Entitled to the pedestal : place, race, and progress in white Southern women's writing, 1920-1945
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Entitled to the pedestal : place, race, and progress in white Southern women's writing, 1920-1945
University of Iowa Press, c2007
- : cloth
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 187-201) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In this searching study, Nghana Lewis offers a close reading of the works and private correspondences, essays, and lectures of five southern white women writers: Julia Peterkin, Gwen Bristow, Caroline Gordon, Willa Cather, and Lillian Smith. At the core of this work is a sophisticated reexamination of the myth of southern white womanhood. Lewis overturns the conventional argument that white women were passive and pedestal-bound. Instead, she argues that these figures were complicit in the day-to-day dynamics of power and authorship and stood to gain much from these arrangements at the expense of others. At the same time that her examination of southern mythology explodes received wisdom, it is also a journey of self-discovery. As Lewis writes in her preface, ""As a proud daughter of the South, I have always been acutely aware of the region's rich cultural heritage, folks, and foodstuffs. How could I not be? I was born and reared in Lafayette, Louisiana, where an infant's first words are not 'da-da' and 'ma-ma' but 'crawfish boil' and 'fais-do-do.'...I have also always been keenly farniliar with its volatile history."" Where these conflicting images meet - and specifically the role of white southern women as catalysts, vindicators, abettors, and antagonists - forms the crux of this study. As such, this study of the South by a daughter of the South offers a distinctive perspective that illuminates the texts in novel and provocative ways.
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