Nina Baym
Showing 1-4 of 4 items.
'The Lamplighter' by Maria Susanna Cummins
Edited by Nina Baym
Rutgers University Press
The Lamplighter was the first novel by twenty-seven-year-old Maria Susanna Cummins. It propelled her into a prominence that continued until her early death at the age of thirty-nine. A novel of female development, The Lamplighter is a woman's version of the quest story. Its heroine, Gerty, comes on the scene as a child abandoned in the slums of Boston. Rescued by the kindly lamplighter Trueman Flint, she learns to meet life with courage and honesty. The novel touched the hearts, validated the ideals, and assuaged the anxieties of a huge readership, and it remained continuously in print until the 1920s.
- Copyright year: 1988
Feminism and American Literary History
Essays
By Nina Baym
Rutgers University Press
Bodies may be currently fashionable in social and feminist theory, but their insides are not. Biological bodies always seem to drop out of debates about the body and its importance in Western culture. They are assumed to be fixed, their workings uninteresting or irrelevant to theory. Birke argues that these static views of biology do not serve feminist politics well. As a trained biologist, she uses ideas in anatomy and physiology to develop the feminist view that the biological body is socially and culturally constructed.
- Copyright year: 1992
American Women of Letters and the Nineteenth-Century Sciences
Styles of Affiliation
By Nina Baym
Rutgers University Press
During the nineteenth century, the content and institutional organization of the sciences evolved dramatically, altering the public's understanding of knowledge. As science grew in importance, many women of letters tried to incorporate it into a female worldview. Nina Baym explores the responses to science displayed in a range of writings by American women. Conceding that they could not become scientists, women insisted, however, that they were capable of understanding science and participating in its discourse. They used their access to publishing to advocate the study and transmission of scientific information to the general public.
The Emperor Redressed
Critiquing Critical Theory
Edited by Dwight Eddins; Introduction by Dwight Eddins
University of Alabama Press
- Copyright year: 1995
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