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Women's Vision in Western Literature Laurence M. Porter

Women's Vision in Western Literature By Laurence M. Porter

Women's Vision in Western Literature by Laurence M. Porter


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Summary

From ancient Greece through the present day, women writers have confronted the male urge to make war by imagining communities in which intuitive bonding among individuals questions and replaces masculinist values of aggression and competition.

Women's Vision in Western Literature Summary

Women's Vision in Western Literature: The Empathic Community by Laurence M. Porter

From ancient Greece through the present day, women writers have confronted the male urge to make war by imagining communities in which intuitive bonding among individuals questions and replaces masculinist values of aggression and competition. Women's Vision in Western Literature traces the gender gap in literature from 600 B.C. to the present day through an examination of seven extraordinary women writers from Sappho to Christa Wolf. Combining close readings with a comprehensive overview of the careers of these women, Porter shows how the threat, the experience, and the aftermath of war incites them to imagine tolerant, empathic communities. This careful consideration of these seven great writers brings to light an underappreciated aspect of Western women's writing.

Starting with Sappho, Porter illustrates this ancient poet's ability to rewrite the Homeric war rhetoric to reflect a non-possessive love experience. Marie de France arranges traditional animal fables to imply an open-ended situation-ethics, according to the author, and Madame de Stael-in a Europe torn by Napoleonic conquests-advocates cross-cultural unions among countries. In the works of Mary Shelley, we see the warnings of the dangers of vainglorious, soulless technology, and Virginia Woolf depicts intuitive bonding beyond gender stereotypes, amid the ruins of war and crumbling empire. He shows how Marguerite Yourcenar dreams of a new era of world peace after Hitler's defeat, and how Christa Wolf tries to cope with her country's Nazi past even as she reaffirms European identity threatened by annihilations in nuclear conflict.

About Laurence M. Porter

Laurence M. Porter is Professor in the Department of French, Classics, and Italian at Michigan State University. He received the Distinguished Faculty Award in 1995, and an NEH Senior Research Fellowship in 1998. He currently serves on the editorial or advisory boards of Nineteenth-Century French Studies, Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature, and Women in French Studies. He has published a dozen books and more than a hundred chapters and articles.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Introduction: Gender, Morality, and Literature Make Love, Not War: Sappho The Situation Ethics of Marie de France Styling a European Union: Madame de Stael Sympathy for the Devil: Mary Shelley Communion and Coercion in Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway The Peaceable Empire: Marguerite Yourcenar's Hadrian Christa Wolf, Citizen of the World The Empathic Vision Works Cited Notes

Additional information

NPB9780313318306
9780313318306
0313318301
Women's Vision in Western Literature: The Empathic Community by Laurence M. Porter
New
Hardback
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
2005-02-28
266
N/A
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