English 153 - New Women in America

Fall
2016
01
4.00
Wendy Bergoffen
MW 12:30PM-01:50PM
Amherst College
ENGL-153-01-1617F
FAYE 217
wbergoffen@amherst.edu
SWAG-112-01,ENGL-153-01

(Offered as SWAG 112 and ENGL 153.)  This course will examine the emergence of the “New Woman” as a category of social theory, political action, and literary representation at the turning of the twentieth century.  Early readings will trace the origins of the New Woman as a response to nineteenth-century notions of “True Womanhood.”  Discussions will situate literary representations of women in larger cultural events taking place during the Progressive Era–debates over suffrage as well as their relationship to issues of citizenship, immigration, Jim Crow segregation, urbanization, and nativism.  The course will focus on texts written by a diverse group of women that present multiple and, at times, conflicting images of the New Woman.  Close attention will be paid to the manner in which these women writers constructed their fictions, particularly to issues of language, style, and form.  Readings will include texts by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Kate Chopin, Edith Wharton, Pauline Hopkins, Anzia Yezierska, and Sui Sin Far.


Preference will be given to first-year students, SWAG students, and American Studies students.  Limited to 18 students. Fall semester. Lecturer Bergoffen.


 

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.