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Willa Cather's Southern Connections: New Essays on Cather and the South
 
 
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Willa Cather's Southern Connections: New Essays on Cather and the South [Paperback]

Ann Romines (Author)

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Book Description

September 22, 2000

Willa Cather spent her first nine years in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, where her family had lived for five generations. Even after the Cathers' move to Nebraska, she came of age in an emphatically southern extended family, surrounded by Virginia stories, customs, and controversies. As Eudora Welty has declared, "She did not come out of Virginia for nothing." Throughout her career, Cather's fiction drew strength from the people, places, and issues of the Reconstruction South of her birth, culminating in her final novel, Sapphira and the Slave Girl.

This collection of essays is the first to look at this important southern connection in Cather's writing life. Ann Romines has brought together eminent Cather critics and fresh new voices. Judith Fetterley and Lisa Marcus restore Cather's southern origins to a central place in her career. Robert K. Miller reads My Mortal Enemy as a Reconstruction narrative, and Patricia Yaeger theorizes the racial language of Cather's landscapes. Among several essays on Sapphira, Mako Yoshikawa's and Tomas Pollard's contributions explore the novel's racial and sexual dynamics and abolitionist concerns. Cynthia Griffin Wolff views Cather's youthful experiments with clothes and gender as responses to contemporary theater and her mother's southern feminine style. Other critics compare Cather to other Southern writers: Allen Tate, Ellen Glasgow, Flannery O'Connor, and Toni Morrison.

Grounded both in traditional literary criticisms and in cultural studies, these sixteen essays make a compelling claim for the importance of Cather's southern connections.

Contributors:

Roseanne V. Camacho, University of LouisvilleJudith Fetterley, University at Albany, State University of New YorkLisa Marcus, Pacific Lutheran UniversityMarilyn Mobley McKenzie, George Mason UniversityRobert K. Miller, University of St. ThomasElsa Nettels, College of William and MaryShelley Newman, University of British ColumbiaTomas Pollard, Texas A&M UniversityAnn Romines, The George Washington UniversityMary R. Ryder, South Dakota State UniversityMerrill Maguire Skaggs, Drew UniversityJanis P. Stout, Texas A&M UniversityJoseph R. Urgo, Bryant CollegeGayle Wald, The George Washington UniversityCynthia Griffin Wolff, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyPatricia Yaeger, University of MichiganMako Yoshikawa, Harvard University


Frequently Bought Together

Willa Cather's Southern Connections: New Essays on Cather and the South + Cather: Stories, Poems, and Other Writings (Library of America) + Cather Novels & Stories 1905-1918: The Troll Garden, O Pioneers! The Song of the Lark, and My Antonia
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About the Author

Ann Romines, author of The Home Plot: Women, Writing, and Domestic Ritual and Constructing Little House: Gender, Culture, and Laura Ingalls Wilder, is Director of the Graduate Program and Professor of English at The George Washington University.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Almost since its scholarly beginnings, the critical enterprise of Cather studies has been closely tied to place. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
dock burs, novel démeublé, southern women writers, southern connections, moral citizenship, political silence, southern novel, lost lady, home plot, southern past, slave girl
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Willa Lather, New York, Willa Cather, Henry Colbert, The Professor's House, Toni Morrison, Back Creek, African American, Ellen Glasgow, Edith Lewis, Tom Outland, Lather's Sapphira, Barren Ground, Glasgow's Virginia, Horace Greeley, Martin Colbert, Allen Tate, Mill Farm, New Deal, Alexander's Bridge, Jennie Lather, Rachel Blake, Red Cloud, Southern Agrarians, The Namesake
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