ABSTRACT

Liberating Literature is, primarily, a bold and revealing book about feminist writers, readers, and texts. But is is also much more than that. Within this volume Maria Lauret manages to look with fresh vision at the American Civil Rights movement of the 1960s; socialist women's writing of the 1930s; the emergence of the New Left; and the second wave women's movement and its cultural practices.
Lauret's historicisation of feminist political writing allows for a new definition of the genre, and enables her to illuminate the profound influence and importance of African-American women's writing. Well-grounded historically and theoretically, Liberating Literature speaks about and to a political and cultural tradition, and offers stunning new readings of both familiar and neglected novels within the feminist canon. Reader and students of feminist fiction cannot afford to be without this major new work.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

American women's writing and social movements from the 1930s to the 1980s

chapter |34 pages

‘This Story Must be Told'

Women writers of the 1930s

chapter |23 pages

Liberating Literature

chapter |27 pages

‘If We Restructure the Sentence Our Lives are Making'

Feminist fictions of subjectivity

chapter |20 pages

Healing the Body Politic

Alice Walker's Meridian

chapter |21 pages

Seizing Time and Making New

Marge Piercy's Vida

chapter |22 pages

‘Context is All'

Backlash fictions of the 1980s

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion

The future of feminist fiction, or, is there a feminist aesthetic?