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Critical Condition
 
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Critical Condition [Hardcover]

Susan Gubar (Author)

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Book Description

Gender and Culture Series February 15, 2000

Is feminism dead, as has been claimed by notable members of the media and the academy? Has feminist knowledge, with its proliferation of methodologies and fields, been purchased at the price of power? Are the conflicts among feminists evidence of self-destructive infighting or do they herald the emergence of innovative modes of inquiry? Given a feminism now ensconced within higher education as specialized or fractious scholarship, Susan Gubar's Critical Condition: Feminism at the Turn of the Century demonstrates that an invigorated concentration on activism and artistry can accentuate not the clinical or disparaging meaning of "critical" but its sense of compelling urgency and irreverent vitality.

As a pioneer of feminist studies -- and the object of some of the more rancorous criticism lodged against early feminist scholars -- Gubar stands in a unique position to comment on current dilemmas. Moving beyond defensiveness produced by generational rivalry, the impasse propagated by smug deployments of identity politics, and the obscurity of poststructuralist theory, she claims that the very controversies that undermine feminism's unity also prove its resilience.

Gubar begins by considering the volatile impact of gender on recent redefinitions of race, sexuality, religion, and class proposed by four important groups in contemporary feminism: African-American performance and visual artists, lesbian creative writers, Jewish-American women, and newly institutionalized female academics. She then addresses major divisions -- including the rifts between various area studies and women's studies, as well as strains between generations -- that both threaten and invigorate feminist inquiry. Gubar's forays into art and activism, politics, and the profession provide a sometimes distressing, sometimes comical, sometimes optimistic view of feminism emerging from a time of contention into a lively period of pluralized perspectives and disciplines.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Is feminism dead, as Time magazine famously inquired? Has critical feminist inquiry in the academy become either so fragmented or so specialized as to be irrelevant to women's real lives? Finally, and most poignantly, have intergenerational friction and the quest for political correctness destroyed the common ground that feminists once believed they shared? Gubar, who, with Susan M. Gilbert, was one of the founders of contemporary feminist literary criticism (Madwoman in the Attic; No Man's Land), turns her attention to the questions now vexing academic feminism(s). In essays written over the course of the last decade, and variously devoted to the intersection of feminist criticism and race, lesbian studies, Jewish studies and the situation of established female university faculty, Gubar struggles toward a conclusion that is largely optimistic, if decidedly nuanced. She calls upon feminist critics to continue a tradition of irreverence and redefinition in order to capture the imaginations of their students, who have been encouraged to view feminism as now pass?. Mixing essays originally written for specialist readers with those of somewhat broader appeal, this book may present some difficulties for the general reader, but will provoke interest and debate among those laboring to maintain a feminist stance in the increasingly fragmented academic world, as well as provide them some cheer. (Feb.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

Susan Gubar, one of the twentieth century´s pioneers in feminist literary studies, provides us with a magnificent description of the dilemmas facing feminist theory as it enters the new millennium. Jewish and African-American feminists, in particular, will be fascinated by her analyses of the configuration of gender, race, and ethnicity in the multicultural agenda. -- Review

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