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Distributed for The Grolier Club

Emerging Voices

American Women Writers, 1650–1920

A celebration of the unique voices of women writers in American literature, this comprehensive catalogue comprises some 100 works by 72 authors, covering the varied genres pursued by women: poetry, and travel journals, romantic novels, and history books. Many of the volumes are rare, reflecting the fact that the seventeenth-century publications were often read to tatters. Some later works, such as those by the Grimke sisters and Emma Southworth, were banned. Others, such as Charlotte Gilman's short story "The Yellow Wall Paper" (1892) and Harriet Jacob's autobiography, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl (1861), were only recently "discovered" by an appreciative feminist audience. Providing a window into the growth of spirit and stature that occurred as women gradually took their place as professional writers, this catalogue accompanied an exhibition that took place at the Grolier Club from March 11 through May 2, 1998.

120 pages | 2 | 6 x 9 | © 1998

Library Science and Publishing: Publishing

Literature and Literary Criticism: American and Canadian Literature

Women's Studies


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Table of Contents

Introduction / Voices in the Wilderness / The Awakening Republic: Idealists and Realists / The Power of Words: Women and Politics / “Those scribbling women”: The Bestseller / Unabashedly / American: Regional Writing / On the Edge: Writers from the West / American Girls: The Juvenile Market / “The precious words”: Verse / The Turn of the Century: Transitions / Bound for Glory: Modernism and the New Bohemia / Indexes

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