现实主义与新女性

Leslie Petty
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引用次数: 1

摘要

这一章讨论了19世纪后期美国社会和政治格局的变化如何导致了新女性的出现,特别是现实主义作家如何回应以这种新理想为代表的当代关于性别的辩论。在19世纪早期,“真正的女性”理想主导了中产阶级的性别规范,但由于女权活动家的努力——部分原因是内战带来的变化——妇女通过选举权运动获得了更多的教育、工作和政治舞台的机会。由于这些变化,广泛阅读的白人小说家不一定会描绘更多参与政治的职业女性,但他们确实探索了传统婚姻中的非人化和悲剧。非裔美国作家探索了有色人种女性在种族提升运动和女权运动中的作用,修改了新女性的理想,以解释她们的黑人身份。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Realism and the New Woman
This chapter discusses how the changing social and political landscape in late nineteenth-century America led to the figure of the New Woman and, specifically, how realist writers responded to the contemporary debate about gender exemplified by this new ideal. In the early nineteenth century, the True Woman ideal dictated gender norms of middle-class propriety, but because of the efforts of women’s rights activists—and in part because of the changes wrought by the Civil War—women gained more access to education, work, and the political arena via the suffrage movement. Widely read white novelists did not necessarily depict more politically engaged, professional women because of these changes, but they did explore the dehumanization and tragedy that attended conventional marriages. African American writers explored the role of women of color within the racial uplift movement as well as the women’s rights movement, revising the New Woman ideal to account for their black identity.
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