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Kitchen Economics - Women's Regionalist Fiction and Political Economy (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,938
Discovery Miles 19 380
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Kitchen Economics - Women's Regionalist Fiction and Political Economy (Hardcover)
Series: American Literary Realism & Naturalism
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Total price: R1,958
Discovery Miles: 19 580
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An analysis of how nineteenth-century women regional writers
represent political economic thought. Readers of late
nineteenth-century female American authors are familiar with plots,
characters, and households that make a virtue of economizing.
Scholars often interpret these scenarios in terms of a mythos of
parsimony, frequently accompanied by a sort of elegiac
republicanism whereby self-sufficiency and autonomy are put to the
service of the greater good - a counterworld to the actual economic
conditions of the period. In Kitchen Economics: Women's Regionalist
Fiction and Political Economy, Thomas Strychacz takes a new
approach to the question of how female regionalist fictions
represent "the economic" by situating them within traditions of
classical political economic thought. Offering case studies of key
works by Sarah Orne Jewett, Mary Wilkins Freeman, Harriet Beecher
Stowe, Rose Terry Cooke, and Alice Dunbar-Nelson, this study
focuses on three complex cultural fables - the island commonwealth,
stadialism (or stage theory), and feeding the body politic - which
found formal expression in political economic thought, made their
way into endless public debates about the economic turmoil of the
late nineteenth century, and informed female authors. These works
represent counterparts, not counterworlds, to modernity; and their
characteristic stance is captured in the complex trope of
feminaeconomica. This approach ultimately leads us to reconsider
what we mean by the term "economic," for the emphasis of
contemporary neoclassical economics on economic agents given over
to infinite wants and complete self-interest has caused the
"sufficiency" and "common good" models of female regionalist
authors to be misinterpreted and misvalued. These fictions are
nowhere more pertinent to modernity than in their alliance with
today's important alternative economic discourses.
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