Previous biographies of Willa Cather have either recycled the
traditional view of a writer detached from social issues whose work
supported a wholesome view of a vanished America, or they have
focused solely on revelations about her private life. Challenging
these narrow interpretations, Janis P. Stout presents a Cather
whose life and quietly modernist work fully reflected the artistic
and cultural tensions of her day.
A product of the South--she was born in Virginia--Cather went
west with her family at an early age, a participant in the
aspirations of Manifest Destiny. Known for her celebrations of
immigrants on the prairie, she in fact shared many of the ethnic
suspicions of her contemporaries. Loved by a popular audience for
her pieties of family and religion, she was in her youth a
freethinker who resisted traditional patterns for women's lives,
cutting her hair like a boy's and dressing in men's clothing. Seen
by critics since the 1930s as a practitioner of an escapist
formalism, she was, in Stout's view, profoundly ambivalent about
most of the important questions she faced. Cather structured her
writing to control her uncertainty and project a serenity she did
not in fact feel.
Cather has at times been viewed as a writer preoccupied with the
past whose literary project had little to do with the intellectual
currents of her time. On the contrary, Stout argues, Cather was a
full participant in the doubts and conflicts of twentieth-century
modernity. Only in recoil from her distress at these conflicts did
she turn to overt celebrations of the past and construct a
retiring, crotchety persona.
The Cather that emerges from Stout's treatment is a modernist
conservative in the mold of T. S. Eliot, though more responsive to
her time and simultaneously less assured in her pronouncements.
Cather's sexuality, too, is more complicated in Stout's version
than previous biographers have allowed. Willa Cather: The Writer
and Her World presents a woman and an artist who fully exemplifies
the ambivalence, the foreboding, and above all the complexity that
we associate with the twentieth-century mind.
General
Imprint: |
University of Virginia Press
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
December 2000 |
First published: |
December 2000 |
Authors: |
Janis P Stout
|
Dimensions: |
235 x 156 x 32mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Hardcover
|
Pages: |
400 |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-8139-1996-6 |
Categories: |
Books
Promotions
|
LSN: |
0-8139-1996-7 |
Barcode: |
9780813919966 |
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