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Sapphic Primitivism: Productions of Race, Class, and Sexuality in Key Works of Modern Fiction
Rutgers University Press, 2003 Paper: 978-0-8135-3347-6 | Cloth: 978-0-8135-3346-9 | eISBN: 978-0-8135-5845-5 Library of Congress Classification PR888.L46H33 2004 Dewey Decimal Classification 823.91099287
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
In this book, Robin Hackett examines portrayals of race, class, and sexuality in modernist texts by white women to argue for the existence of a literary device that she calls “Sapphic primitivism.” The works vary widely in their form and content and include Olive Schreiner’s proto-modernist exploration of New Womanhood, The Story of an African Farm; Virginia Woolf’s high modernist “play-poem,” The Waves; Sylvia Townsend Warner’s historical novel, Summer Will Show; and Willa Cather’s Southern pastoral, Sapphira and the Slave Girl. In each, blackness and working-class culture are figured to represent sexual autonomy, including lesbianism, for white women. Sapphic primitivism exposes the ways several classes of identification were intertwined with the development of homosexual identities at the turn of the century. Sapphic primitivism is not, however, a means of disguising lesbian content. Rather, it is an aesthetic displacement device that simultaneously exposes lesbianism and exploits modern, primitivist modes of self-representation. Hackett’s revelations of the mutual interests of those who study early twentieth-century constructions of race and sexuality and twenty-first-century feminists doing anti-racist and queer work are a major contribution to literary studies and identity theory. See other books on: Class | English fiction | English-speaking countries | Modernism (Literature) | Women in literature See other titles from Rutgers University Press |
Nearby on shelf for English literature / Prose / Prose fiction. The novel:
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