Gun-toting, rough-riding, crack-shot women; train-robbing female
bandits; blood-thirsty mothers who refuse to accept injustice--
these women appear in vigilante literature as protagonists that
recognize the extent of their own exploitation and directly
confront the causes. In this dynamic study, Graham-Bertolini
provides the first analysis of vigilante women in contemporary
American fiction and develops a model of vigilante heroines using
literary and feminist theory. Through close-readings of important
texts, including those by Flagg, Glaspell, Hong-Kington, Hurston,
Rawlings, Walker, this analysis broadens our understanding of how
law and culture infringe upon women's rights and joins the
discussion about gender oppression and traditional identity
politics.
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