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Originally published alongside Ulysses in the pages of the
legendary Little Review, "Mary Olivier: A Life" is an intimate,
lacerating account of the ties between daughter and mother, a book
of transfixing images and troubling moral intelligence that
confronts the exigencies and ambiguities of freedom and
responsibility with empathy and power. May Sinclair's finest novel
stands comparison with the work of Willa Cather, Katherine
Mansfield, and the young Virginia Woolf.
As a child, Mary Olivier's dreamy disposition and fierce
intelligence set her apart from her Victorian family, especially
her mother, "Little Mamma," whose dazzling looks cannot hide her
meager love for her only daughter. Mary grows up in a world of her
own, a solitude that leaves her free to explore her deepest
passions, for literature and philosophy, for the austere beauties
of England's north country, even as she continues to attend to her
family. But in time the independence Mary values--at almost any
cost--threatens to become a form of captivity itself.
Subject to Debate, Katha Pollitt's column in The Nation, has offered readers clear-eyed yet provocative observations on women, politics, and culture for more than seven years. Bringing together eighty-eight of her most astute essays on hot-button topics like abortion, affirmative action, and school vouchers, this selection displays the full range of her indefatigable wit and brilliance. Her stirring new Introduction offers a seasoned critique of feminism at the millennium and is a clarion call for renewed activism against social injustice.
Nominated for the National Book Critics Circle Award, this brilliant, insightful, controversial, and courageous book contains the best of Pollitt's pieces, which have galvanized readers of The Nation, The New Yorker and The New York Times, on subjects that range from abortion and breast implants to date-rape, marriage, the media, and violence.
First published in 1792, A Vindication of the Rights of Woman was an instant success, turning its thirty-three-year-old author into a minor celebrity. A pioneering work of early feminism that extends to women the Enlightenment principle of "the rights of man," its argument remains as relevant today as it was for Woll-stonecraft's contemporaries. "Mary Wollstonecraft was not the first writer to call for women to receive a real, challenging education," writes Katha Pollitt in the new Introduction. "But she was the first to connect the education of women to the transformation of women's social position, of relations between the sexes, and even of society itself. She was the first to argue that women's intellectual equality would and should have actual consequences. The winds of change sweep through her pages."
This classic work of early feminism remains as relevant and passionate today as it was for Wollstonecraft's contemporaries. This edition includes new explanatory notes.
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