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Overview

Working Women in American Literature, 1865–1950 consists of eight original essays by literary, historical, and multicultural critics on the subject of working women in late-nineteenth- to mid-twentieth-century American literature. The volume examines how the American working woman has been presented, misrepresented, and underrepresented in American realistic and naturalistic literature (1865–1930), and by later authors influenced by realism and naturalism. Points explored include: the historical vocational realities of working women (e.g., factory workers, seamstresses, maids, teachers, writers, prostitutes, etc.); the distortions in literary representations of female work; the ways in which these representations still inform the lives of working women today; and new perspectives from queer theory, immigrant studies, and race and class analyses.
These essays draw on current feminist thought while remaining mindful of the historicity of the context. The essayists discuss important women writers of the period (for instance, Ellen Glasgow, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Rachel Crothers, Willa Cather, and the understudied Ann Petry), as well as canonical writers like Theodore Dreiser, Henry James, and William Dean Howells. The discussions touch on a variety of literary and artistic genres: novels, short stories, other forms of fiction, biographies, dramas, and films. In the introductory essay and throughout the collection, the term “working women in the United States” is deconstructed; the historical and cultural definitions of “work,” and the words “work in America” are redefined through the lens of genders.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498546799
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 07/07/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 184
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Miriam S. Gogol is professor of English at Mercy College.

Table of Contents

Introduction, by Miriam S. Gogol
Part I: Naturalism and the Working Woman
“The Female Domestic in Naturalistic Fiction,” by Miriam S. Gogol
“Sister Carrie, Fashion and the Working Woman in American Realism,”by Irene Gammel
Part II: The “New Woman”
“Women Doctors in Henry James and William Dean Howells,” by Lara Hubel
“Women, Work and Cross-Class Alliances in the Fiction of Charlotte Perkins Gilman” by Nancy Von Rosk
“Naturalism and the New Woman in Ellen Glasgow’s Barren Ground: “How Hard She Had Worked!” by Jessica Schubert McCarthy
Part III: Race, Sex, and Class
“Work, race, and the performance of gender in Ann Petry’s The Street” by Jochem Riesthuis
Part IV: Working Women in Drama and Film
“Feminism, Sentimentality and Realism in Rachel Crothers’ Working-Women Plays” by Anna Andes
“Career Women in 1940s Cinema: The Heroine as Executive Editor,” by Pedro Ponce
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