting patriarchal rhetoric. This demand becomes an artistic drive to express an embodied knowledge in a new language of artistic invention that establishes the female body as generative beyond corporeal reproduction.This book explores the development of the female artist in American literature by women writers, including the work of E.D.E.N Southworth, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Kate Chopin, Willa Cather, Jessie Fauset, and Zelda Fitzgerald. Each of these authors depicts the coming-of-age of women artists to assert the legitimacy of their art, pushing back against the erroneous notion that women are, at best, talented hobbyists, and, at worst, a scribbling mob drawing attention away from more substantial works by critically acclaimed male authors.



Trade Review

In Women Writing the American Artist in Novels of Development from 1850-1932: The Artist Embodied, Rickie-Ann Legleitner makes a substantial contribution to the scholarship on the female artist novel of development through compelling analyses of patriarchal America’s resistance to recognizing women artists as creators of high art. In five Künstleromane published between 1850 and 1932, Legleitner focuses on how her selected women writers reconfigure accepted domestic and sentimental themes into declarations of female individualism and autonomy that establish the female body’s generative capabilities not only for corporeal reproduction but for liberating cultural production. Complicating the analyses through tropes of race, ethnicity, class and ability, the study examines the female fictional artists negotiating private and public spaces, the home and the marketplace, much as the women writers who created them did.

-- Rita Bode, Professor of English Literature, Trent University

Table of Contents

Chapter One: Individuality and the Embodiment of Inequality in E.D.E.N. Southworth’s The Deserted Wife

Chapter Two: Disabling Marriage and the Woman Artist in Elizabeth Stuart Phelps’s The Story of Avis

Chapter Three: Embracing Fate: Artistry and Autonomy in Kate Chopin’s The Awakening

Chapter Four: ‘That sensuous form’: Corporeal Artistic Creation in Willa Cather’s The Song of the Lark

Chapter Five: The Body at Play: Artistic Passing in Jessie Fauset’s Plum Bun

Chapter Six: The Cult of Artistry in Zelda Fitzgerald’s Save me the Waltz

Women Writing the American Artist in Novels of

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    A Hardback by Rickie-Ann Legleitner

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      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 06/05/2021
      ISBN13: 9781793610348, 978-1793610348
      ISBN10: 1793610347

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      From 1850-1932, American women artists found their bodies and desires narrowly defined by cultural, social, and legal patriarchal systems. Women were typically depicted as “abnormal” for harboring desires that lay outside of motherhood, yet female coming-of-age stories complicate this rhetoric by revealing how the roles of wife and mother are themselves “abnormal” in their self-sacrificial demands. The Artist Embodied: The Development of Women Artists in American Literature from 1850-1940 contends that in the female Künstlerromane, or artist novels, the protagonist’s body demands an outlet to articulate desires that defy restricting patriarchal rhetoric. This demand becomes an artistic drive to express an embodied knowledge in a new language of artistic invention that establishes the female body as generative beyond corporeal reproduction.This book explores the development of the female artist in American literature by women writers, including the work of E.D.E.N Southworth, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Kate Chopin, Willa Cather, Jessie Fauset, and Zelda Fitzgerald. Each of these authors depicts the coming-of-age of women artists to assert the legitimacy of their art, pushing back against the erroneous notion that women are, at best, talented hobbyists, and, at worst, a scribbling mob drawing attention away from more substantial works by critically acclaimed male authors.



      Trade Review

      In Women Writing the American Artist in Novels of Development from 1850-1932: The Artist Embodied, Rickie-Ann Legleitner makes a substantial contribution to the scholarship on the female artist novel of development through compelling analyses of patriarchal America’s resistance to recognizing women artists as creators of high art. In five Künstleromane published between 1850 and 1932, Legleitner focuses on how her selected women writers reconfigure accepted domestic and sentimental themes into declarations of female individualism and autonomy that establish the female body’s generative capabilities not only for corporeal reproduction but for liberating cultural production. Complicating the analyses through tropes of race, ethnicity, class and ability, the study examines the female fictional artists negotiating private and public spaces, the home and the marketplace, much as the women writers who created them did.

      -- Rita Bode, Professor of English Literature, Trent University

      Table of Contents

      Chapter One: Individuality and the Embodiment of Inequality in E.D.E.N. Southworth’s The Deserted Wife

      Chapter Two: Disabling Marriage and the Woman Artist in Elizabeth Stuart Phelps’s The Story of Avis

      Chapter Three: Embracing Fate: Artistry and Autonomy in Kate Chopin’s The Awakening

      Chapter Four: ‘That sensuous form’: Corporeal Artistic Creation in Willa Cather’s The Song of the Lark

      Chapter Five: The Body at Play: Artistic Passing in Jessie Fauset’s Plum Bun

      Chapter Six: The Cult of Artistry in Zelda Fitzgerald’s Save me the Waltz

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