Penelope's web : gender, modernity, H.D.'s fiction

Bibliographic Information

Penelope's web : gender, modernity, H.D.'s fiction

Susan Stanford Friedman

(Cambridge studies in American literature and culture)

Cambridge University Press, 1990

  • : pbk

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Note

Bibliography: p. 407-429

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Penelope's Web should appeal to a wide spectrum of readers interested in twentieth-century modernism, women's writing, feminist criticism, post-structuralist theory, psychoanalysis, autobiography, and women's studies. Published in 1991, it was the first book to examine fully the brilliantly innovative prose writings of H. D., the pen-name for Hilda Doolittle (1886-1961), who has been known primarily as a poet. Her prose, more personal, experimental, and postmodern than her poetry, raises central questions about the relation of women writers to language, desire and history. She suppressed in her lifetime many of these texts because of their daring exploration of her bisexuality and their radical critique of the social order. H. D.'s prose writings contribute importantly to the many histories and theories of modernism that are redrawing boundaries to include the achievement of women writers.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction: the double weave of H. D.'s prose modernism
  • 1. 'H. D. - Who is she?': discourses of self-creation
  • 2. Origins: rescriptions of desire in HER
  • 3. Madrigals: love, war and the the return of the repressed
  • 4. Borderlines: diaspora in the history novels and the Dijon series
  • 5. Rebirths: re/membering the father and mother
  • Coda: bridging the double discourse in H. D.' Oeuvre
  • Chronology: dating H. D.'s writing
  • Notes
  • Works cited
  • Index.

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