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The Patchwork Quilt

Ideas of Community in Nineteenth-Century American Women’s Fiction

by Suzanne V. Shepard (Author)
©2001 Monographs XII, 172 Pages
Series: American University Studies , Volume 74

Summary

Nineteenth-century American women’s patchwork-quilt fiction sought to redefine the concept of «brotherhood», established in Winthrop’s «city upon a hill», by providing an inclusive and matriarchal model for the communal experiment that was America. Patchwork-quilt fiction, from such domestic writers as Susan Warner to local colorists like Sarah Orne Jewett, combines realistic detail with women’s metaphors like the hearth, home, kitchen, garden, and quilt, to express feminine ideas about community.

Details

Pages
XII, 172
Year
2001
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820440743
Language
English
Keywords
Literature Frontier Americanism community experience Susan Strehle American women writers
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2001, 2005. XII, 172 pp., 1 ill.

Biographical notes

Suzanne V. Shepard (Author)

The Author: Suzanne V. Shepard is Associate Professor of English at Broome Community College. She received her Ph.D. in English from Binghamton University. She has published articles on a wide variety of subjects and has contributed computer-based study questions to an introduction to literature text.

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Title: The Patchwork Quilt