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Overview

Modernist Women Writers and American Social Engagement explores the role of social and political engagement by women writers in the development of American modernism. Examining a diverse array of genres by both canonical modernists and underrepresented writers, this collection uncovers an obscured strain of modernist activism. Each chapter provides a detailed cultural and literary analysis, revealing the ways in which modernists’ politically and socially engaged interventions shaped their writing. Considering issues such as working class women’s advocacy, educational reform, political radicalism, and the global implications for American literary production, this book examines the complexity of the relationship between creating art and fostering social change. Ultimately, this collection redefines the parameters of modernism while also broadening the conception of social engagement to include both readily acknowledged social movements as well as less recognizable forms of advocacy for social change.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498582919
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 03/15/2019
Series: Innovation and Activism in American Women's Writing
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 326
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Jody Cardinal is director of the Writing Center at the State University of New York, Old Westbury.

Deirdre E. Egan-Ryan is associate professor of English at St. Norbert College.

Julia Lisella is associate professor of English at Regis College.

Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction: Modernist Women Writers and American Social Engagement

Jody Cardinal, Deirdre E. Egan-Ryan, and Julia Lisella

Part I: Women’s Work as Modernist Engagement

1. Resisting Dismissal: Working-Class Women in the Popular Fiction of Edna Ferber and Mary Roberts Rinehart

Windy Counsell Petrie

2. Virginia Lee Burton’s “Just Sentimental Talk”: Modernist Children’s Literature and Collective Action

Deirdre E. Egan-Ryan

3. “In Harmony with the Desert”: Syncretic Modernism in Polingaysi Qoyawayma’s No Turning Back

Amanda J. Zink

Part II: Modernism, Social Movements, and Advocacy

4. Gertrude Stein and College Education for Women: Early Activism and its Modernist Legacy

Jody Cardinal

5. Unclassified: The Political Feminism of Edna St. Vincent Millay’s “Sonnets from an Ungrafted Tree”

Linda Martin

6. Anne Spencer’s Epistolary Activism

Lesley Wheeler

Part III: Political Radicals and Modernism

7. Lola Ridge, Modernism, and the Poetics of Radical Sentimentalism

Nathaniel Cadle

8. Radical Re-Invention of the Lyric in Genevieve Taggard’s Poems of Hawai‘i

Julia Lisella

9. Politics, Rhetoric, and Death in Katherine Anne Porter

William Solomon

Part IV: Modernist Social Engagement in its Global Context

10. “Is it time?”: Modernist Experimentation and Harlem Renaissance Prophecy inMarita Bonner’s The Purple Flower

Laura Dawkins

11. Economics, Nation, and Family in Mina Loy’s Anglo-Mongrels and the Rose

Linda A. Kinnahan

12. Anti-Fascist, Anti-Imperialist, Anti-War: The Political Alter-Egos of Elizabeth Bishop and Marianne Moore in 1930s Britain

Celena Kusch

Index

About the Editors

About the Contributors




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