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Feminism and the Politics of Literary Reputation
Charlotte Templin
其他書名
The Example of Erica Jong
出版
University Press of Kansas
, 1995
主題
Literary Criticism / General
Literary Criticism / American / General
Literary Criticism / Women Authors
Literary Criticism / Subjects & Themes / Politics
Social Science / Feminism & Feminist Theory
Social Science / Women's Studies
ISBN
0700607080
9780700607082
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=HONaAAAAMAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Soon after its publication in 1973,
Fear of Flying
brought Erica Jong immense popular success and media fame. Alternately pegged sassy and vulgar, Jong's novel embraced the politics of the women's liberation movement and challenged the definition of female sexuality. Yet today, more than twenty years and several books later, literary reputation continues, for the most part, to elude Jong.
Typecast by her adversaries as a media-seeking sensationalist, Erica Jong has been unfairly side-stepped by academia, Charlotte Templin contends. In this carefully researched study augmented by personal interviews with Jong, Templin assembles and analyzes the medley of responses to Jong's books by reviewers, critics, writers, academics, and the media-by liberals, conservatives, and feminists. She examines the diverse opinions on the merit and relevance to contemporary life of
Fear of Flying
; the invocation of a high culture/low culture dichotomy to discredit
How to Save Your Own Life
; the anatomy of literary success with Fanny; Jong's reception in a postfeminist age, and the trivialization of Jong's works that is inevitable with mass media exposure.
Templin also shows how antagonistic reviewers tend to identify Jong with her fictitious characters—a practice more common when the author is a woman—and judge her to be guilty of the sin of not being a "proper woman." In turn she shows how reviewers reveal something of their own values and ideological biases in their critiques and how literary reputations are built, destroyed, and altered over time.
The first book to make a detailed examination of the reputation of a woman writer,
Feminism and the Politics of Literary Reputation
provides an excellent case study for the literary reception of women writers within a broad cultural context. Templin's analysis offers valuable insight into the reception of women writers—especially commercially successful women writers—and dramatically illustrates the relation of literary reputation to popular appeal and cultural mores.