This collection delves deeply into the power of solitude in a richly detailed exploration of the lives of women writers! The essays in this fascinating volume combine literary theory, autobiography, performance, and criticism, while opening minds and expanding concepts of women's roles both in the home and within academia along the way. Herspace: Women, Writing, and Solitude begins with a discussion of the importance of solitude to the works of a variety of writers, including Margaret Atwood, May Sarton, Virginia Woolf, Marguerite Duras, and Zora Neale Hurston, and then moves on to an examination of the actual solitary spaces of women writers. The book concludes with the stories of modern women asserting their right to a space of their own. These essays, full of pain and new growth, lessons learned and battles fought, resound with the honesty and courage the authors have found in the process of truly making their own homes. Herspace examines: the stereotyped spinster solitude as a process and a journey women's prison literature cars, empty nests, kitchen counters, and other found spaces for writing the meaning of a home of one's own creating beauty in solitary settingsContributors to Herspace have made a conscious effort to integrate the personal with the academic, and the result is a volume of surprising intimacy, a window into the world of women writers past and present actively engaging solitude. From finding and defining the muse to the identity issues of home ownership, Herspace, which includes Jan Wellington's essay What to Make of Missing Children (A Life Slipping into Fiction), (winner of the 2003 NCTE Donald Murray Prize for the best creative essay about teaching and/or writing published during the preceding year) provides you with the perspectives of women who are living these issues. As the editors write: The solitary space itself enables the writing process, protects it. And women, more than men, need this enabling protection. Women need to claim their own space, to bargain and plan and keep out of sight that solitary space in which to commune with their thoughts and feelings, to experience their creative process intimately. Herspace explores these women's experiences, revealing the unique creativity that comes from solitude.
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About the Editors Contributors Acknowledgments Introduction Section I: Women Theorizing HerspaceSolitude and Writing 1. Women Alone: The Spinster’s Art 2. With Sure and Uncertain Footing: Negotiating the Terrain of a Solitude in May Sarton’s Journals 3. Unknown Women: Secular Solitude in the Works of Alice Koller and May Sarton 4. A Veritable Guest to Her Own Self 5. Woolf, Hurston, and the House of Self 6. The Domestic Politics of Marguerite Duras Section II: Women’s Writing SpacesSolitude and the Creative Process 7. Writing Women, Solitary Space, and the Ideology of Domesticity 8. Car, Kitchen, Canyon: Mother Writing 9. Between the Study and the Living Room: Writing Alone and with Others Section III: Women Writing HerspacePersonal Takes on Home 10. What to Make of Missing Children (A Life Slipping into Fiction) 11. The Little Gray House and Me 12. The Colors and the Light 13. A Woman’s Place 14. Reframing My Life 15. An &/or Peace Performance Afterword
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780789018199
Publisert
2003-07-01
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Vekt
612 gr
Høyde
210 mm
Bredde
148 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, G, 05, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
308

Om bidragsyterne

J Dianne Garner, Victoria Boynton, Jo Malin