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9780872498846

Women Without Men

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780872498846

  • ISBN10:

    0872498840

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 1993-05-01
  • Publisher: Univ of South Carolina Pr
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List Price: $34.95

Summary

Donald J. Greiner's provocative new study evaluates the fiction of ten contemporary female novelists to ask questions about gender relations in American fiction. Looking closely at the reaction of female writers to what Greiner describes as a central paradigm of American literature - men bonding in the wilderness in an attempt to escape women and the social restrictions they represent - Greiner contends that female novelists have not only adopted the venerable model but also adapted it so that women venture into the wilderness while excluding men from the quest.
Greiner first shows how such contemporary white male novelists as Frederick Busch, John Irving, and Larry Woiwode modify the literary model established by Cooper, Melville, and Twain to include women in the bonding process. He then argues that recent female novelists are not so eager to allow males into the wilderness or to bond with them. Rather than facilitate a closing of the gender gap, many contemporary female writers insist on separating the sexes. Greiner frames his analysis with discussions of prominent feminist literary theorists and feminist psychologists including Carolyn Heilbrun, Rachel Brownstein, Nancy Chodorow, Janice Raymond, and Judith Kegan Gardiner.
From close readings of recent novels by Gloria Naylor, Marianne Wiggins, Joan Didion, Diane Johnson, Marilynne Robinson, Mona Simpson, Hilma Wolitzer, Meg Wolitzer, Joan Chase, and Lisa Alther, Greiner finds three significant differences in the way contemporary female novelists employ the quest plot: the patriarchal text is not repudiated but revised to accommodate female characters who readily accept the traditional masculine call to the quest; once outside the bounds of society, female bonds do not always hold; males are excluded from the bonding process. To contrast the gender exclusivity favored by contemporary female writers, Greiner ends his study with a discussion of bonding as portrayed by contemporary male novelist Douglas Ungar.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction: Female Bonding and Cultural Controversyp. 1
Female Bonding and Literary Heroinesp. 22
Female Bonding and the Identities of Mothers and Daughtersp. 34
Joan Didion, Diane Johnson, and the Novel of Female Bonding in the 1970sp. 50
Revising the Paradigm: Female Bonding and the Transients of Housekeepingp. 66
Women without Men
Mona Simpson: Anywhere but Herep. 82
Hilma Wolitzer: Heartsp. 90
Meg Wolitzer: This Is Your Lifep. 97
Joan Chase: During the Reign of the Queen of Persiap. 103
Lisa Alther: Other Womenp. 110
Coda: Douglas Ungar, Male Novelists, Wilderness Womenp. 120
Sourcesp. 127
Indexp. 131
Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved.

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