Before They Could Vote
American Women's Autobiographical Writing, 1819-1919
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Wisconsin Press
Published:30th Jun '06
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The life narratives in this collection are by ethnically diverse women of energy and ambition - some well known, some forgotten over generations - who confronted barriers of gender, class, race, and sexual difference as they pursued or adapted to adventurous new lives in a rapidly changing America. The engaging selections - from captivity narratives to letters, manifestos, criminal confessions, and childhood sketches - span a hundred years in which women increasingly asserted themselves publicly. Some rose to positions of prominence as writers, activists, and artists; some sought education or wrote to support themselves and their families; some transgressed social norms in search of new possibilities. Each woman's story is strikingly individual, yet the brief narratives in this anthology collectively chart bold new visions of women's agency.
This indispensable collection is... important for its range of topics - social uplift, geography, education, lynching, sanctification, Indian removal, deafness, and abolition, among others. - Dale M. Bauer, coeditor, The Cambridge Companion to Nineteenth-Century American Women's Writing ""This rich new anthology sets in motion an inter-textual conversation of remarkable vitality that will change the ways we understand gender, class, ethnicity, culture, and nation in nineteenth-century America."" - Susanna Egan, author of Mirror-Talk
ISBN: 9780299220549
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 640g
472 pages