Madwomen in Social Justice Movements, Literatures, and Art

Édition Jessica Lowell Mason , Nicole Crevar
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Madwomen in Social Justice Movements, Literatures, and Art

Édition Jessica Lowell Mason , Nicole Crevar
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264 PAGESANGLAIS

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  • Date de publication : May 18, 2023
  • Langue : anglais
  • Nombre de pages : 264
  • Éditeur : Vernon Art and Science
  • ISBN : 9781648896835
  • Dimensions : 6.0" W x 0.55" L x 9.0" H

'Madwomen in Social Justice Movements, Literatures, and Art' extends Sandra Gilbert's and Susan Gubar's influential work, 'The Madwoman in the Attic' for the 21st century by revealing how madness as a category has been socially constructed and weaponized against disenfranchised voices. Featuring a new framework that includes work by activists, artists, and academics, this expertly edited collection draws on autoethnographic approaches, disability studies, and mad feminist discourse to center mad subjectivities and disrupt traditional structures of academia. In this way, 'Madwomen' reclaims the derogatory term "madness" and reveals ways in which women have been empowered by both their anger and their so-called disability, allowing them to think outside of rigid patriarchal frameworks and offer reparative alternatives. In so doing, this collection reveals that literature and art indeed have a social role to play-that they are, by virtue of their own madness, social justice agents informed by cultural circumstances and embodied experience alike.


Dr. Aimee Pozorski

Professor of English

Coordinator of the Racial Justice Certificate Program

Co-coordinator of the American Studies Program

Co-executive editor of Philip Roth Studies

Central Connecticut State University


In 'Madwomen in Social Justice Movements, Literatures, and Art', editors Nicole Crevar and Jessica Lowell Mason assemble a range of incisive and deeply feminist essays that reconsider and resituate the madwoman trope indelibly traced by Gilbert and Gubar. Drawing from texts as wide-ranging as Woolf's 'Orlando', Janet Frame's 'Faces in the Water', Zee Edgell's 'Beka Lamb', Rayda Jacobs' 'Joonie', and Haile Gerima's 'Bush Mama', these contemporary considerations of the madwoman literary trope illuminate the continued urgency and necessity of grappling with the mad, the crazy, the uncontainable, in literary texts. Most exciting about this collection are the creative "mad disruptions" sprinkled between the chapters. The writing in these chapters-innovative, challenging, energizing-reminds readers why literary arts endure and what is at stake in challenging ideas surrounding women and madness, particularly today.

Dr. Julie R. Enszer, editor and publisher of 'Sinister Wisdom'



Unparalleled in its scope and variety, this volume makes an essential contribution to mad studies, feminist studies, and their generative intersections.


Dr. David Schmid

Department of English

University at Buffalo

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