Painted Lives

Painted Lives

Author: Charlotte Vale Allen

Publisher: Island Nation Press LLC

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 272

ISBN-13: 9781892738332

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Mattie Sylvester, a widow of one of America's most celebrated painters, reveals the sordid truth of the past, and of her husband, to her secretary.


Generations Women in the South

Generations Women in the South

Author: Joy Elvey Lamm

Publisher: The Institute for Southern Studies

Published:

Total Pages: 124

ISBN-13:

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The time has come, Lillian Smith wrote in 1962, for women to risk the "great and daring creative act" of discovering and articulating their own identity. Three years later, Southern women of a younger generation, fortified by the skills and self-respect earned in the black civil-rights movement, issued the first manifesto of a new feminism. Their words landed with explosive force, setting off cultural reverberations which have shaken the lives of men and women alike. A little more than a decade after that, this issue of Southern Exposure began to take form. Its creation has taken us back into history and deep into the meaning of our own lives. As we set out to understand the situation of Southern women, we found ourselves "in search of our mothers' gardens." We found ourselves naming an experience we share across the generations. "So many of the stories that I write," Alice Walker discovered, "are my mother's stories." To speak in our own voices, we had first to give expression to a "promise song" that has been there all along.


No More Masks!

No More Masks!

Author: Florence Howe

Publisher: Anchor Books

Published: 1973

Total Pages: 438

ISBN-13:

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"This volume presents for the first time the continuing tradition of feminist consciousness as expressed in poetry by women. Here 87 women poets of this century write disctinctively for and about women, on issues both private and public, such as war, poverty, racism, sexuality, childbirth and abortion."--Back cover.


Experience and Faith

Experience and Faith

Author: R. Brantley

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2016-04-30

Total Pages: 285

ISBN-13: 1137122099

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Emily Dickinson (1830-86) recasts British-Romantic themes of natural and spiritual perception for an American audience. Her poems of science and technology reflect her faith in experience. Her lyrics about natural history build on this empiricism and develop her commitment to natural religion. Her poems of revealed religion constitute her experience of faith. Thus Dickinson stands on the experiential common ground between empiricism and evangelicalism in Romantic Anglo-America. Her double perspective parallels the implicit androgyny of her nineteenth-century feminism. Her counterintuitive combination of natural models with spiritual metaphors champions immortality. The experience/faith dialectic of her Late-Romantic imagination forms the heart of her legacy.