Cover image for Playing House in the American West : Western Women's Life Narratives, 1839-1987.
Playing House in the American West : Western Women's Life Narratives, 1839-1987.
Title:
Playing House in the American West : Western Women's Life Narratives, 1839-1987.
Author:
Halverson, Cathryn.
ISBN:
9780817386863
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (264 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. Playing House on the Froniter - Caroline Kirkland and Louise Clappe -- Chapter 2. "Your Ex-Washlady" : Elinore Pruitt Stewart, the Woman Homesteader of Wyoming -- Chapter 3. "Straight-Made in Nothing" : Mary MacLane and Domestic Ritual -- Chapter 4. Girls of the Limberlost : Gene Stratton-Porter and Opal Whiteley -- Chapter 5. "Wind and Sun Are Good Housekeepers" : The Domestic Narratives of Mary Austin and Zitkala-Sa -- Chapter 6. Camps, Caves, and Attics: Playing House in Willa Cather's Western Novels -- Chapter 7. My Great, Wide, Beautiful World: Home Writing as Travel Writing -- Chapter 8. Eating in, Eating Out, and Eating al Otro Lado: M.F.K. Fisher's The Gastronomical Me -- Chapter 9. Searching for Home: Jean Stafford's West -- Chapter 10. The Once and Future Home: Housekeeping and Anywhere but Here -- Conclusion. "I Am Going to 'Play Like' You Have Come" -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Index.
Abstract:
Examining an eclectic group of western women's autobiographical texts-canonical and otherwise-Playing House in the American West argues for a distinct regional literary tradition characterized by strategic representations of unconventional domestic life.  The controlling metaphor Cathryn Halverson uses in her engrossing study is "playing house."  From Caroline Kirkland and Laura Ingalls Wilder to Willa Cather and Marilynne Robinson, from the mid-nineteenth to the late-twentieth centuries, western authors have persistently embraced wayward or eccentric housekeeping to prove a woman's difference from western neighbors and eastern readers alike.  The readings in Playing House investigate the surprising textual ends to which westerners turn the familiar terrain of the home: evaluating community; arguing for different conceptions of race and class; and perhaps most especially, resisting traditional gender roles.  Western women writers, Halverson argues, render the home as a stage for autonomy, resistance, and imagination rather than as a site of sacrifice and obligation. The western women examined in Playing House in the American West are promoted and read as representatives of a region, as insiders offering views of distant and intriguing ways of life, even as they conceive of themselves as outsiders. By playing with domestic conventions, they recast the region they describe, portraying the West as a place that fosters female agency, individuality, and subjectivity.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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