Melville & WomenElizabeth A. Schultz, Haskell S. Springer Kent State University Press, 2006 - 287 pàgines A comprehensive examination of the significance of women in Melville's life and work The twelve new essays in this collection extend the interest in Melville and women evident in recent scholarship, biography, art, and drama. Throughout his life, Melville lived surrounded by women, and he wove women's experiences into most of his literary work, early and late. Treating his poetry and prose and using a variety of theoretical approaches from the biographical to the ecocritical, the essays focus not only on Melville's female characters but also on gender roles, colonialism, intertextuality, legal issues, and concepts of the female and feminine. Several of them demonstrate his sensitive response to the work of nineteenth-century women authors. Collectively, they open new understandings of a writer too often seen almost wholly in masculine contexts. The comprehensive introduction by the editors surveys women in Melville's writings and situates the essays historically by relating them to scholarship concerning women in Melville's work as well as to Melville scholarship written by women. The essays are complemented by an extensive bibliography, portraits, and a portfolio of paintings created by contemporary women artists in response to Moby-Dick. |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 23.
Pàgina 7
... feminist literary criticism in the 1970s , scholars such as Ann Douglass , Joyce M. Warren , and Wilma Garcia , in reexamining nineteenth - century American canonical literature from an explicitly feminist perspective , turned their ...
... feminist literary criticism in the 1970s , scholars such as Ann Douglass , Joyce M. Warren , and Wilma Garcia , in reexamining nineteenth - century American canonical literature from an explicitly feminist perspective , turned their ...
Pàgina 8
... feminist concern that Melville projects male fantasies rather than fully developed , individual woman characters , early feminist Melville critics failed to consider the strengths of such characters , in prose and poetry , as Hunilla ...
... feminist concern that Melville projects male fantasies rather than fully developed , individual woman characters , early feminist Melville critics failed to consider the strengths of such characters , in prose and poetry , as Hunilla ...
Pàgina 104
... feminist ethic operates according to networks of obligation and connection . Masculinist ethics grow out of experiences of vying for mastery , then creating laws by which others may avoid strife . Gilligan calls this system an ethics of ...
... feminist ethic operates according to networks of obligation and connection . Masculinist ethics grow out of experiences of vying for mastery , then creating laws by which others may avoid strife . Gilligan calls this system an ethics of ...
Continguts
Melville Writing WomenWomen Writing Melville | 3 |
Women Reading MelvilleMelville Reading Women | 41 |
Melville Reading Sedgwick | 60 |
Copyright | |
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