Palgrave Studies in Nineteenth-Century Writing and Culture
The Modern Feminine in the Medusa Satire of Fanny Fern
Chronologie aller Bände (1 - 2)
Die Reihenfolge beginnt mit dem Buch "Victorian Soul-Talk". Wer alle Bücher der Reihe nach lesen möchte, sollte mit diesem Band von Julia F. Saville beginnen. Der zweite Teil der Reihe "The Modern Feminine in the Medusa Satire of Fanny Fern" ist am 21.01.2025 erschienen. Mit insgesamt 2 Bänden wurde die Reihe über einen Zeitraum von ungefähr 8 Jahren fortgesetzt. Der neueste Band trägt den Titel "The Modern Feminine in the Medusa Satire of Fanny Fern".
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- Start der Reihe: 19.05.2017
- Neueste Folge: 21.01.2025
Diese Reihenfolge enthält 2 unterschiedliche Autoren.
- Autor: Saville, Julia F.
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- Medium: Buch
- Veröffentlicht: 30.05.2017
- Genre: Sonstiges
Victorian Soul-Talk
This book explores the decades between the Reform Acts of 1832 and 1884 when British poets such as Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Arthur Hugh Clough, Robert Browning, and Algernon Charles Swinburne, along with their transatlantic contemporary Walt Whitman, defended the civil rights of disenfranchised souls as Western nations slowly evolved toward modern democracies with shared transnational connections. For in the decades before the new science of psychology transformed the soul into the psyche, poets claimed the spiritual well-being of the body politic as their special moral responsibility. Exploiting the rich aesthetic potential of language, they created poetry with striking sensory appeal to make their readers experience the complex effects of political decisions on public spirit. Within contexts such as Risorgimento Italy, Civil War America, and Second Empire France, these poets spoke from their souls to the souls of their readers to reveal insights that eluded the prosaic formsof fiction, essay, and journalism.
- Autor: Caron, James E.
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- Medium: Buch
- Veröffentlicht: 03.01.2024
- Genre: Comedy
The Modern Feminine in the Medusa Satire of Fanny Fern
The Modern Feminine in the Medusa Satire of Fanny Fern argues that Sara Parton and her literary alter ego, Fanny Fern, occupy a star-power position within the antebellum literary marketplace dominated by women authors of sentimental fiction, writers Nathaniel Hawthorne (in)famously called “the damn mob of scribbling women.” The Fanny Fern persona represents a nineteenth-century woman voicing the modern feminine within a laughter-provoking bourgeois carnival, a forerunner of Hélène Cixous’s laughing Medusa figure and her theory about écriture féminine. By advancing an innovative theory about an Anglo-American aesthetic, comic belles lettres, Caron explains the comic nuances of Parton’s persona, capable of both an amiable and a caustic satire. The book traces Parton’s burgeoning celebrity, analyzes her satires on cultural expectations of gendered behavior, and provides a close look at her variegated comic style. The book then makes two first-order conclusions: Parton not only offers a unique profile for antebellum women comic writers, but her Fanny Fern persona also anchors a potential genealogy of women comic writers and activists, down to the present day, who could fit Kate Clinton’s concept of fumerism, a feminist style of humor that fumes, that embraces the comic power of a Medusa satire.

