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- catalog abstract "Joyce Carol Oates's authorial voice is lavishly diverse. In her works she divides herself into many voices, many persons. This up-to-date examination of Oates's novels argues that the father-identified daughters in her early novels have become, in the novels of the 1980s, self-authoring women who seek alliances with their culturally devalued mothers. Oates's struggle to resist and transform male-defined literary conventions is often mirrored by the struggles of her female characters to resist and transform social conventions.".
- catalog contributor b9994818.
- catalog created "c1996.".
- catalog date "1996".
- catalog date "c1996.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1996.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. [249]-263) and index.".
- catalog description "Introduction: Lavish Self-Divisions: The Novels of Joyce Carol Oates -- pt. 1. Anxious Authorship in the 1960s: Daughters Leaving Home. 1. Not Strictly Parallel: The Sacrificial Plots of Daughters and Sons in With Shuddering Fall. 2. Yeats's Daughter: Images of "Leda and the Swan" in the Trilogy of the 1960s. 3. "The Central Nervous System of America": The Writer in/as the Crowd in Wonderland -- pt. 2. Dialogic Authorship in the 1970s: Marriage and Infidelities. 4. Marriage as Novel: Beyond the Conventions of Romance and Law in Do with Me What You Will. 5. Wedding a (Woman) Writer's Voices: Dis-membering the "I" in The Assassins, Re-membering "Us" in Childwold. 6. Self-Narrating Woman: Marriage as Emancipatory Metaphor in Unholy Loves -- pt. 3. Communal Authorship in the 1980s: The (M)other in Us. 7. Daughters of the American Revolution: "Idiosyncratic" Narrators in Three Postmodern Novels.".
- catalog description "Joyce Carol Oates's authorial voice is lavishly diverse. In her works she divides herself into many voices, many persons. This up-to-date examination of Oates's novels argues that the father-identified daughters in her early novels have become, in the novels of the 1980s, self-authoring women who seek alliances with their culturally devalued mothers. Oates's struggle to resist and transform male-defined literary conventions is often mirrored by the struggles of her female characters to resist and transform social conventions.".
- catalog extent "xxiv, 278 p. ;".
- catalog hasFormat "Lavish self-divisions.".
- catalog identifier "0878058850 (cloth : alk. paper)".
- catalog isFormatOf "Lavish self-divisions.".
- catalog issued "1996".
- catalog issued "c1996.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Jackson : University Press of Mississippi,".
- catalog relation "Lavish self-divisions.".
- catalog spatial "United States".
- catalog subject "813/.54 20".
- catalog subject "Authorship.".
- catalog subject "Oates, Joyce Carol, 1938- Criticism and interpretation.".
- catalog subject "PS3565.A8 Z635 1996".
- catalog subject "Psychological fiction, American History and criticism.".
- catalog subject "Self in literature.".
- catalog subject "Women and literature United States History 20th century.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Introduction: Lavish Self-Divisions: The Novels of Joyce Carol Oates -- pt. 1. Anxious Authorship in the 1960s: Daughters Leaving Home. 1. Not Strictly Parallel: The Sacrificial Plots of Daughters and Sons in With Shuddering Fall. 2. Yeats's Daughter: Images of "Leda and the Swan" in the Trilogy of the 1960s. 3. "The Central Nervous System of America": The Writer in/as the Crowd in Wonderland -- pt. 2. Dialogic Authorship in the 1970s: Marriage and Infidelities. 4. Marriage as Novel: Beyond the Conventions of Romance and Law in Do with Me What You Will. 5. Wedding a (Woman) Writer's Voices: Dis-membering the "I" in The Assassins, Re-membering "Us" in Childwold. 6. Self-Narrating Woman: Marriage as Emancipatory Metaphor in Unholy Loves -- pt. 3. Communal Authorship in the 1980s: The (M)other in Us. 7. Daughters of the American Revolution: "Idiosyncratic" Narrators in Three Postmodern Novels.".
- catalog title "Lavish self-divisions : the novels of Joyce Carol Oates / Brenda Daly.".
- catalog type "Criticism, interpretation, etc. fast".
- catalog type "History. fast".
- catalog type "text".