Self-fashioning (im)possibilities [electronic resource] : a literary tapestry of women at work in nineteenth-century America /
Abstract (Summary)
TITLE OF DISSERTATION: SELF-FASHIONING (IM)POSSIBILITIES:
A LITERARY TAPESTRY OF WOMEN AT WORK IN
NINETEENTH-CENTURY AMERICA
Carol G. Dorsey, Doctor of Philosophy, 2005
Dissertation directed by: Professor Martha Nell Smith
Department of English
This dissertation investigates representations of women’s work and the construction of
identity in texts written by women between 1840 and 1877. I focus on the literary
construction of workingwomen’s struggle to find their place in a culture that valorizes
women who selflessly devote themselves to family and community. These authors show
that while work empowers women who are privileged by race and class, work oppresses
women who are defined by the material conditions of their lives.
Focusing on working women whose life chances are circumscribed by class and gender
in Ruth Hall by Fanny Fern and Elizabeth Stuart Phelps’s novel The Story of Avis, the
first chapter illuminates the stasis inherent in the lives housekeepers, cooks, laundresses,
and babysitters, women whose labor supports the middle-class. In Chapter Two, the
complex web that intersection of race, class, and gender create informs my analysis of the
fictional autobiographies Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs and Our
Nig by Harriet Wilson. The legally sanctioned theft of humanity from the protagonists in
these texts necessitates that work be redefined as the process of constituting personhood
through the intellectual work of outwitting the enslaver. Chapter Three analyzes the
public persona nineteenth-century female factory workers construct for themselves
through fictional letters, stories, and essays published in The Lowell Offering, a
newspaper edited by blue-collar workingwomen, and in the extended poem, An Idyl of
Work, a retrospective account of factory experience written by former operative Lucy
Larcom. Mired in the ideologies of class and gender, these writers attempt to bridge the
social and economic chasm that separates workingwomen from ladies of leisure by
offering altruistic protagonists who work to support others instead of themselves. The
fourth chapter investigates the representation of dehumanization and impossibility in the
lives of female textile laborers in Rebecca Harding Davis’s novella, Life in the Iron Mills
and Elizabeth Stuart Phelps’s novel, The Silent Partner. Davis’s workingwoman, Deb
Wolfe, and Phelps’s female factory worker, Sip Garth, are products of their labors and
lack the potential to change their lives because they have no perception that they can
escape the meanness of their existence.
SELF-FASHIONING (IM)POSSIBILITIES: A LITERARY TAPESTRY OF WOMEN
AT
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:University of Maryland Baltimore
School Location:USA - Maryland
Source Type:Master's Thesis
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