Driving Women Driving Women

Driving Women

Fiction and Automobile Culture in Twentieth-Century America

    • $40.99
    • $40.99

Publisher Description

Over the years, cars have helped to define the experiences and self-perceptions of women in complex and sometimes unexpected ways. When women take the wheel, family structure and public space are reconfigured and re-gendered, creating a context for a literary tradition in which the car has served as a substitute for, an escape from, and an extension of the home, as well as a surrogate mother, a financial safeguard, and a means of self-expression.

Driving Women examines the intersection of American fiction—primarily but not exclusively by women—and automobile culture. Deborah Clarke argues that issues critical to twentieth-century American society—technology, mobility, domesticity, and agency—are repeatedly articulated through women's relationships with cars. Women writers took surprisingly intense interest in car culture and its import for modern life, as the car, replete with material and symbolic meaning, recast literal and literary female power in the automotive age.

Clarke draws on a wide range of literary works, both canonical and popular, to document women's fascination with cars from many perspectives: historical, psychological, economic, ethnic. Authors discussed include Wharton, Stein, Faulkner, O’Connor, Morrison, Erdrich, Mason, Kingsolver, Lopez, Kadohata, Smiley, Senna, Viramontes, Allison, and Silko. By investigating how cars can function as female space, reflect female identity, and reshape female agency, this engaging study opens up new angles from which to approach fiction by and about women and traces new directions in the intersection of literature, technology, and gender.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2007
April 15
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
226
Pages
PUBLISHER
Johns Hopkins University Press
SELLER
Johns Hopkins University
SIZE
2.5
MB
Keeping up Her Geography Keeping up Her Geography
2006
D. H. Lawrence, Transport and Cultural Transition D. H. Lawrence, Transport and Cultural Transition
2017
Gender Commodity Gender Commodity
2022
Separate Spheres No More Separate Spheres No More
2014
Charlotte Perkins Gilman Charlotte Perkins Gilman
1999
Archives of Labor Archives of Labor
2017