Broadway's bravest woman : selected writings of Sophie Treadwell

著者

書誌事項

Broadway's bravest woman : selected writings of Sophie Treadwell

edited and with introductions by Jerry Dickey and Miriam López-Rodríguez

(Theater in the Americas / Robert A. Schanke, series editor)

Southern Illinois University Press, c2006

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 267-271)

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Expanding critical awareness of a feminist writer's neglected accomplishments. This collection of plays, fiction, and journalistic essays provides an engaging portrait of one of America's most innovative yet neglected feminists. ""Broadway's Bravest Woman: Selected Writings of Sophie Treadwell"" is the first critical compilation of her prose and drama and highlights her most significant but formerly unavailable works. Editors Jerry Dickey and Miriam Lopez-Rodriguez place Treadwell within the context of the early twentieth century and outline four themes that infused her feminist ideology: the social position of women, ethnic identity in the United States, tensions between modern progressivism and conservatism, and the individual's role in social justice. Treadwell's critical reputation as a dramatist is based largely on the success of the 1928 expressionist drama ""Machinal"", but little is known about her other dramas, much less her fiction and journalism. Drawing largely on unpublished manuscripts, this volume documents the breadth of Treadwell's work, from an investigative newspaper serial written in 1914 to selections from an autobiographical novel completed during World War II, which chronicled her development as a feminist. In the introduction, Dickey and Lopez-Rodriguez present a detailed picture of Treadwell's sensational but critically neglected journalistic career, from her 1915 serial on social welfare for prostitutes in San Francisco to her 1921 groundbreaking story on the Mexican revolutionary leader Pancho Villa. They also outline the personal and social factors that helped shape Treadwell's feminist ideals. Dickey and Lopez-Rodriguez assess Treadwell's playwriting aesthetic and establish a critical context for three of her plays - ""Clarence Darrow"", ""The Eye of the Beholder"", and ""Ladies Leave"" - published in this volume for the first time. They also detail Treadwell's novel ""Hope for a Harvest"", which addressed prejudice against foreigners, immigrants, and Mexican Americans, long before Chicano literature became popular.

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