Offering a strikingly original treatment of feminist literature,
"Popular Feminist Fiction as American Allegory "argues that
feminist novels served as a means of narrating and negotiating the
perceived decline of American progress after the 1960s. Elliott
analyzes popular tropes ranging from the white middle class
housewife trapped in endless domestic labor to the woman of color
haunted by a traumatic past--exploring the way in which feminist
narratives represented women as unable to access positive futures.
In a powerful new reading of temporality in contemporary fiction,
Elliott posits that feminism's image of women trapped in time
operated as a potent allegory for the apparent breakdown of
futurity in postmodernity.
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