Margaret Fuller's Cultural Critique: Her Age and LegacyFritz Fleischmann Peter Lang, 2000 - 277 páginas A century and a half after her death, Margaret Fuller is recognized as «America's female intellectual prophet» (Charles Capper), a thinker of stunning acumen and foresight-feminist theoretician of gender and culture, literary and social critic, foreign correspondent, teacher, writer, revolutionist. The essays in this volume discuss her «seven practices» of cultural critique, her feminism as a road not taken, the twentieth-century life of her ideas, and her relationships with Lydia Maria Child, Julia Ward Howe, and Nathaniel Hawthorne; they contain analyses of language, perception, and voice, Fuller's travel writing at home and abroad, and her brother Arthur's editing practices. The broad range of biographical and critical scholarship assembled in this book contributes to the growing comprehension of Fuller's pioneering life and work. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 33
Página 65
... feel and say what I think : in short , to express without having to persuade " ( 249 ) . This echoes Fuller's earlier challenge to herself : “ I wish to arrive at that point where I can trust myself and leave off saying , ' It seems so ...
... feel and say what I think : in short , to express without having to persuade " ( 249 ) . This echoes Fuller's earlier challenge to herself : “ I wish to arrive at that point where I can trust myself and leave off saying , ' It seems so ...
Página 185
... feel an anxiety about voicing these ideas , about including what should be footnotes to my critical enterprise , or suppressed entirely , in the main text , and , like Margaret Fuller , I feel tempted to ask my readers not to " blame me ...
... feel an anxiety about voicing these ideas , about including what should be footnotes to my critical enterprise , or suppressed entirely , in the main text , and , like Margaret Fuller , I feel tempted to ask my readers not to " blame me ...
Página 221
... feel anything but the buoyant pleasure of being carried so lightly through this surf amid the breakers " ( 150 ) .21 The canoe ride passes all too quickly , however , and Fuller experiences " buoyant pleasure " only fleetingly . " In ...
... feel anything but the buoyant pleasure of being carried so lightly through this surf amid the breakers " ( 150 ) .21 The canoe ride passes all too quickly , however , and Fuller experiences " buoyant pleasure " only fleetingly . " In ...
Contenido
Margaret Fullers Presence between Centuries | 55 |
Margaret Fuller Perceiving Science | 123 |
Textual Wandering and Anxiety | 171 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 3 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
abolitionist aesthetic American Literature American Renaissance American women anthology argues Arthur Fuller authority Bell Gale biography Boston Capper Chevigny claims contemporary Conversations critical cultural critique describes Dial dialogue discourse edition editor Ellison Emanuel Leutze Emerson essay European Everett experience Female Poets feminine feminism feminist figure friendship Fuller's poem Fuller's text Fuller's writing gender genre George Sand Hawthorne Hawthorne's history painting Howe's images Indian intellectual Italian Italy Jeffrey Steele journal Julia Ward Lakes language legacy Leibniz letters literary Lydia Maria Child male Margaret Fuller Margaret Fuller Ossoli masculine monad mother narrative Nathaniel Hawthorne Native American nature Nineteenth Century perception poetic political psychological radical reader reading relations representation revolution role Romantic scene sentimental Sigourney sister social Sophia soul spiritual struggle suggests Summer Susan symbols theory thought traditional Transcendentalist translation Tribune vision voice woman woman's rights womanhood words York Zwarg
Referencias a este libro
Woman Thinking: Feminism and Transcendentalism in Nineteenth-Century America Tiffany K. Wayne Sin vista previa disponible - 2007 |