Ambrose Holt and Family

Ambrose Holt and Family
Author: Susan Glaspell
Publisher:
Total Pages: 324
Release: 1931
Genre: Domestic fiction
ISBN:

Marriage as a life to be lived and not a situation to be evaded.

Disclosing Intertextualities

Disclosing Intertextualities
Author:
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 307
Release: 2016-08-29
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9401203466

For the first time, this volume brings together essays by feminist, Americanist, and theater scholars who apply a variety of sophisticated critical approaches to Susan Glaspell’s entire oeuvre. Glaspell’s one-act play, “Trifles,” and the short story that she constructed from it, “A Jury of Her Peers,” have drawn the attention of many feminist critics, but the rest of her writing—the short stories, plays and novels—is largely unknown. The essays gathered here will allow students of literature, women’s studies and theater studies an insight into the variety and scope of her oeuvre. Glaspell’s political and literary thinking was radicalized by the turbulent Greenwich Village environment of the first decades of the twentieth century, by progressive-era social movements and by modernist literary and theatrical innovation. The focus of Glaspell studies has, till recently, been dominated by the feminist imperative to recover a canon of silenced women writers and, in particular, to restore Glaspell to her rightful place in American drama. Transcending the limitations generated by such a specific agenda, the contributors to this volume approach Glaspell’s work as a dialogic intersection of genres, texts, and cultural phenomena—a method that is particularly apt for Glaspell, who moved between genres with a unique fluidity, creating such modernist masterpieces as The Verge or Brook Evans. This volume establishes Glaspell’s work as an “intersection of textual surfaces,” resulting for the first time in the complex aesthetic appreciation that her varied life’s work merits.

Domesticity And Dirt

Domesticity And Dirt
Author: Phyllis Palmer
Publisher: Temple University Press
Total Pages: 233
Release: 2010-09-23
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN: 1439905541

Examining the cultual norms of women after Suffrage to define labor based on color.

Library Bulletin

Library Bulletin
Author: Fitchburg Public Library
Publisher:
Total Pages: 394
Release: 1907
Genre: Catalogs, Classified
ISBN:

Susan Glaspell's Century of American Women

Susan Glaspell's Century of American Women
Author: Veronica Makowsky
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 180
Release: 1993-03-25
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0195360095

Tracing the evolution of Susan Glaspell's writing, Veronica Makowsky provides fascinating glimpses of the life of a woman who broke the barriers against female journalists, advocated socialism, struggled with the precepts of Greenwich Village free love, was one of the founders of the Provincetown Players, participated in the sessions of the feminist Heterodoxy Club, placed women's concerns on the stage as a playwright and actress, and wrote about a turbulent century of American women with courage, optimism, sensitivity, and love. This is the first full-length book about Glaspell's works, including the fiction and lifewriting that bracketed her relatively brief career as the playwright best-known for the one-act drama Trifles. Also the author of many other plays, including the Pulitzer prize-winning Alison's House, a number of collected and uncollected short stories, nine novels, and a biography of her husband the iconoclastic George Cram Cook, Glaspell was an artist of formidable, but ill-acknowledged talent. Makowsky places Glaspell's work in its biographical and cultural context, with particular attention to Glaspell's depiction of women's roles over a century of American history. In addition, she examines closely Glaspell's use of the maternal metaphor and her depiction of women in the role of mothers. This absorbing and revelatory study rescues one of America's literary "foremothers" from relative obscurity, challenging canonical ideas about the circumstances that lead to literary "greatness."

Susan Glaspell

Susan Glaspell
Author: Linda Ben-Zvi
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 509
Release: 2007-07
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0195313232

The biography of Susan Glaspell traces the development of the first important American female playwright and illustrates the ways in which her fascinating, avant-garde life provided the model and materials for her groundbreaking dramas and fiction.

Susan Glaspell and Sophie Treadwell

Susan Glaspell and Sophie Treadwell
Author: Barbara Ozieblo
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 313
Release: 2008-03-03
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1134136749

Susan Glaspell and Sophie Treadwell presents critical introductions to two of the most significant American dramatists of the early twentieth century. Glaspell and Treadwell led American Theatre from outdated melodrama to the experimentation of great European playwrights like Ibsen, Strindberg and Shaw. This is the first book to deal with Glaspell and Treadwell’s plays from a theatrical, rather than literary, perspective, and presents a comprehensive overview of their work from lesser known plays to seminal productions of Trifles and Machinal. Although each woman pursued her own themes, subjects and manner of stage production, this shared volume underscores the theatrical and cultural conditions influencing female playwrights in modern America.

Susan Glaspell

Susan Glaspell
Author: Bárbara Ozieblo Rajkowska
Publisher: UNC Press Books
Total Pages: 368
Release: 2000
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780807848685

Celebrates the life and work of Susan Glaspell who won the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 1931 and who is recognized for her groundbreaking feminist dramas.