The Personal and the Political in American Working-Class Literature, 1850-1939: Defining the Radical Romance

The Personal and the Political in American Working-Class Literature, 1850-1939: Defining the Radical Romance

by Laurie J. C. Cella
The Personal and the Political in American Working-Class Literature, 1850-1939: Defining the Radical Romance

The Personal and the Political in American Working-Class Literature, 1850-1939: Defining the Radical Romance

by Laurie J. C. Cella

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Overview

As working women invaded the public space of the factory in the nineteenth century, they challenged Victorian notions of female domesticity and chastity. With virtue at the forefront of discussions regarding working women, aspects of working-class women’s culture—fashion, fiction, and dance halls—become vivid signifiers for moral impropriety, and attempts to censure these activities become overt attempts to censure female sexuality in the workplace. The Personal and the Political in American Working-Class Literature, 1850–1939 argues that these informal and often ignored “trifles” of female community provided the building blocks for female solidarity in the workplace. While most critical approaches to working-class fiction emphasize female suffering rather than agency, this book argues that working women themselves viewed aspects of consumer culture and new avenues for courtship as extensions of their rights as breadwinners. The strike itself is an intense moment of political upheaval that lends itself to more extensive personal and sexual freedoms. Through its analysis of strike novels, this book provides a fuller picture of working-class women as they simultaneously navigate new identities as “working ladies” and enter the dramatic and sometimes violent world of labor activism. This book is recommended for scholars of literary studies, women’s studies, and US history.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498581219
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 09/06/2019
Series: Innovation and Activism in American Women's Writing
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 196
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Laurie Cella is associate professor of English at Shippensburg University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Chapter 1: The Lowell Experiment: Finery, Chastity, and an Emerging Working-class Culture

Chapter 2: Maud Matchin: A Working-Class American Beauty in John Hay’s The Breadwinners (1896)

Chapter 3: Strikers at the Ball: Radical Romances of the Great Shirtwaist Strike, Diary of a Shirtwaist Striker (1909) and Comrade Yetta (1913)

Chapter 4: Romance on the Picket Line: Mary Heaton Vorse’s Strike! (1930) and Dorothy Myra Page’s Gathering Storm (1932)

Chapter 5: Violence and Female Sexuality in Sherwood Anderson’s Beyond Desire (1932) and William Rollins’s The Shadow Before (1934)

Chapter 6: Romance as Redemption in Olive Tilford Dargan’s Call Home the Heart (1932), Stone Came Rolling (1935) and Grace Lumpkin’s To Make My Bread (1932)

Conclusion

Works Cited

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