248 pages / 5.50 x 8.50 inches / no illustrations
One of the most often repeated anecdotes about the direction of literary studies over the past three decades concerns a graduate student who complained of reading Kate Chopin's The Awakening in three classes and Herman Melville's Moby-Dick in none. But Chopin has not always been featured in the literary curriculum. Though she achieved national success in her lifetime (1850-1904) as a writer of Louisiana "local color" fiction, after her death her work fell into obscurity until 1969, when Norwegian literary scholar Per Seyersted published The Complete Works of Kate Chopin and sparked a remarkable American literary revival. Chopin soon became a major presence in the canon, and today every college textbook surveying American literature contains a Chopin short story, her novel The Awakening, or an excerpt from it.
In this unique work, twelve prominent Chopin scholars reflect on their parts in the Kate Chopin revival and its impact on their careers. A generation ago, against powerful odds, many of them staked their reputations on the belief--now fully validated--that Chopin is one of America's essential writers. These scholars energetically sponsored Chopin's works in the 1970s and 1980s and encouraged reading, studying, and teaching Chopin. They wrote books and articles about her, gave talks about her, offered interviews to newspapers and magazines, taught her works in their classes, and urged their colleagues to do the same, helping to build a network of teachers, students, editors, journalists, librarians, and others who continue to promote Chopin's work.
Throughout, these essays stress several elements vital to the revival's success. Timing proved critical, as the rise of the women's movement and the emergence of new sexual norms in the 1960s helped set an ideal context for Chopin in the United States and abroad in the 1970s and 1980s. Seyersted's biography of Chopin and his accurate texts of her entire oeuvre allowed scholars to quickly publish their analyses of her work. Popular media--including Redbook, New York Times, and PBS--took notice of Chopin and advanced her work outside the scholarly realm. But in the final analysis, as the contributors point out, Kate Chopin's irresistible writing itself made her revival possible.
Highly personal, at times amusing, and always thought provoking, these revealing recollections and new critical insights offer a fascinating firsthand account of a decisive moment in American literary history.
Bernard Koloski has been writing about Kate Chopin for more than thirty years. A professor emeritus of English at Mansfield University in Pennsylvania, he is the author of Kate Chopin: A Study of the Short Fiction and has published editions of Chopin’s At Fault, Bayou Folk, and A Night in Acadie.
“The pieces in Awakenings are distinguished for their verve, polished style, mature reflections upon Kate Chopin, to be sure, but also upon the larger scope of literary culture over the past fifty years. Many of the pieces are page-turners. I was hooked from the graceful introduction. This volume will appeal not only to the academic scholar of American literature, but to theorists of cultural studies, to those interested in the recent history of the literary profession, and to the general reader who will find here the personal voices of professors whose lives are deeply connected to the literature they profess.” — Peggy Prenshaw, editor of Women Writers of the Contemporary South
“This is a collection written by enthusiasts for enthusiasts, present and future; it is a collection which tells of conversions to the cause of Chopin, by supervisors, skeptical colleagues, cynical students—all, indeed, willing to be seduced by her.”—Journal of American Studies
“Chopin has been very well served by her advocates.”—The Times Literary Supplement
“In fascinating detail, the essayists recall their initial encounters with Chopin’s fiction between the 1950s and the 1980s, when the Louisiana writer’s long neglected texts again became available.”—The Southern Register
“Highly recommended.”—Choice
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