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LAURA LAFFRADO, UNCOMMON WOMEN: GENDER AND REPRESENTATION IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY U.S. WOMEN'S WRITING

06/02/2009 7:00 pm
Location: 
Street:
Village Books
Additional:
1200 Eleventh Street
City:
Bellingham
,
Province:
Washington
Postal Code:
98225
Country:
United States
In her book, Laura Laffrado writes about early American women’s autobiography and how the uncommon women of the title, including Louisa May Alcott and Harriet Jacobs, were able to write about their daring actions without being penalized for their unusual behavior. Laura Laffrado is a specialist in early U.S. literatures and culture, a past winner of WWU’s Excellence in Teaching Award, and has published widely on American literature.

 

$39.95
ISBN-13: 9780814206188
Availability: Usually Ships in 1-5 days
Published: Ohio State University Press, 4/2009
"Uncommon Women "discusses provocative, highly readable, nineteenth-century American texts that complicate notions of self-writing and female agency. This feminist study considers the generic forms, language, and illustrations of a group of complex and often daring texts, including Sarah Kemble Knight's unconventional travel "Journal" (1825); Fanny Fern's controversial newspaper essays (1851-72); Civil War nurse Louisa May Alcott's "Hospital Sketches "(1863); and cross-dressed soldier's S. Emma E. Edmonds's "Nurse" "and Spy in the Union Army "(1865), along with later women's war reminiscences. The study concludes with a fresh reading of neglected aspects of Harriet Jacobs's "Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl" (1861), the primary Black female autobiographical text of the century, which fundamentally displays what whiteness enabled. "Uncommon Women" reveals attempts of white middle-class women to both violate and align themselves with gendered assumptions. In doing so, it makes visible the ways in which these texts disputed restrictive female constructions, tested boundaries of race and class, and anticipated reaction to their disruptive discourses. The resulting conflicted self-representations illuminate the vexed contours of women's autobiography. This study's findings make plain the impact of white/male discourses of gender on women's self-narrativeand illustrate how unconventional women were pressured to embrace domesticity, heterosexuality, marriage, motherhood, and political passivity.