Village Rebels: Gender, Race, and the Environment in the Revolt from the Village Movement

Stephanie Palmer
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Village Rebels: Gender, Race, and the Environment in the Revolt from the Village Movement

Stephanie Palmer
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Found in: Arts & Letters, Literary Criticism

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Overview

288 PAGESENGLISH

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?Fresh and enlightening. . . . Stephanie Palmer?s study ranges from the ?restless women? texts by Neith Boyce, Zona Gale, and Mary Austin to male outsider characters from Langston Hughes and Wallace Thurman, illuminating the ways in which these texts anticipate contemporary theories of environmentalism, community, and childrearing. Their work communicates that improvement, not flight, was the answer to the problem of the village. Village Rebels is an essential resource for scholars of regionalism and early twentieth-century literature, both challenging and expanding Carl Van Doren?s concept of the conformity of the American small town.??Donna M. Campbell, author of Resisting Regionalism: Gender and Naturalism in American Fiction, 1885?1915

  • Published date: Jan 01, 2027
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 288
  • Publisher: Nebraska
  • ISBN: 9781496249692
  • Dimensions: 6.0" W x 1.0" L x 9.0" H

Stephanie Palmer is a senior lecturer of English at Nottingham Trent University. She is the author of Transatlantic Footholds: Turn-of-the-Century American Women Writers and British Reviewers and Together by Accident: American Local Color Literature and the Middle Class and a coeditor of New Perspectives on Mary E. Wilkins Freeman: Reading with and against the Grain.

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