1998
DOI: 10.2307/2902708
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Sex, Class, and "Category Crisis": Reading Jewett's Transitivity

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…In the debate that has arisen in the 1990s about Jewett's social and political affiliations, which dualistically assigns her either to female outsiderdom or to complicity with white conservative privilege, I align myself with Marjorie Pryse, who argues instead that Jewett's fiction is characterised by liminality that resists classification and teaches fluidity: Jewett lives on borders. 26 But how similar, then, is this position to that of Waverley, protagonist of Scott's first novel, who crosses geographical and political borders to see the Second Jacobite Rebellion from several perspectives, and how might this also resemble Scott's own, much debated political position? Scott's political views were more overtly stated than Jewett's, yet there is a muchnoted doubleness in his writing that might, alternatively, be figured as a straddling of borders.…”
Section: 'That Great Man'mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the debate that has arisen in the 1990s about Jewett's social and political affiliations, which dualistically assigns her either to female outsiderdom or to complicity with white conservative privilege, I align myself with Marjorie Pryse, who argues instead that Jewett's fiction is characterised by liminality that resists classification and teaches fluidity: Jewett lives on borders. 26 But how similar, then, is this position to that of Waverley, protagonist of Scott's first novel, who crosses geographical and political borders to see the Second Jacobite Rebellion from several perspectives, and how might this also resemble Scott's own, much debated political position? Scott's political views were more overtly stated than Jewett's, yet there is a muchnoted doubleness in his writing that might, alternatively, be figured as a straddling of borders.…”
Section: 'That Great Man'mentioning
confidence: 99%