(Sem)Erotics - (Cutting Edge: Lesbian Life and Literature) by Elizabeth Meese (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- What is at stake in the production of experimental texts by lesbian writers?
- Author(s): Elizabeth Meese
- 188 Pages
- Literary Criticism, American
- Series Name: Cutting Edge: Lesbian Life and Literature
Description
Book Synopsis
What is at stake in the production of experimental texts by lesbian writers? what motivates these writers and characterizes their work? In this work, Elizabeth Meese examines the ways in which the experiences of the text, and the experiences of character, diverge and converge wit the writer's own biography.
Review Quotes
"A remarkable story of the three R's--repatriation, remembrance, and return--one of the most poignant to appear in recent years about American participation in World War I. It has its moments in the work of what later became the funeral industry. The far wider importance, here for the first time, concerns the nationalizing of grief."
-Robert H. Ferrell, author of "Woodrow Wilson and World War I, 1917-1921"
"Bodies of War makes a strong and innovative contribution to the social and cultural history of America's Great War. Budreau shows how Americans' ambiguous understanding of the war interacted with their need to grieve and comprehend the loss of their sons in the nation's first European war. Her powerful argument makes an important contribution to our knowledge not just of the war itself, but of the many ways that the war continued to impact America long after its conclusion."
-Michael Neiberg, editor of "The World War I Reader"
"Budreau's book is a monument to the power of civil society in framing American commemorative practices. She brings Gold Star Mothers back where they belong, into the center of the story of war and its aftermath. Through her study, we can still hear their voices, full of dignity and sadness. Here is a fine contribution to the history of American memory culture."
-Jay Winter, author of "Remembering War: The Great War between Memory and History in the Twentieth Century"
"Budreau offers an insightful perspective on how the US dealt with the aftermath of the Great War as officials sought to commemorate those who died in faraway places... For those with interests in the Gilded Age, the Progressive Era, or military, ethnic, and gender history, this book is a must... Summing Up: Essential."-CHOICE,
"Budreau's acount of the American way of remembrance uncovers a neglected chapter in the disputatious political history of the 1920s. Examining dozens of archival collections, both public and private, she ahs recovered the voices of mothers and other relatives of the dead. Bodies of War is a thoughtful, sometimes poignant contribution to our understanding of America's Great War experience."-Robert H. Zieger, The Journal of American History