Mary Austin's Regionalism: Reflections on Gender, Genre, and Geography

Mary Austin's Regionalism: Reflections on Gender, Genre, and Geography

Mary Austin's Regionalism: Reflections on Gender, Genre, and Geography

Mary Austin's Regionalism: Reflections on Gender, Genre, and Geography

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Overview

Best known for The Land of Little Rain, a collection of natural-history essays about the California deserts, the Western writer Mary Austin (1868–1934) was a prolific literary figure in the first few decades of the twentieth century. In addition to her essays and short stories, Austin produced novels, poems, and cultural criticism, and was well known as a feminist, political writer, and mystic. Over the past decade a number of Austin’s books have been reissued, and her work has been the subject of increasing critical attention.

Heike Schaefer’s study complements that renewed interest with a fresh, broad appreciation of the complexity of Austin’s work. Considering unpublished materials and the full range of Austin’s literary and theoretical writing, Mary Austin’s Regionalism: Reflections on Gender, Genre, and Geography presents Austin as a significant early twentieth-century author who reworked the traditions of nature writing and women’s regionalism to envision a sustainable and democratic American culture. Austin brought an environmental awareness to the exploration of the race, gender, and class dynamics informing the European American colonization of the West. Drawing on Southwestern folklore and Native American concepts of storytelling, her work addressed feminist, pluralist, and ecological concerns in often strikingly original ways. By placing Austin’s writing in the context of contemporaneous as well as current critical debates, Mary Austin’s Regionalism reveals the insights that Austin’s work offers to present discussions of sense of place, the construction of human and nonhuman nature, sustainability, feminist politics, and the dynamics of intercultural communication. Mary Austin’s decades-old regionalist work still has the power to fascinate and move a wide audience of contemporary readers.

Under the Sign of Nature: Explorations in Ecocriticism


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813922737
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Publication date: 06/22/2004
Series: Under the Sign of Nature
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.25(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Heike Schaefer is Assistant Professor of American Studies at the University of Mannheim.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsix
Introduction1
1"The Land Sets the Limit": Austin's Concept of Regionalism19
2Nature Writing as Regionalist Practice53
3Sense of Place85
4Deserting the Myth of the West: The Gender of Nature and the Nature of Gender112
5Who Owns the Place? Regional Development and the Future of the Nation146
6Regionalist Conversations178
Conclusion209
Notes223
Bibliography263
Index283

What People are Saying About This

Melody Graulich

While many critics have recognized that Mary Austin is a regionalist who turned to regional cultures to envision a more democratic and spiritually rich national culture, no one has explored this issue as comprehensively, looking at the entire body of Austin's work. Mary Austin's Regionalism: Reflections on Gender, Genre, and Geography is original because it reaches beyond Austin to debates about regionalism, environmental writing, identity, and other issues, and provides a rich analysis of Austin's thoughts and writings.(Melody Graulich, editor of Western American Literature)

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