Nations, Traditions and Cross-Cultural Identities: Women's Writing in English in a European Context
The notion of citizenship is part of a national collective memory and a memory of individuals belonging to a specific geographical, historical and cultural context. The volume seeks to investigate the importance of women’s relationship with citizenship and nationality from a diachronic perspective analysing different forms of writing in various European contexts. Many themes intersect in the different essays that comprise the volume, including the construction of female identity through religious ideology, the importance of translation and cultural studies as a source of feminine knowledge, and the relationship between public life and private domain within the multiculturalism of Europe. The intersection between national identity, women’s writings and cultural difference surfaces in many essays and demonstrates how the notion of a necessary translation between cultures has been central for women authors since the seventeenth century.
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Nations, Traditions and Cross-Cultural Identities: Women's Writing in English in a European Context
The notion of citizenship is part of a national collective memory and a memory of individuals belonging to a specific geographical, historical and cultural context. The volume seeks to investigate the importance of women’s relationship with citizenship and nationality from a diachronic perspective analysing different forms of writing in various European contexts. Many themes intersect in the different essays that comprise the volume, including the construction of female identity through religious ideology, the importance of translation and cultural studies as a source of feminine knowledge, and the relationship between public life and private domain within the multiculturalism of Europe. The intersection between national identity, women’s writings and cultural difference surfaces in many essays and demonstrates how the notion of a necessary translation between cultures has been central for women authors since the seventeenth century.
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Nations, Traditions and Cross-Cultural Identities: Women's Writing in English in a European Context

Nations, Traditions and Cross-Cultural Identities: Women's Writing in English in a European Context

Nations, Traditions and Cross-Cultural Identities: Women's Writing in English in a European Context

Nations, Traditions and Cross-Cultural Identities: Women's Writing in English in a European Context

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Overview

The notion of citizenship is part of a national collective memory and a memory of individuals belonging to a specific geographical, historical and cultural context. The volume seeks to investigate the importance of women’s relationship with citizenship and nationality from a diachronic perspective analysing different forms of writing in various European contexts. Many themes intersect in the different essays that comprise the volume, including the construction of female identity through religious ideology, the importance of translation and cultural studies as a source of feminine knowledge, and the relationship between public life and private domain within the multiculturalism of Europe. The intersection between national identity, women’s writings and cultural difference surfaces in many essays and demonstrates how the notion of a necessary translation between cultures has been central for women authors since the seventeenth century.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783039114139
Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
Publication date: 11/20/2009
Series: European Connections: Studies in Comparative Literature, Intermediality and Aesthetics , #27
Pages: 182
Product dimensions: 5.91(w) x 8.66(h) x (d)

About the Author

The Editors: Annamaria Lamarra is Professor of English Literature at the University Federico II, Naples (Italy), where she is also Director of the Language Centre. Her recent publications include Behn Aphra (Oxford 2008). She is co-editor of the volume Aphra Behn In/And Our Time (Paris 2009).
Eleonora Federici (M.A., Ph.D. University of Hull, UK) is Associate Professor of English Language at the University of Calabria (Italy). Her main research areas are translation studies, gender studies and postcolonial studies from a linguistic and cultural perspective. She has co-edited with A. Lamarra and V. Fortunati The Controversial Women’s Body: Images and Representations in Literature and Arts (2004) and she is author of The Translator as Intercultural Mediator (2006).

Table of Contents

Contents: Patsy Stoneman/Angela Leighton: General Editors’ Preface – Annamaria Lamarra/Eleonora Federici: Introduction – June Waudby: ‘Doth Religion Reside in a Woman’s Bonnet. Is her Silence Fixed by Decree? ’ Locating the Early Work of Anne Vaughan Locke – Andrew Monnickendam: Food and Patriotism: The Battle of Words between Hannah Glasse and Ann Cook – Kim Hyowon: Mapping Women’s National Identity in George Eliot’s The Spanish Gypsy – Annamaria Lamarra: Jessie White Mario, Louise Colet and the Italian Risorgimento – Anna Maria Palombi Cataldi: Nancy Cunard: ‘An Extraordinary Woman’ – Maureen Mulligan: History Written in Flesh and Blood: Rebecca West, Martha Gellhorn and María Martínez Sierra – Patty Zupan: Artemisia’s Arte and the Art of the Historical Novel: Anna Banti, Alexandra Lapierre and Susan Vreeland – Eleonora Federici: Translating Identity through Women’s Voices: Michèle Roberts’s Fair Exchange and The Looking Glass – Gabriella Morisco: Contrasting Gardens and Worlds: America and Europe in the Long Journey of Indigo, a Young Native American Girl – Oriana Palusci: ‘You Can Do it’: Bending and Blending in Gurinder Chadha’s Bend It Like Beckham.
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