Embroidering the Scarlet A : unwed mothers and illegitimate children in American fiction and film / Janet Mason Ellerby.
Publisher: Ann Arbor : University of Michigan Press, [2015]Description: xii, 277 pages ; 24 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780472072637 (hardcover)
- 9780472052639 (paper)
- Unwed mothers and illegitimate children in American fiction and film
- Ellerby, Janet Mason
- American fiction -- 20th century -- History and criticism
- American fiction -- History and criticism -- 21st century
- Unmarried mothers in literature
- Illegitimate children in literature
- Unmarried mothers in motion pictures
- Illegitimate children in motion pictures
- SOCIAL SCIENCE / Women's Studies
- LITERARY COLLECTIONS / American / General
- 813.009/3526947 23
- PS374.M547 E45 2015
- SOC028000 | LCO002000
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | NMC Library | Stacks | PS374 .M547 E45 2015 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 33039001358067 |
Browsing NMC Library shelves, Shelving location: Stacks Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
PS374 .L6 G67 1997 The end of the novel of love / | PS374 .M38 C66 2004 Muse in the machine : American fiction and mass publicity / | PS374 .M535 B475 2005 Modernity and progress : Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Orwell / | PS374 .M547 E45 2015 Embroidering the Scarlet A : unwed mothers and illegitimate children in American fiction and film / | PS374 .N29 A47 2004 American naturalism / | PS374 .N29 C58 1994 American literary naturalism and its twentieth-century transformations : Frank Norris, Ernest Hemingway, Don DeLillo / | PS374 .N29 D83 2004 A man's game : masculinity and the anti-aesthetics of American literary naturalism / |
"Embroidering the Scarlet A traces the evolution of the "fallen woman" from the earliest novels to recent representations in fiction and film, including The Scarlet Letter, The Sound and the Fury, The Color Purple, and Love Medicine, and the films Juno and Mother and Child. Interweaving her own experience as a pregnant teen forced to surrender her daughter and pledge secrecy for decades, Ellerby interrogates "out-of-wedlock" motherhood, mapping the ways archetypal scarlet women and their children have been exiled as social pariahs, pardoned as blameless pawns, and transformed into empowered women. Drawing on narrative, feminist, and autobiographical theory, the book examines the ways that the texts have affirmed, subverted, or challenged dominant thinking and the prevailing moral standards as they have shifted over time. Using her own life experience and her uniquely informed perspective, Ellerby assesses the effect these stories have on the lives of real women and children. By inhabiting the space where ideology meets narrative, Ellerby questions the constricting historical, cultural, and social parameters of female sexuality and permissible maternity. As a feminist cultural critique, a moving autobiographical journey, and an historical investigation that addresses both fiction and film, Embroidering the Scarlet A will appeal to students and scholars of literature, history, sociology, psychology, women's and gender studies, and film studies. The book will also interest general readers, as it relates the experience of surrendering a child to adoption at a time when birthmothers were still exiled, birth records were locked away, and secrecy was still mandatory. It will also appeal to those concerned with adoption or the cultural shifts that have changed our thinking about illegitimacy"-- Provided by publisher.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 261-272) and index.
Introduction -- The unwed mothers of the early American Novel -- Theodore Dreiser's all-giving angel: Jennie Gerhardt -- Edith Wharton's female enforcers -- The scarlet women of William Faulkner's The sound and the fury -- The unwed mother triumphant: Celie and Alice Walker's The color purple -- Illegitimacy and sexual violence -- Birthmothers in exile -- Fathering iIllegitimacy -- The legacy of secrets -- Birthmothers in the adoption triangle: Caroline Leavitt's Girls in trouble and Tim Kirkman's Loggerheads -- Comedy and the unwed mother -- Bearing sorrow -- Conclusion.
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