首页> 外文学位 >Making girls into women: Reading, gender and sexuality in American women's writing, 1865-1940.
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Making girls into women: Reading, gender and sexuality in American women's writing, 1865-1940.

机译:使女孩成为女性:1865-1940年美国女性写作中的阅读,性别和性行为。

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摘要

Beginning with Michel Foucault, accounts of the consolidation of sexuality into identity have tended to focus solely on the role played by sexology and medicalization at the turn of the century in organizing into "sexual identities" a disparate group of acts and identifications. My dissertation explores how other late-nineteenth-century ideological shifts--in the discourses of sentimentality, of material production and reproduction in the context of industrialization, of gendered and racial embodiment--contribute to the rise of lesbian identity, and traces how these shifts are represented in late-nineteenth and early-twentieth-century U.S. women's writing. In my first chapter I elucidate how, after the Civil War, regionalist writing's stereotypes of the spinster opened up a space for imagining "queer" or "protolesbian" possibilities for female subjectivity within the bourgeois domestic sphere. Similarly, emerging literary forms such as the "girls" novel, as well as new counterpublic spheres such as boarding houses and women's colleges, began to offer pedagogic and erotic alternatives to the domestic sphere for the production of "little women"; my second chapter argues that Louisa May Alcott's novels dramatize the beginning of this shift, and in my third chapter I speculate on the effects that reading these enormously popular books had on the subjectivities of white, middle class girls. By comparing such texts as Djuna Barnes' Ladies Almanack and the Girl Scout Handbook, I demonstrate how both modernism and mass culture utilize the metaphors of mass production for their own attempts at reproducing specific forms of female subjectivity: while the Girl Scouts seek to make immigrants into middle class citizens, Barnes fantasizes that her writing will turn women into lesbians. My last two chapters investigate how postbellum representations of the spinster and of sentimentalized relationships between women are rewritten by Gertrude Stein, Marianne Moore and Elizabeth Bishop into models of (pro)creative, culturally central, "queer" and/or "lesbian" identities. Thus, in my attention to the status of gender and sexuality in realist, modernist and popular texts, I underscore the importance of women's writing in the formation of lesbian identity in America.
机译:从米歇尔·福柯开始,关于将性纳入身份的论述往往只关注于世纪之交的性学和医学化在将一系列不同的行为和认同组织为“性身份”中所扮演的角色。我的论文探讨了19世纪后期的其他意识形态转变-在感性,工业化背景下的物质生产和再生产,性别和种族体现的论述中如何促进了女同性恋身份的产生,并追溯了这些变化的方式。这种转变体现在19世纪末和20世纪初的美国女性作品中。在我的第一章中,我阐明了南北战争之后,区域主义者的写作对大屠杀的刻板印象如何为想象资产阶级家庭领域中女性主观性的“同性恋”或“同性恋”可能性开辟了空间。同样,新兴的文学形式,例如“女孩”小说,以及新的反公共领域,例如寄宿房和女子大学,开始为家庭领域提供教育和色情替代品,以生产“小女人”;我的第二章认为路易莎·梅·奥尔科特的小说生动地说明了这种转变的开始,而在我的第三章中,我推测阅读这些非常流行的书对白人,中产阶级女孩的主体性有何影响。通过比较诸如Djuna Barnes的《 Ladies Almanack》和《女童子军手册》等文本,我证明了现代主义和大众文化如何利用大规模生产的隐喻来自己尝试再现特定形式的女性主体性:而女童子军则在寻求移民。巴恩斯(Barnes)幻想成为中产阶级公民,她的写作将把女人变成女同性恋者。我的前两章探讨了格特鲁德·斯坦(Gertrude Stein),玛丽安·摩尔(Marianne Moore)和伊丽莎白·毕晓普(Elizabeth Bishop)如何将大后肢和女性之间感情上的关系的战后表现重新改写成(亲)创意,文化中心,“同性恋”和/或“女同性恋”身份的模型。因此,在我关注现实主义,现代主义和通俗文学中的性别和性身份状况时,我强调了女性写作在美国形成女同性恋身份的重要性。

著录项

  • 作者

    Kent, Kathryn Ruth.;

  • 作者单位

    Duke University.;

  • 授予单位 Duke University.;
  • 学科 American literature.;Womens studies.;American studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 1995
  • 页码 422 p.
  • 总页数 422
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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