Women Writing Race, Nation, and History: N/native

Women Writing Race, Nation, and History: N/native

by Sonita Sarker
Women Writing Race, Nation, and History: N/native

Women Writing Race, Nation, and History: N/native

by Sonita Sarker

Hardcover

$84.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

This book presents how Nation and Narrative are bound together through the figure of the "N/native" as it appears in the non-fictional writings of Cornelia Sorabji, Grazia Deledda, Zitkála-Šá, Virginia Woolf, Victoria Ocampo, and Gwendolyn Bennett. It addresses two questions: How did women writers in the early twentieth century tackle the entangled roots of political and cultural citizenship from which crises of belonging arise? How do their narrative negotiations of those crises inform modernist practice and modernity, then and now?

The "N/native" moves between "born in" and "first in" in the context of the modern nation-state. In the dominant discourses of post-imperial as well as de-colonizing nations, "Native" is relegated to Time (static or fetishized through nostalgia and romance). History is envisioned as active and contoured, associated with motion and progress, which the "native" inhabits and for whom citizenship is a political as well as a temporal attribute. The six authors' identities as Native, settler, indigenous, immigrant, or native-citizen, are formed from their gendered, racialized, and classed locations in their respective nations. Each author negotiates the intertwined strands of Time and History by mobilizing the "N/native" to reclaim citizenship (cultural-political belonging). This study reveals how their lineage, connections to land, experiences in learning (education), and their labor generate their narratives.

The juxtaposition of the six writers keeps in focus the asymmetries in their responses to their times, and illustrates how relevant women's/feminist production were, and are in today's versions of the same urgent debates about heightened nativisms and nationalisms

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780192849960
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 10/31/2022
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 9.33(w) x 6.28(h) x 0.69(d)

About the Author

Sonita Sarker, Professor, Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, and English, Macalester College

Sonita Sarker has published in post/colonial and trans/national modernisms, subalternity, literary theory, and Cold War women's writing, and on Woolf, Hossain, Gramsci, Foucault, and Benjamin. Her work has appeared in several journals, and in her co-edited collection Trans-Status Subjects: Gender in the Globalization in South and Southeast Asia (Duke University Press, 2002) and edited volume Sustainable Feminisms (Elsevier, 2007). She is currently writing on comparative indigenous modernisms, and on Anglophone Modernist Studies and Whiteness. She teaches at Macalester College on the lands of the Sisseton and Wahpeton peoples, in St. Paul, Minnesota, USA.

Table of Contents

Introduction1. Cornelia Sorabji: Not native, not foreign, but citizen2. Grazia Deledda: From Island to Continent and Never Back Again3. Zitkála-Šá: The "First American"4. Virginia Woolf: Forever (Becoming) English5. Victoria Ocampo: What it Means to be a Citizen of the World6. Gwendolyn Bennett: Across the Fault Lines
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews