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English Fiction & Prose Literature - General & Miscellaneous - Literary Criticism, Literary Criticism - General & Miscellaneous, Science Fiction & Fantasy - Literary Criticism, Women Authors - American (U.S.) - Literary Criticism, Women Authors - British
Dream Revisionaries by Lewes β€” book cover

Dream Revisionaries

by Lewes
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Overview

Dream Revisionaries charts the evolution of women's utopian writing in Britain and the United States between 1869 and 1920. This period saw the emergence of a new kind of utopian text--one that redefined women's roles in society and questioned the very foundations of the social order on both sides of the Atlantic. During the period under study, more than one hundred remarkably diverse utopian narratives written by women were published on both sides of the Atlantic: feminist and antifeminist,
socialist and capitalist; placed in Kentucky, in London, at the North Pole,
or on Mars; set in the past, present, future, or outside of time altogether.
The value of these narratives is incalculable, for they provide insight into how a homogeneous group of women (sharing an Anglo-Saxon heritage and middle-class status) at a particular historical moment imagined what men and women might be like if freed from the tyranny of custom and contemporary values. Dream Revisionaries examines the literary, social, and historical catalysts for this sudden efflorescence of women's utopian writing. It delineates the historical contours of mainstream utopian fiction,
examines the place of women in canonical texts, and demonstrates how the utopian responses of women in the 17th, 18th, and early 19th centuries paved the way for the late 19th-century texts discussed in this study.
Lewes observes how women's utopian fiction facilitated the creation of political and social manifestos that responded to the late
19th-century historical environment and how nationality sometimes complicated and even overrode the authors' apparent commonalities. This volume demonstrates how the genre was used to reconcile historically opposed feminist ideologies and compares texts of the 1870s and 1970s, showing that the supposedly "new" type of women's utopian writing in many ways resembled that of a century earlier. Finally, it provides an invaluable annotated bibliography covering three centuries of women's utopian writing.

About the Author, Lewes

Darby Lewes is a professor of English and the author of Nudes from Nowhere and Dream Revisionaries: Gender and Genre in Women's Utopian Fiction, 1870–1920

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Editorials

From the Publisher

"An impressive and highly persuasive book. A particular strength of this book is the way in which a study of women's utopian literature illuminates differences between British and American cultural realities, which in turn led to different social arrangements and feminist agendas. It is to the author's credit that she has made a welter of information orderly and accessible to the reader."β€”Nancy A. Walker, Vanderbilt University

"Well written and thoughtful throughout, it will make a significant contribution to literary history and to women's studies research. This book is illuminating and fresh."β€”Dale M. Bauer, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Booknews

Chronicles the evolution of women's utopian writing in Britain and the US as a new type of utopian text emerged--one that redefined women's roles in society and profoundly questioned the foundations of the social order on both sides of the Atlantic. Includes an extensive annotated bibliography. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
September 30, 1995
Publisher
Tuscaloosa : University of Alabama Press, c1995.
Pages
216
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780817307950

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