Dead Lovers are Faithful Lovers

Dead Lovers are Faithful Lovers
Author: Frances Newman
Publisher:
Total Pages: 306
Release: 1928
Genre: Adultery
ISBN:

Dead Lovers Are Faithful Lovers is a tale of stifling passions, marital infidelity, and the empty conventionality of relations between the sexes in Jazz Age America. Set mainly in Atlanta and Richmond, its minimal plot unfolds through a stream-of-consciousness rendering of the thoughts and emotions of two women in love with the same man.

Dead Lovers Are Faithful Lovers

Dead Lovers Are Faithful Lovers
Author: Frances Newman
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2022-05-03
Genre:
ISBN: 9781632923530

Dead Lovers are Faithful Lovers, published the year of Frances Newman's premature death, exposes the paradoxes and fallacies behind the outward sexual and political emancipation of women in the Roaring Twenties. Describing the thoughts of two women in love with the same man-one his suffering wife and the other his liberated lover-Newman carefully reveals that the thoughts, feelings, and desires of these two women are ultimately bounded by the same limits despite having such disparate social positions. In a society where a woman's value as well as her satisfaction are both determined by her husband's stature, marriage and adultery are no longer very different from each other."[One of] an important group of Southern writers who were reevaluating both the past and the present, and subjecting the raw material of life to the fearless scrutiny and the spacious treatment of art." - Ellen Glasgow

Tomorrow is Another Day

Tomorrow is Another Day
Author: Anne Goodwyn Jones
Publisher: LSU Press
Total Pages: 542
Release: 1982-05-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0807153273

From the mid-nineteenth century through at least the first half of the twentieth, the southern code of appropriate feminine behavior required that women depend on sources outside themselves for sustenance, direction, and expression. The chivalric ideal that placed the southern lady on a pedestal often created within her gracious and gentle exterior a turmoil of frustration, confusion, and resentment. This concept of upper middle-class, white southern womanhood forms an important part of the imaginative expression of the southern women writers whose works and lives form the subject matter of this book. All seven—Augusta Jane Evans, Grace King, Kate Chopin, Mary Johnston, Ellen Glasgow, Frances Newman, and Margaret Mitchell—were themselves products of this genteel tradition. Anne Goodwyn Jones explains that her aim is not to link biography and art but to seek, in the lives and works of these seven southern women writers, common patterns that can lead to ways to discern the mind of the southern lady. Tomorrow Is Another Day shows that, by writing themselves and their characters into being, by expressing their voices—however variant in tone—“these seven writers wrote themselves into another day.”

World War I and Southern Modernism

World War I and Southern Modernism
Author: David A. Davis
Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi
Total Pages: 248
Release: 2017-11-27
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1496815424

Winner of the 2018 Eudora Welty Prize When the United States entered World War I, parts of the country had developed industries, urban cultures, and democratic political systems, but the South lagged behind, remaining an impoverished, agriculture region. Despite New South boosterism, the culture of the early twentieth-century South was comparatively artistically arid. Yet, southern writers dominated the literary marketplace by the 1920s and 1930s. World War I brought southerners into contact with modernity before the South fully modernized. This shortfall created an inherent tension between the region's existing agricultural social structure and the processes of modernization, leading to distal modernism, a form of writing that combines elements of modernism to depict non-modern social structures. Critics have struggled to formulate explanations for the eruption of modern southern literature, sometimes called the Southern Renaissance. Pinpointing World War I as the catalyst, David A. Davis argues southern modernism was not a self-generating outburst of writing, but a response to the disruptions modernity generated in the region. In World War I and Southern Modernism, Davis examines dozens of works of literature by writers, including William Faulkner, Ellen Glasgow, and Claude McKay, that depict the South during the war. Topics explored in the book include contact between the North and the South, southerners who served in combat, and the developing southern economy. Davis also provides a new lens for this argument, taking a closer look at African Americans in the military and changing gender roles.

The Cambridge History of the Gothic: Volume 3, Gothic in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries

The Cambridge History of the Gothic: Volume 3, Gothic in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries
Author: Catherine Spooner
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 555
Release: 2021-08-19
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1108652077

The third volume of The Cambridge History of the Gothic is the first book to provide an in-depth history of Gothic literature, film, television and culture in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries (c. 1896-present). Identifying key historical shifts from the birth of film to the threat of apocalypse, leading international scholars offer comprehensive coverage of the ideas, events, movements and contexts that shaped the Gothic as it entered a dynamic period of diversification across all forms of media. Twenty-three chapters plus an extended introduction provide in-depth accounts of topics including Modernism, war, postcolonialism, psychoanalysis, counterculture, feminism, AIDS, neo-liberalism, globalisation, multiculturalism, the war on terror and environmental crisis. Provocative and cutting edge, this will be an essential reference volume for anyone studying modern and contemporary Gothic culture.

Making Whiteness

Making Whiteness
Author: Grace Elizabeth Hale
Publisher: Vintage
Total Pages: 449
Release: 2010-08-25
Genre: History
ISBN: 0307487938

Making Whiteness is a profoundly important work that explains how and why whiteness came to be such a crucial, embattled--and distorting--component of twentieth-century American identity. In intricately textured detail and with passionately mastered analysis, Grace Elizabeth Hale shows how, when faced with the active citizenship of their ex-slaves after the Civil War, white southerners re-established their dominance through a cultural system based on violence and physical separation. And in a bold and transformative analysis of the meaning of segregation for the nation as a whole, she explains how white southerners' creation of modern "whiteness" was, beginning in the 1920s, taken up by the rest of the nation as a way of enforcing a new social hierarchy while at the same time creating the illusion of a national, egalitarian, consumerist democracy. By showing the very recent historical "making" of contemporary American whiteness and by examining how the culture of segregation, in all its murderous contradictions, was lived, Hale makes it possible to imagine a future outside it. Her vision holds out the difficult promise of a truly democratic American identity whose possibilities are no longer limited and disfigured by race.