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Writing Red: An Anthology of American Women Writers, 1930-1940 [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 368 pages, height x width: 152x228 mm, Illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Mar-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Haymarket Books
  • ISBN-10: 1642595837
  • ISBN-13: 9781642595833
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  • Cena: 28,70 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 368 pages, height x width: 152x228 mm, Illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Mar-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Haymarket Books
  • ISBN-10: 1642595837
  • ISBN-13: 9781642595833

A landmark volume showcasing the vital writing of revolutionary women during the 1930s.



This comprehensive collection of fiction, poetry, and reportage by revolutionary women of the 1930s lays to rest the charge that feminism disappeared after 1920. Among the thirty-six writers are Muriel Rukeyser, Margaret Walker, Josephine Herbst, Tillie Olsen, Tess Slesinger, Agnes Smedley, and Meridel Le Sueur. Other voices may be new to readers, including many working-class Black and white women. Topics covered range from sexuality and family relationships, to race, class, and patriarchy, to party politics. Toni Morrison writes that the anthology is “peopled with questioning, caring, socially committed women writers.”

Recenzijas

This historic volume powerfully captures the vital role revolutionary women played in shaping American radicalism during the Great Depression. It is a must-read for anyone interested in history, gender, and politics. Keisha N. Blain, author of Until I Am Free: Fannie Lou Hamers Enduring Message to America This republication of Writing Red comes to us just as we are primed to think deeply about gender, race, and class in a moment that mirrors both the tragedy and creative awakening in the aftermath of the early twentieth centurys capitalist crisis. In the 1930s, in the 1980s, and again today, these women writers attend to our neglected realities and dreams. Hopefully, future generations will learn how not to forget them, and we will all benefit from their wisdom and perspective, moving forward toward the freedom of not just some but all. Gina Dent, co-author of Abolition. Feminism. Now.

Thirty-five years ago, Nekola and Rabinowitz produced a labor of love, the path-breaking anthology, Writing Red. Indefatigable researchers, they discovered radical women writers whose work had gone missing from histories of the Thirties and histories of feminism. Theirs was not an academic exercise, but rather an effort to show that radical women of the Thirties, in their desire to tackle capitalism, racism and patriarchy, were there well before us. Now that historians are re-periodizing the womens movement, suggesting the Thirties rather than the Sixties as its starting point, Writing Red is more essential than ever. Alice Echols, Barbra Streisand Chair of Contemporary Gender Studies at the University of Southern California From Meridel Le Sueurs fiction to Margaret Walkers poetry, from legendary folk singer Aunt Molly Jacksons lyrics to Tillie Olsens reportage from the West Coast Longshoremans Strike of 1934, Writing Red reignites the fires behind the battlelines of womens struggles in the 1930s for a new generation of readers. Contemporary organizers and activists in abortion rights, trade unions, gender studies, sex work, and other sites of social action will find comrades-in-arms from a century ago in this magnificent volume by Nekola and Rabinowitz. Mark Nowak, author of Social Poetics Writing Red is an indispensable record of the political struggles and intersectional solidarities of 1930s women radicals. With this updated edition, the revolutionary desires of the past are illuminated anew for the next generation of readers, writers, and activists. A testament to feminist collaboration, and a call to meet the challenges of the present, Writing Red is an enduring and necessary book. Sarah Ehlers, author of Left of Poetry: Depression America and the Formation of Modern Poetics In Writing Red, Paula Rabinowitz and Charlotte Nekola introduce twenty-first century readers to remarkable writers from an extraordinary decade. Exquisitely readable and superbly informative, these collected voices bring to life women in fields and factories, kitchens, battlefields, and on the picket lines. By drawing attention to sexuality, domestic labor, motherhood, gender and racial oppression, these radical writers amplified the Left of their time. They remain a vital resource in ours. Rosemary Hennessy, author of Profit and Pleasure: Sexual Identities in Late Capitalism Writing Red is one of those rare books that transformed twentieth century literary history forever. This bold and brilliant anthology, curated with audacity by Charlotte Nekola and Paula Rabinowitz, became the vanguard text of a new direction in the study of United States Literary Radicalism, one that upended the masculinist narrative of the Marxist-led cultural movement of the 1930s. Nearly four decades later, its unparalleled mission of reinvention continues to refresh and inspire scholars, activists, and readers. Alan Wald, author of Exiles from a Future Time: The Forging of the Mid-Twentieth Century Literary Left This superb anthology offers the perfect introduction to the wide range of radical women writers in '30s America. And it documents a key moment in the evolution of the progressive movement in the US. A perfect book for any course touching on the Depression Era or the history of radicalism. T.V. Reed, author of The Art of Protest: Culture and Activism from the Civil Rights Movement to the Present In this time of precarity, pandemic, and protest, we need more than ever to read those women writers of short fiction, poetry, and reportage that Charlotte Nekola and Paula Rabinowitz first anthologized in 1987. Writing Red captures anger at exploitation and longing for a more just world: among both the left authors of the depression decade of 1930-1940 and its feminist editors of the 1980s, when women's studies as a field became institutionalized. We need these fighting words to counter the fascism and financial capitalism of our time. Eileen Boris, author of Making the Woman Worker: Precarious Labor and the Fight for Global Standards, 1919-2019 When it was first published in 1987, Writing Red exploded the leftist literary landscape by forcefully demonstrating how Depression-era women writers engaged carefully with gender, sexuality, class, and race in their radical work. Thanks to this timely republication of a classic anthology, an entirely new generation of readers and activists can grapple with the brilliant pieces it contains even as they ask themselves why so many of the struggles found in this essential volumes pages continue to feel eerily familiar. Populated with the energetic voices of women who imagined their fiction, poetry, and reportage as essentially connected to on-the-ground protest, Writing Red will inspire, challenge, and provoke all who peruse its pages. Aaron Lecklider, author of Love's Next Meeting: The Forgotten History of Homosexuality and the Left in American Culture



This volume excavates the stories, poems, and reportage of women writers whose work originally appeared in now-defunct Left journals. This essential collection should inspire. Library Journal

Papildus informācija

Promotion targeting left leaning publications like the Nation, Jacobin, Truthout, Counter Punch Social media publicity campaign
Foreword xiii
Toni Morrison
Preface to the 2022 Edition xv
Preface xvii
Women and U.S. Literary Radicalism 1(16)
Paula Rabinowitz
Part I FICTION
17(108)
Writing Red: Women's Short Fiction of the 1930s
19(11)
Paula Rabinowitz
Shan-Fei, Communist
30(6)
Agnes Smedley
Sequel To Love
36(3)
Meridel Le Sueur
From Industrial Valley
39(7)
Ruth Mckenney
Room In The World
46(6)
Leane Zugsmith
Deepening Dusk
52(15)
Edith Manuel Durham
Two-Bit Piece
67(3)
Lucille Boehm
The Whipping
70(9)
Marita Bonner
The Woman In The Window
79(5)
Ramona Lowe
Our House
84(5)
Elizabeth Thomas
Hurry, Hurry
89(7)
Eleanor Clark
The Enemy
96(10)
Josephine Herbst
The Mouse-Trap
106(19)
Tess Slesinger
Part II POETRY
125(62)
Worlds Moving: Women, Poetry, And The Literary Politics Of The 1930s
127(8)
Charlotte Nekola
Ann Burlak
135(12)
Muriel Rukeyser
Absalom
139(3)
More of a Corpse Than a Woman
142(1)
Fifth Elegy: A Turning Wind
143(4)
Try Tropic
147(10)
Genevieve Taggard
Return of the Native
148(1)
To My Mother
149(1)
Silence in Mallorca
150(2)
Proud Day
152(1)
Autumn Song for Guitar
153(1)
Creative Effort
154(1)
Ode in Time of Crisis
155(2)
Under the Sound of Voices
157(4)
Josephine W. Johnson
He Who Shall Turn
158(1)
Ice Winter
159(2)
For My People
161(4)
Margaret Walker
Dark Blood
163(1)
Lineage
164(1)
The Palm Wine Seller
165(2)
Gladys Casely Hayford
All Things Insensible
167(1)
Kathleen Tankersley Young
Breed, Women, Breed
168(3)
Lucia Trent
Lady In A Limousine
169(1)
Parade The Narrow Turrets
170(1)
On The Wall To Your Left
171(1)
Ruth Lechlitner
White Man's Blues
172(1)
Susan Mcmillan Shepherd
Mothers
173(1)
Mary Leduc Gibbons
This Woman
174(5)
Joy Davidman
Twentieth-Century Americanism
175(3)
Prayer Against Indifference
178(1)
I Want You Women Up North To Know
179(3)
Tillie Olsen
Which Side Are You On?
182(2)
Florence Reece
I Am A Union Woman
184(3)
Aunt Molly Jackson
The Hungry Blues
185(2)
Part III Reportage, Theory And Analysis
187(154)
Worlds Unseen: Political Women Journalists And The 1930S
189(10)
Charlotte Nekola
A Passport From Realengo 18
199(4)
Josephine Herbst
The People In China
203(12)
Agnes Smedley
Fighters for Women's Rights
215(13)
Anna Louise Strong
Front Trenches--Northwest
224(4)
Woman Freed
228(8)
Ella Winter
Finding Women
236(9)
Ruth Gruber
The Strike
245(7)
Tillie Olsen
Them Women Sure Are Scrappers
252(3)
Vivian Dahl
Women of the Cotton Fields
255(3)
Elaine Ellis
Bessie: A Garment Strike Story
258(6)
Mary Guimes Lear
We Are Mill People
264(6)
Ella Ford
My Life: A True Story by a Negro Worker of the South
270(6)
Anonymous
And Mine: A True Story by a Negro Worker of the North
272(2)
No More Helling! A True Story by a Working Woman
274(2)
Negro Women in Steel
276(3)
Mollie V. Lewis
A Good Landlord (An Interview with Our Janitress)
279(3)
Dorothy Day
Chicago in the Rain (Relief for Negro Homeless Men on the South Side)
282(3)
Thyra J. Edwards
School for Bums
285(8)
Mary Heaton Vorse
Hard-Boiled
291(2)
"Leave Them Meters Be!"
293(6)
Myra Page
"Water!"
291(8)
The Fetish of Being Outside
299(5)
Meridel Le Sueur
Manufacturing Femininity
304(12)
Mary Inman
The Pivot of the System
308(4)
The Code of a Class
312(4)
Women and Communism
316(13)
Rebecca Pitts
Women under Capitalism
329(12)
Grace Hutchins
The Double Burden
335(6)
Contributors 341(6)
Acknowledgments 347
Charlotte Nekola is the author of Dream House and Della Who.

Paula Rabinowitz is the author of Labor and Desire and American Pulp.