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Author Burke, Sally.

Title American feminist playwrights : a critical history / Sally Burke
Published New York : Twayne Publishers ; [1996]
London : Prentice Hall International, [1996]
©1996
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Description 1 online resource (ix, 270 pages) : illustrations
Series Gale virtual reference library
Twayne's critical history of American drama
Gale virtual reference library.
Twayne's critical history of American drama.
Contents Pioneers and prototypes: America's first feminist playwrights -- The woman question onstage -- From Boston to Harlem: the varied voices --Anticipating the second wave -- The second wave: a multiplicity of concerns -- Feminisms: the debate over realism
Summary The history of America's feminist playwrights is as old as the history of the nation. Since the incorporation of the United States in the late 1700s, scores of women have dramatized the plight of women in a culture dominated by the interests of its men. Mercy Otis Warren, a patriot of the Revolution, was not only the country's first woman playwright but also its first feminist playwright. Warren and the dramatists Susanna Rowson and Anna Cora Mowatt, who followed her in the 19th century, addressed in their plays such feminist concerns as the objectification of women, the silencing of their voices, and their psychological and physical abuse - concerns that continue to appear in the plays of contemporary feminist playwrights. Burke's study examines works intensely feminist in their message - the suffrage plays of the early women's movement, the social protest dramas of the 1920s and 1930s, the plays advocating equal rights from the late 1960s onward - and those whose feminism seems an almost unintentional part of their content. Lillian Hellman, who professed no special interest in women's issues and disdained discussions of herself as a "woman" playwright, nonetheless addressed in her dramas numerous feminist themes, including women's need for financial independence, the treatment of women as possessions, the crippling effects of male dominance, and society's attitudes toward lesbianism. In the latter half of the 20th century a number of feminist playwrights integrated into their dramatic consciousness an awareness of racism. Since 1949, when Alice Childress produced her one-act play Florence, such dramatists as Lorraine Hansberry, Adrienne Kennedy, and Ntozake Shange have exposed the insidious effects of racism and sexism on the lives of black women. At the core of Burke's examination of all of the playwrights she discusses is the belief that there is no one, "correct" kind of feminism. "Theorists now speak of diversity within feminism," Burke writes, "of feminisms." But whatever the distinctions in their underlying philosophies or their blueprints for change, American feminist playwrights since Mercy Otis Warren have shared their refusal both to "live by disabling definitions that mark women as inferior" and to "represent women onstage by such definitions." Mourning those women whose lives have been irreparably damaged by the oppressions of a male-dominated culture, they celebrate the persistent spirit that continues to challenge and remake it
Analysis USA Drama Feminismus Geschichte
USA Frauendrama Geschichte
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 242-258) and index
Notes Print version record
Subject American drama -- Women authors -- History and criticism.
Feminism and literature -- United States.
Feminist drama -- History and criticism.
Sex role in literature.
Women and literature -- United States
Amerikaans.
Feministen.
Toneelschrijvers.
Vrouwelijke auteurs.
American drama -- Women authors.
Feminism and literature.
Feminist drama.
Frauendrama
Frauendrama -- amerikanisches -- 0 Gesamtdarstellung.
Frauendrama -- amerikanisches.
Sex role in literature.
Women and literature.
USA.
United States.
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Form Electronic book
LC no. 96010832
ISBN 0805717374
9780805717372