From the hearth to the open road : a feminist study of aging in contemporary literature

Bibliographic Information

From the hearth to the open road : a feminist study of aging in contemporary literature

Barbara Frey Waxman

(Contributions in women's studies, no. 113)

Greenwood Press, 1990

  • lib. bdg. : alk. pap

Available at  / 29 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. [191]-198

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This literary critical book deals exclusively with contemporary fiction by women that focuses on aging of women. It discusses the emergence of a new fictional genre, the novel of ripening or Reifungsroman. This emerging genre about the aging heroine reconceptualizes middle and old age for women, taking it from a formerly stereotypical state of passivity and deterioration (by the hearthside) into one of adventure, growth, self-discovery, self-affirmation, and integration (on the open road). The book contains an extensive bibliography of twentieth-century popular periodical articles on aging (Canadian, American, and British); literary critical articles on aging in the fiction of Doris Lessing, Alice Adams, Paule Marshall, Elizabeth Taylor, Barbara Pym, May Sarton, and Margaret Laurence; as well as general literary critical works on these authors; and some general (non-literary) studies of aging, often from a feminist framework (such as Simone de Beavoir's The Coming of Age). Using a feminist theoretical approach, with some influence from social literary critics such as Lentricchia and Said, the book surveys, in the first chapter, selected popular magazine articles written over this century. The next chapter analyzes fiction on middle-aged women, in works by Doris Lessing and Alice Adams. Chapter Three analyzes young-old women, in works by Barbara Pym, Elizabeth Taylor, and Paule Marshall. The final chapter looks at frail, or dependent old women, in works by May Sarton and Margaret Laurence. This work should be well received by students and scholars engaged in the study of literary criticism, women's studies in literature, gerontology, the life-cycle in literature, and contemporary women in literature.

Table of Contents

Introduction: A New Fictional Genre--The Reifungsroman, or Fiction of Ripening Popular Journalism's Treatment of Old Age and the Aging Experience Beginning the Journey to Selfhood in Middle Age New Passions and Commitments in Young Old Age Challenging Dependency and Embracing Death Conclusion: The Aging Woman in Society, the Reifungsroman, and Literary Criticism's Role Bibliography Index

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