Barbara Kingsolver

Format: Print Book 2010
Availability: Available at 2 Libraries 2 of 2 copies
Available (2)
Location Collection Call #
CLP - Main Library Second Floor - Non-fiction PS3561.I496 Z59 2010
Location  CLP - Main Library
 
Collection  Second Floor - Non-fiction
 
Call Number  PS3561.I496 Z59 2010
 
 
Monroeville Public Library Non-fiction 813.5409 KINGSOLVER
Location  Monroeville Public Library
 
Collection  Non-fiction
 
Call Number  813.5409 KINGSOLVER
 
 
Summary
This title includes in-depth critical discussions of her life and works. Over the past two decades, Barbara Kingsolver has built a sizable reputation as one of the most politically engaged writers in America. When ""The Bean Trees"" was published in 1988, Kingsolver established herself as a new literary voice willing to take on contemporary political and social issues like race, feminism, class, and immigration. Subsequent books, like ""Pigs in Heaven"", ""The Poisonwood Bible"", ""Prodigal Summer"", and ""Small Wonder"", reiterated these concerns and added others, most notably environmentalism. Today, she continues to be a formidable advocate of politically, socially, and environmentally conscious writing. This collection of essays, edited and introduced by Thomas Austenfeld, Professor of American Literature and Dean of the Faculty of Letters at the University of Fribourg, Switzerland, offers readers an introduction to Kingsolver's life, works, and critics. Austenfeld's introduction reflects on Kingsolver's 'sense of place' and her ongoing commitment to being a 'writer with a purpose', while four original essays provide valuable context for readers new to Kingsolver. These essays draw on Kingsolver's biography to discuss the evolution of her political convictions and locate her as an inheritor of the political fiction of the 1930s; review the major pieces of Kingsolver criticism and the popular reception of her books; demonstrate how her first novel, ""The Bean Trees"", reworks the gothic tropes of Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre to affirm positive portrayals of racial and ethnic others; and offer an ecofeminist reading of Prodigal Summer that reveals, how throughout the novel, the female protagonists reconsider their relationships with human communities and the land of the Appalachian South. Finally, this volume assembles a highly diverse selection of previously published essays concerning Kingsolver. ""The Bean Trees"" is read as a feminine re-working of the American Western, and matriarchal communities are explored in the same as well as in Pigs in Heaven. Other essays analyze Animal Dreams through the lens of trauma studies to yield insight into the novel's narrative structure and use developmental psychology to understand the growth of the novel's protagonist. ""The Poisonwood Bible""'s depiction of the colonization of the Congo is read as a parallel to Nathan's colonization of the women of the Price family, and other readings of the novel reveals how it reworks the genre of domestic fiction, how its multiple narrators subvert traditional Western narrative techniques to create a unique rhetorical appeal, and how Kingsolver depicts disability. ""Prodigal Summer"" is read as an argument for a bioregionalism perspective of sustainable agriculture and, finally, a survey of Kingsolver's fiction and nonfiction is used to discuss the environmental concerns spanning her works. The volume also contains an original contribution by ""Paris Review"" writer Katherine Ryder that discusses the politics of Kingsolver's essay collection ""Small Wonder"" as well as critical reference materials for readers wishing to study this uniquely committed writer in greater depth.
Contents
On Barbara Kingsolver / Thomas Austenfeld
Biography of Barbara Kingsolver / Marilyn Kongslie and Karen L. Arnold
The Paris review perspective / Katherine Ryder
The political is personal: sociocultural realities and the writings of Barbara Kingsolver / John Nizalowski
Barbara Kingsolver and the critics / Rosemary M. Canfield Reisman
Cultivating our bioregional roots: an ecofeminist exploration of Barbara Kingsolver's Prodigal summer / Christine M. Battista
The gothic and the ethnic in Barbara Kingsolver's The bean trees / Matthew J. Bolton
Gardens of auto parts: Kingsolver's merger of American western myth and Native American myth in The bean trees / Catherine Himmelwright
The loner and the matriarchal community in Barbara Kingsolver's The bean trees and Pigs in heaven / Loretta Martin Murrey
Trauma and memory in Kingsolver's Animal dreams / Sheryl Stevenson
Exploring the matrix of identity in Barbara Kingsolver's Animal dreams / Lee Ann De Reus
Luna moths, coyotes, sugar skulls: the fiction of Barbara Kingsolver / Amanda Cockrell
The missionary position: Barbara Kingsolver's The poisonwood bible / Elaine R. Ognibene
The neodomestic American novel: the politics of home in Barbara Kingsolver's The poisonwood bible / Kristin J. Jacobson
The revelatory narrative circle in Barbara Kingsolver's The poisonwood bible / Anne Marie Austenfeld
Barbara Kingsolver and Keri Hulme: disability, family, and culture / Stephen D. Fox
The southern family farm as endangered species: possibilities for survival in Barbara Kingsolver's Prodigal summer / Suzanne W. Jones.

Additional Information
Series Critical insights.
Subjects Kingsolver, Barbara -- Criticism and interpretation.
Women and literature -- United States -- History -- 20th century.
Publisher Pasadena, Calif. :Salem Press,2010
Contributors Austenfeld, Thomas, 1960-
Language English
Description ix, 323 pages ; 24 cm.
Bibliography Notes Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 9781587656422 (hbk. : alk. paper)
1587656426 (hbk. : alk. paper)
Other Classic View