Poems By Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings: Songs Of A Housewife,Used

Poems By Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings: Songs Of A Housewife,Used

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SKU: SONG0813014913
Brand: University Press of Florida
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A fascinating tapestry woven from the lives of women who had won the right to vote a mere six years earlier. In Songs of a Housewife, we hear the voice of an emerging feminist, a voice that stubbornly andgiven the political climate of the 1920scourageously insists that women be respected. Fans of Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings will be surprised and ultimately delighted by this long overdue collection.'Connie May Fowler, author of Sugar Cage and Before Women Had Wings'Makes available for the first time [the] early work of Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings. . . . Reveals themes, attitudes, phrases, habits of speech . . . and a predilection for irony that characterizes [her] later work.'Peggy W. Prenshaw, Louisiana State University'Rawlingss poetry is surprisingly good. . . . solid, traditional poetry about subjects that will never go out of fashion.'Joel Myerson, University of South CarolinaMore than a decade before writing The Yearling and Cross Creek, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings was a young housewifejournalist living in Rochester, New York. In 1926, the Rochester TimesUnion did a trial run of her columninverse, Songs of a Housewife. To the editors surprise, the column proved immensely popular; over the next two years, Rawlings published a poem a day, six days a week, and gained a wide syndication. When she moved to Florida in 1928, however, the poems were forgotten anduntil this collection of roughly half of themnever reprinted.In the 250 poems collected here, Rawlings presents homespun advice on such subjects as the trials and tribulations of being a cook, mother, friend, relative, and neighbor. She dedicates many to her favorite subjects: gardening, cooking, pets, and nature. Throughout, her goal is to entertain, to educate, and to give a voice to the housewife who sees her role as a creative and important one. In the process, of course, she also invariably reveals a great deal about herself, and devoted readers will be curious to see how the Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings they know and love is evident here, in these early and spirited poems.Because little is known about Rawlingss life during this period, Songs of a Housewife is valuable as commentary on her evolving attitudes as a woman and as a writer, and many of the same themes appear in her later works. As a reflection of the life of a middleclass woman struggling to carve out an independent and fulfilling role for herself, these poems also offer a rare insight into the life of women in the late 1920s.Rodger L. Tarr is University Distinguished Professor of English at Illinois State University. His most recent publications are Short Stories of Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings (UPF, 1994) and Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings: A Descriptive Bibliography (1996).

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