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Reconsidering Laura Ingalls Wilder Miranda A. Green-Barteet

Reconsidering Laura Ingalls Wilder By Miranda A. Green-Barteet

Reconsidering Laura Ingalls Wilder by Miranda A. Green-Barteet


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Summary

Offers a sustained, critical examination of Wilder's writings, including her Little House series, her posthumously published The First Four Years, her letters, journalism, and autobiography. The collection also draws on biographies of Wilder, letters to and from Wilder and her daughter, and other biographical materials.

Reconsidering Laura Ingalls Wilder Summary

Reconsidering Laura Ingalls Wilder: Little House and Beyond by Miranda A. Green-Barteet

Contributions by Emily Anderson, Elif S. Armbruster, Jenna Brack, Christine Cooper-Rompato, Christiane E. Farnan, Melanie J. Fishbane, Vera R. Foley, Sonya Sawyer Fritz, Miranda A. Green-Barteet, Anna Thompson Hajdik, Keri Holt, Shosuke Kinugawa, Margaret Noodin, Anne K. Phillips, Dawn Sardella-Ayres, Katharine Slater, Lindsay Stephens, and Jericho Williams

Reconsidering Laura Ingalls Wilder: Little House and Beyond offers a sustained, critical examination of Wilder's writings, including her Little House series, her posthumously published and unrevised The First Four Years, her letters, her journalism, and her autobiography, Pioneer Girl. The collection also draws on biographies of Wilder, letters to and from Wilder and her daughter, collaborator and editor Rose Wilder Lane, and other biographical materials. Contributors analyze the current state of Wilder studies, delineating Wilder's place in a canon of increasingly diverse US women writers, and attending in particular to issues of gender, femininity, space and place, truth, and collaboration, among other issues.

The collection argues that Wilder's work and her contributions to US children's literature, western literature, and the pioneer experience must be considered in context with problematic racialized representations of peoples of color, specifically Native Americans. While Wilder's fiction accurately represents the experiences of white settlers, it also privileges their experiences and validates, explicitly and implicitly, the erasure of Native American peoples and culture. The volume's contributors engage critically with Wilder's writings, interrogating them, acknowledging their limitations, and enhancing ongoing conversations about them while placing them in context with other voices, works, and perspectives that can bring into focus larger truths about North American history. Reconsidering Laura Ingalls Wilder examines Wilder's strengths and weaknesses as it discusses her writings with context, awareness, and nuance.

About Miranda A. Green-Barteet

Miranda A. Green-Barteet is assistant professor in both the Department of Womens Studies and Department of English and Writing at University of Western Ontario. She is coeditor of Female Rebellion in Young Adult Dystopian Fiction, and her work has appeared in Canadian Review of American Studies, South Central Review, and the Encyclopedia of African American Women Writers.

Anne K. Phillips is professor of English at Kansas State University. She is coeditor of Critical Insights: Louisa May Alcott and Critical Insights: Little Women. Her work has appeared in Frontiers in American Childrens Literature, the James Fenimore Cooper Society Journal, and Childrens Literature Association Quarterly.

Additional information

NPB9781496823083
9781496823083
1496823087
Reconsidering Laura Ingalls Wilder: Little House and Beyond by Miranda A. Green-Barteet
New
Paperback
University Press of Mississippi
2019-05-30
240
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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