CFP: The 'New Woman' and the Literature of the 1920s (4/15/06; MSA 8, 10/19/06-10/22/06)
Proposed panel: The 'New Woman' and the Literature of the 1920s
*deadline for proposals: April 15th, 2006
One significant cultural transformation rapidly solidified in the
aftermath
of the Great War was the emergence of the New Woman. Smoking, drinking,=
enjoying sex in an uncomfortably masculine way, these women embraced th=
e
social relaxation that followed the crippling of class mores. Writers i=
n
the 1890s had sought to outline the inherent evils for women of attempt=
ing
to work, reject maternal or domicile identities, or otherwise take on
the freedoms previously restricted to the male sphere (one need only th=
ink
of Stoker's Lucy Westenra and the consequences of her sexuality);
nevertheless, many women, in these new social conditions, turned to wri=
ting
and the arts.
We invite proposals that address the types of responses to the altered=
social
landscape these women crafted: their newfound freedoms, their sexual
experimentation and experiences, and, in particular, their reactions to=
and
dialogue with those works now considered defining of modernism that eme=
rged
after the Great War. How did women writers of the 20s and 30s earn and
use their newfound literary independence?
Please send 300 word abstract together with a brief CV to
Heather.Lusty_at_unlv.edu The deadline for submissions in April
15th, 2006.=
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Received on Mon Jan 30 2006 - 17:46:24 EST