From Curlers to Chainsaws: Women and Their Machines
The twenty-three distinguished writers included in From Curlers to Chainsaws: Women and Their Machines invite machines into their lives and onto the page. In every room and landscape these writers occupy, gadgets that both stir and stymie may be found: a Singer sewing machine, a stove, a gun, a vibrator, a prosthetic limb, a tractor, a Dodge Dart, a microphone, a smartphone, a stapler, a No. 1 pencil and, of course, a curling iron and a chainsaw.
From Curlers to Chainsaws is a groundbreaking collection of lyrical and illuminating essays about the serious, silly, seductive, and sometimes sorrowful relationships between women and their machines. This collection explores in depth objects we sometimes take for granted, focusing not only on their functions but also on their powers to inform identity.
For each writer, the device moves beyond the functional to become a symbolic extension of the writer’s own mind—altering and deepening each woman’s concept of herself.
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From Curlers to Chainsaws: Women and Their Machines
The twenty-three distinguished writers included in From Curlers to Chainsaws: Women and Their Machines invite machines into their lives and onto the page. In every room and landscape these writers occupy, gadgets that both stir and stymie may be found: a Singer sewing machine, a stove, a gun, a vibrator, a prosthetic limb, a tractor, a Dodge Dart, a microphone, a smartphone, a stapler, a No. 1 pencil and, of course, a curling iron and a chainsaw.
From Curlers to Chainsaws is a groundbreaking collection of lyrical and illuminating essays about the serious, silly, seductive, and sometimes sorrowful relationships between women and their machines. This collection explores in depth objects we sometimes take for granted, focusing not only on their functions but also on their powers to inform identity.
For each writer, the device moves beyond the functional to become a symbolic extension of the writer’s own mind—altering and deepening each woman’s concept of herself.
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From Curlers to Chainsaws: Women and Their Machines

From Curlers to Chainsaws: Women and Their Machines

From Curlers to Chainsaws: Women and Their Machines

From Curlers to Chainsaws: Women and Their Machines

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Overview

The twenty-three distinguished writers included in From Curlers to Chainsaws: Women and Their Machines invite machines into their lives and onto the page. In every room and landscape these writers occupy, gadgets that both stir and stymie may be found: a Singer sewing machine, a stove, a gun, a vibrator, a prosthetic limb, a tractor, a Dodge Dart, a microphone, a smartphone, a stapler, a No. 1 pencil and, of course, a curling iron and a chainsaw.
From Curlers to Chainsaws is a groundbreaking collection of lyrical and illuminating essays about the serious, silly, seductive, and sometimes sorrowful relationships between women and their machines. This collection explores in depth objects we sometimes take for granted, focusing not only on their functions but also on their powers to inform identity.
For each writer, the device moves beyond the functional to become a symbolic extension of the writer’s own mind—altering and deepening each woman’s concept of herself.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781611861907
Publisher: Michigan State University Press
Publication date: 02/01/2016
Edition description: 1
Pages: 335
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Joyce Dyer is professor emerita of English at Hiram College.
Jennifer Cognard-Black is professor of English at St. Mary’s College of Maryland.
Elizabeth Macleod Walls is dean of University College and teaches at Nebraska Wesleyan University.

Table of Contents

Preface ix

Acknowledgments xvii

Hearth and Home

Maytag Washer, 1939 Norma Tilden 2

My Mother's Singer Joyce Dyer 8

If You Can't Stand the Heat Ruminations on the Stove from an African American Woman Psyche Williams-Forson 28

Glad-Iron Rebecca McClanahan Sad-Iron 50

Grip Joy Castro 64

Bedroom and Birthing Room

Of Vibrators E. J. Levy 70

The Hot Thing Jennifer Cognard-Black 78

Beautiful Monster: Life with a Prosthetic Limb Emily Rapp 98

Mother Hands Monica Frantz Midwife Hands 108

Farm, Lawn, Hill, and Wood

Tsantas and the Mind-Expanding Power of a Small Machine Mary Swander 122

Old Iron: A Restoration Mary Quade 134

All Flesh Is Grass Maureen Stanton 148

Driven Karen Salyer McElmurray 170

More Than Noise Ana Maria Spagna 182

Stage and World

The Microphone Erotic Debra Marquart 192

Phone Elizabeth MacLeod Walls, I 202

Body, Camera, Self Melissa A. Goldthwaite 214

Lebanese Airwaves Diana Salman 228

Remembered Is Misrememberedr Then Turns Monica Berlin 242

The Writer's Studio

Swingline Nine Jen Hirt 260

The Qwertyist Sue William Silverman 272

On Typing and Salvation Karen Outen 282

Black woman with pencil, sharpened Nikky Finney, Inquisitor and Insurgent

Contributors 309

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