ABSTRACT

First published in 1996. The present volume, Homemaking: Women Writers and the Politics and Poetics of Home, enters the critical discourse on gender by way of two of its most pressing issues: the politics of women’s locations at the end of the twentieth century, and the division of experience into public and private. That the emergence of systematic feminist thought in the west coincided with the invention of "private life" should not surprise us. Feminist thinkers from Mary Wollstonecroft on were quick to realize that the designation of the public and the private, male and female, was key to the subordination of women.

chapter 1|1 pages

Perhaps the World Ends Here

chapter 4|9 pages

Beyond Silence

chapter 14|5 pages

Spices

chapter 20|5 pages

Home

chapter 21|1 pages

Untitled Letter