Narrow Search
Search narrowed by
Last searches

Results for *

Displaying results 1 to 1 of 1.

  1. Mapping our selves
    Canadian women's autobiography in English
    Published: c1993
    Publisher:  McGill-Queen's University Press, Montreal

    In Mapping Our Selves Helen Buss considers a broad range of autobiographical works written by Canadian women, including memoirs, journals, and conventional autobiography as well as experiments in blending a number of writing genres. She constructs... more

    Access:
    Aggregator (lizenzpflichtig)
    Hochschule Aalen, Bibliothek
    E-Book EBSCO
    No inter-library loan
    Hochschule Esslingen, Bibliothek
    E-Book Ebsco
    No inter-library loan
    Saarländische Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek
    No inter-library loan
    Universitätsbibliothek der Eberhard Karls Universität
    No inter-library loan

     

    In Mapping Our Selves Helen Buss considers a broad range of autobiographical works written by Canadian women, including memoirs, journals, and conventional autobiography as well as experiments in blending a number of writing genres. She constructs her own "mapping" theory of how female identity is formed in order to illustrate how identity can be understood through the relationship between writer, text, and reader. Buss supplies a framework for her study by reviewing male-centred theories of identity and some of the ways in which theorists working with women's autobiographical accounts are changing these models. The texts selected by Buss include those by Elizabeth Simcoe, Susanna Moodie, Anna Jameson, Nellie McClung, Lucy Maud Montgomery, Emily Carr, Laura Salverson, Margaret Laurence, Dorothy Livesay, Daphne Marlatt, Mary Meigs, Maria Campbell, Kristjana Gunnars, and Aritha van Herk. Each section of the book opens with a short autobiographical introduction by Buss, allowing the reader to place the author's critical practice within the context of her sense of her own identity as critic, writer, and woman.-- publisher pt. 1. Reading for an Alternate Tradition. 1. Pioneer Women's Diaries and Journals: Letters Home/Letters to the Future. 2. Pioneer Women's Memoirs: Preserving the Past/Rescuing the Self. 3. Two Exemplary Tools: Moodie's Roughing It and Jameson's Studies and Rambles -- pt. 2. On Becoming a Twentieth-Century Woman. 4. Achieving Women/Achieving Womanhood. 5. Literary Women: Finding "The Words to Say It" -- pt. 3. Finding a Counter-Discourse. 6. Gestures towards an Embodied Tradition.

     

    Export to reference management software   RIS file
      BibTeX file