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Literary Figures - Women's Biography, U.S. Authors - 19th Century - Literary Biography, American Women - Literary Biography, 19th Century American Literature - Literary Criticism
Helen Hunt Jackson: A Literary Life by Kate Phillips — book cover

Helen Hunt Jackson: A Literary Life

by Kate Phillips
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Overview

Novelist, travel writer, and essayist Helen Hunt Jackson (1830-1885) was one of the most successful authors and most passionate intellects of her day. Ralph Waldo Emerson also regarded her as one of America's greatest poets. Today Jackson is best remembered for Ramona, a romantic novel set in the rural Southern Californian
Indian and Californio communities of her day. Ramona, continuously in print for over a century, has become a cultural icon, but Jackson's prolific career left us with much more, notably her achievements as a prose writer and her work as an early activist on behalf of Native Americans. This long-overdue biography of Jackson's remarkable life and times reintroduces a distinguished figure in American letters and restores Helen Hunt Jackson to her rightful place in history.
Discussing much new material, Kate Phillips makes extensive use of Jackson's unpublished private correspondence. She takes us from Jackson's early years in rural New England to her later pioneer days in Colorado and to her adventerous travels in Europe and Southern California. The book also gives the first in-depth discussions of Jackson's writing in every genre, her beliefs about race and religion, and the significance of her chronic illnesses. Phillips also discusses Jackson's intimate relationships—with her two husbands, her mentor Thomas Wentworth Higginson, the famed actress Charlotte Cushman, and the poet Emily Dickinson. Phillips concludes with a re-evaluation of Ramona, discussing the novel as the earliest example of the California dystopian tradition in its portrayal of a state on the road to self-destruction, a tradition carried further by writers like Nathanael West and Joan Didion.

In this gripping biography, Phillips offers fascinating glimpses of how social context both shaped and inspired Jackson's thinking, highlighting the inextricable presence of gender, race, and class in American literary history and culture and opening a new window onto the nineteenth century.

Synopsis

"This beautifully crafted book is a landmark in literary and cultural studies. Kate Phillips brings together in this definitive life of Helen Hunt Jackson a variety of challenging issues-feminism, literary history, psychology, social history, biography, intellectual history, anthropology-and the result is a brilliant contribution to the entire field of American studies. Helen Hunt Jackson: A Literary Life will have a broad and lasting impact on our understanding of American culture."—Sacvan Bercovitch, Powell M. Cabot Research Professor of American Literature, Harvard University

The San Francisco Chronicle

Helen Hunt Jackson succeeds unequivocally as an accomplished, smoothly written investigation of a life whose echoes still resound in the California around us.—David Kipen

About the Author, Kate Phillips

Kate Phillips received a Ph.D. from Harvard University in the History of American Civilization and is an independent scholar and writer. She is the author of the acclaimed novel White Rabbit (1996, paperback 1997).

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Editorials

The Los Angeles Times

Kate Phillips, a novelist (White Rabbit) as well as a literary scholar, seeks to put Jackson in her rightful place on the literary landscape — and a lofty place it is. Her critical biography of Jackson rescues the writer from deepening shadows of a fast-fading reputation and throws a bright light on her life and work. What she reveals about Jackson is surprising and fascinating: Jackson was an early advocate of the rights of Native Americans and a visionary who clearly saw California as an imperiled paradise. — Jonathan Kirsch

The New York Times

So with new correspondence in hand, the novelist Kate Phillips rightly chooses to knit a smart biography of a tireless literary worker and intellectual, not a genius -- a singular woman who, despite or because of the benumbing early deaths of her parents, husband, and two small sons, strode full force into a remarkably independent, productive life. — Renée Tursi

The San Francisco Chronicle

Helen Hunt Jackson succeeds unequivocally as an accomplished, smoothly written investigation of a life whose echoes still resound in the California around us.—David Kipen

Book Details

Published
April 1, 2003
Publisher
University of California Press
Pages
408
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780520218048

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