《玛丽·哈洛克·富特的流亡、自然与转变》作者:梅根·莱利·麦吉尔克里斯特(书评)

IF 0.2 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN
Christie Smith
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McGilchrist makes the considerable trek almost every year to the WLA conferences from London, England, where she teaches at The American School. McGrilchrist was a girl in the Bay Area and moved to England in her twenties. By contrast, Foote, 1847–1939, was raised in the settled eastern United States but lived in the West for the rest of her adult life. McGilchrist explores the effects of living away from one's birthplace using Foote's life and her own as exemplars. <em>Exile, Nature, and Transformation</em> uses Foote's letters as much as her fiction and art to illustrate her intimate views of life, the West, and society, since as McGilchrist, Melody Graulich, and others have noted, Foote's as yet unpublished letters are her best, most honest, and most intense writings. <strong>[End Page 294]</strong></p> <p>I imagine that this book will appeal to <em>WAL</em> readers, since many will have had similar professional trajectories: relocating after high school to college or graduate school and thence to somewhere(s) else for their teaching careers. <em>Exile, Nature, and Transformation</em> certainly speaks to me because like Foote I came from the East to the West in my twenties, stayed, and have taken decades to make sense of the differences I experience. Full disclosure: in my early thirties, I too was drawn to Foote's life and her stories of exile and reinvention. I wrote the second dissertation on her in the '90s and published a revised version of that in 2009. I too have read Foote's fiction and letters and visited Foote sites east and west and pondered on them.</p> <p>The focus of this book is none other than the midlife existential question of how we academics might more broadly share what we continue to study after we've written an academic book or two and published the necessary papers in our subject areas. Wanting to write a more accessible meditation on Foote than another learned tome read by only a few, McGilchrist explores how her Foote scholarship has informed and enriched her life and trajectories. She structures the book along the lines of Foote's fascinating biography, from the Quaker childhood along the Hudson River to the diverse sojourns—successful and unsuccessful—in 1870s California; 1870s travel though Morelia, Mexico; 1879–1880 sojourns in Leadville, Colorado; the difficult decade in Boise, Idaho, and its canyons; and finally the Foote family's settling in 1895 in Grass Valley, California, where Foote's mining engineer husband and herself found their \"angle of repose\" in life and work.</p> <p>A continual thread in McGilchrist's book is the new natural world that Foote encountered in the West, how it comforted and nurtured her, particularly early on when her distance from eastern culture felt particularly painful. McGilchrist herself appreciates the solace and spiritual connection that the outdoors affords. She explores what nature has meant for Foote and for herself both when they revisit their birth regions and probe their adopted locales for adult significance. As an exile, Foote's work explores both her own and her characters' \"life in two places\" (qtd. in 63). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

代替摘要,这里是内容的简短摘录:回顾:流放,自然和转变在玛丽·哈洛克·富特的生活梅根·莱利·麦吉尔克里斯特,流放,自然和转变在玛丽·哈洛克·富特的生活。里诺:内华达大学,2021年。224页,平装,40美元。这本书写优美的自传体作品将美国西部插画家和作家玛丽·哈洛克·富特的生活和转变与作者梅根·赖利·麦吉尔克里斯特交织在一起,她是美国西部文学协会的忠实成员和演讲者之一。麦吉尔克里斯特几乎每年都要长途跋涉从英国伦敦参加WLA会议,她在那里的美国学校任教。McGrilchrist是湾区的一个女孩,20多岁时搬到了英国。相比之下,富特(1847-1939)在美国东部定居长大,但成年后一直生活在西部。麦吉尔克里斯特以富特和她自己的生活为例,探讨了远离出生地生活的影响。《流放、自然与转型》一书不仅使用了富特的小说和艺术作品,还使用了她的信件来阐述她对生活、西方和社会的亲密看法,因为正如麦吉尔克里斯特、梅洛迪·格劳利希和其他人所指出的那样,富特尚未发表的信件是她最好、最诚实、最激烈的作品。我想这本书会吸引《华尔街日报》的读者,因为许多人都有类似的职业轨迹:高中毕业后去大学或研究生院,然后再去别的地方从事他们的教学生涯。《流放、自然与转变》一书当然对我很有意义,因为像富特一样,我在20多岁的时候从东方来到西方,待了下来,花了几十年的时间来理解我所经历的差异。充分披露:在我三十出头的时候,我也被富特的生活和她的流亡和重塑的故事所吸引。我在90年代写了关于她的第二篇论文,并在2009年出版了修订版。我也读过富特的小说和信件,访问过东方和西方的富特网站,并对它们进行了思考。这本书的焦点不是别的,正是我们学者如何更广泛地分享我们在写了一两本学术书籍并在我们的学科领域发表了必要的论文后继续研究的问题。麦吉尔克里斯特想要写一本更容易理解的关于富特的沉思,而不是另一本只有少数人读过的学问巨著,她探索了她的富特研究如何影响和丰富了她的生活和轨迹。她按照富特引人入胜的传记的思路来组织这本书,从哈德逊河沿岸的贵格会教徒的童年,到19世纪70年代在加利福尼亚的各种各样的旅居——成功的和不成功的;19世纪70年代在墨西哥的莫雷利亚旅行;1879-1880年在科罗拉多州莱德维尔逗留;爱达荷州博伊西及其峡谷艰难的十年;最后,富特一家于1895年在加州格拉斯谷定居,富特的采矿工程师丈夫和她自己在那里找到了生活和工作的“休息角度”。在麦吉尔克里斯特的书中,贯穿始终的线索是富特在西方遇到的新的自然世界,它是如何安慰和滋养她的,尤其是在她与东方文化的距离让她感到特别痛苦的早期。麦吉尔克里斯特自己也很欣赏户外活动带来的慰藉和精神上的联系。她探索大自然对富特和她自己意味着什么,当他们重新审视他们的出生地区,并探索他们所接受的地方对成人的意义。作为一个流亡者,富特的作品探索了她自己和她笔下人物的“两地生活”。在63年)。正如麦克吉尔克里斯特所指出的,“玛丽一生生活在西方,很多时候都渴望东方,但最终意识到她已经成为一个新世界的一部分,而这个新世界也成为她的一部分”(17)。《放逐、自然与转变》是一部关于19世纪和20世纪女性生活、变化和个人成长的可爱的漫游,稳重、深思熟虑的麦吉尔克里斯特就在我们身边。版权所有©2023西方文学协会…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Exile, Nature, and Transformation in the Life of Mary Hallock Foote by Megan Riley McGilchrist (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Exile, Nature, and Transformation in the Life of Mary Hallock Foote by Megan Riley McGilchrist
  • Christie Smith
Megan Riley McGilchrist, Exile, Nature, and Transformation in the Life of Mary Hallock Foote. Reno: U of Nevada P, 2021. 224 pp. Paper, $40.

This beautifully written autobiographical text interweaves the life and transformations of western American illustrator and writer Mary Hallock Foote with its author, one of the Western American Literature Association's stalwart members and presenters, Megan Riley McGilchrist. McGilchrist makes the considerable trek almost every year to the WLA conferences from London, England, where she teaches at The American School. McGrilchrist was a girl in the Bay Area and moved to England in her twenties. By contrast, Foote, 1847–1939, was raised in the settled eastern United States but lived in the West for the rest of her adult life. McGilchrist explores the effects of living away from one's birthplace using Foote's life and her own as exemplars. Exile, Nature, and Transformation uses Foote's letters as much as her fiction and art to illustrate her intimate views of life, the West, and society, since as McGilchrist, Melody Graulich, and others have noted, Foote's as yet unpublished letters are her best, most honest, and most intense writings. [End Page 294]

I imagine that this book will appeal to WAL readers, since many will have had similar professional trajectories: relocating after high school to college or graduate school and thence to somewhere(s) else for their teaching careers. Exile, Nature, and Transformation certainly speaks to me because like Foote I came from the East to the West in my twenties, stayed, and have taken decades to make sense of the differences I experience. Full disclosure: in my early thirties, I too was drawn to Foote's life and her stories of exile and reinvention. I wrote the second dissertation on her in the '90s and published a revised version of that in 2009. I too have read Foote's fiction and letters and visited Foote sites east and west and pondered on them.

The focus of this book is none other than the midlife existential question of how we academics might more broadly share what we continue to study after we've written an academic book or two and published the necessary papers in our subject areas. Wanting to write a more accessible meditation on Foote than another learned tome read by only a few, McGilchrist explores how her Foote scholarship has informed and enriched her life and trajectories. She structures the book along the lines of Foote's fascinating biography, from the Quaker childhood along the Hudson River to the diverse sojourns—successful and unsuccessful—in 1870s California; 1870s travel though Morelia, Mexico; 1879–1880 sojourns in Leadville, Colorado; the difficult decade in Boise, Idaho, and its canyons; and finally the Foote family's settling in 1895 in Grass Valley, California, where Foote's mining engineer husband and herself found their "angle of repose" in life and work.

A continual thread in McGilchrist's book is the new natural world that Foote encountered in the West, how it comforted and nurtured her, particularly early on when her distance from eastern culture felt particularly painful. McGilchrist herself appreciates the solace and spiritual connection that the outdoors affords. She explores what nature has meant for Foote and for herself both when they revisit their birth regions and probe their adopted locales for adult significance. As an exile, Foote's work explores both her own and her characters' "life in two places" (qtd. in 63). As McGilchrist notes, "Mary lived her life in the West, quite a lot of that time longing for the East, but in the end recognizing that she had become [End Page 295] part of a new world, and it has become part of her" (17). Exile, Nature, and Transformation is a lovely wander through nineteenth- and twentieth-century women's lives, changes, and personal growth, with the steady, thoughtful McGilchrist at our side.

Christie Smith Colorado Mountain College Copyright © 2023 Western Literature Association ...

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来源期刊
Western American Literature
Western American Literature LITERATURE, AMERICAN-
CiteScore
0.30
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50.00%
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