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Redressing the balance : American women's literary humor from Colonial times to the 1980s / edited by Nancy Walker and Zita Dresner.
Van Pelt Library PN6231.W6 R43 1988
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LIBRA - Special PN6231.W6 R43 1988
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- Format:
- Book
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- American wit and humor--Women authors.
- American wit and humor.
- Women--United States--Humor.
- Women.
- United States.
- Genre:
- Humor.
- Penn Provenance:
- Gotham Book Mart (former owner) (Gotham Book Mart Collection copy)
- Physical Description:
- xxxiv, 454 pages ; 24 cm
- Place of Publication:
- Jackson : University Press of Mississippi, [1988]
- Summary:
- Available again in paperback, this book giving new focus to the wide field of humor includes work by such well-known writers as Dorothy Parker, Phyllis McGinley, and Gertrude Stein as well as by once-popular but forgotten authors such as Frances Whitcher, Carolyn Wells, Alice Duer Miller, and Florence Guy Seabury.
- Indeed, one of the purposes of the anthology is to reclaim the tradition of women's humor in America, from the witty observations of Sarah Kemble Knight in the early eighteenth century to the humorous essays on contemporary American society by Veronica Geng and Gail Sausser. Included are feminist political satire, literary parody, light verse, and domestic humor by more than fifty American women during a period of more than three hundred years.
- The collection provides ample evidence that women -- white and black, urban and rural, newspaper columnists and fiction writers -- have taken note of the absurdities and incongruities of American life, particularly as these have affected their lives because they are women. A strong current of feminist protest runs throughout the anthology, not only in the work of avowed feminists such as Marietta Holley and Charlotte Perkins Gilman but also in portraits of strong, assertive women such as Mary Roberts Rinehart's "Tish" and distraught housewives such as the narrator in Betty MacDonald's The Egg and I.
- The issues these writers explore are to the current women's movement -- women's economic and political subordination, the sexual double standard, lack of self-definition and autonomy, and the frustrations of homemaking and earning a living.
- Notes:
- Bibliography: pages 449-454.
- ISBN:
- 0878053638
- 0878053646
- OCLC:
- 18019522
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