Grotesque Relations: Modernist Domestic Fiction and the U.S. Welfare State

Grotesque Relations: Modernist Domestic Fiction and the U.S. Welfare State

by Susan Edmunds
Grotesque Relations: Modernist Domestic Fiction and the U.S. Welfare State

Grotesque Relations: Modernist Domestic Fiction and the U.S. Welfare State

by Susan Edmunds

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Overview

In this book, Susan Edmunds explores he relationship between modernist domestic fiction and the rise of the U.S. welfare state. This relationship, which began in the Progressive era, emerged as maternalist reformers developed an inverted discourse of social housekeeping in order to call for state protection and regulation of the home. Modernists followed suit, turning the genre of domestic fiction inside out in order to represent new struggles on the border between home, market and state. Edmunds uses the work of Djuna Barnes, Jean Toomer, Tillie Olsen, Edna Ferber, Nathanael West, and Flannery O'Connor to trace the significance of modernists' radical reconstitution of the genre of domestic fiction. Using a grotesque aesthetic of revolutionary inversion, these writers looped their depictions of the domestic sphere through revolutionary discourses associated with socialism, consumerism and the avant-garde. These authors used their grotesque discourses to deal with issues of social conflict ranging from domestic abuse and racial violence to educational reform, public health care, eugenics, and social security. With the New Deal, the U.S. welfare state realized maternalist ambitions to disseminate a modern sentimental version of the home to all white citizens, successfully translating radical bids for collective social security into a racialized order of selective and detached domestic security. The book argues that modernists engaged and contested this historical trajectory from the start. In the process, they forged an enduring set of terms for understanding and negotiating the systemic forms of ambivalence, alienation and conflict that accompany Americans' contemporary investments in "family values."

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199713530
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 08/14/2008
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 414 KB

About the Author

Susan Edmunds is an Associate Professor of English at Syracuse University, where she has taught since 1992.

Table of Contents

Introduction "As with a Startling Picture": Modernism and the Domestic Sphere 3

1 "For She Asks Forever Only Help": The Critique of Maternalist Reform Discourse in Djuna Barnes's Ryder 39

2 Tortured Bodies and Twisted Words: The Antidomestic Vision of Jean Toomer's Cane 65

3 Freaked: Eastern European Immigration and the "American Home" in Edna Ferber's American Beauty 95

4 "Not Sentimental": The Double Bind of White Working-Class Femininity in Tillie Olsen's Yonnondio 123

5 Siren Calls: Consumer Revolution and the Body Beautiful in Nathanael West's The Day of the Locust 149

6 "Not Charity Yet!": State-Supported Capitalism and the Secret Life of God in Flannery O'Connor's Wise Blood 181

Notes 209

Bibliography 233

Index 253

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