Tomboys: A Literary and Cultural History

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Temple University Press, 2008 M06 28 - 328 pages

Starting with the figure of the bold, boisterous girl in the mid-19th century and ending with the “girl power” movement of the 1990’s, Tomboys is the first full-length critical study of this gender-bending code of female conduct. Michelle Abate uncovers the origins, charts the trajectory, and traces the literary and cultural transformations that the concept of “tomboy” has undergone in the United States.

Abate focuses on literature including Louisa May Alcott's Little Women and Carson McCullers's The Member of the Wedding and films such as Peter Bogdanovich's Paper Moon and Jon Avnet's Fried Green Tomatoes. She also draws onlesser-known texts like E.D.E.N. Southworth's once wildly popular 1859 novel The Hidden Hand, Cold War lesbian pulp fiction, and New Queer Cinema from the 1990s.

Tomboys also explores the gender and sexual dynamics of tomboyism, and offers intriguing discussions of race and ethnicity's role in the construction of the enduring cultural archetype. Abate’s insightful analysis provides useful, thought-provoking connections between different literary works and eras. The result demystifies this cultural phenomenon and challenges readers to consider tomboys in a whole new light.

From inside the book

Contents

E D E N Southworths The Hidden Hand
1
Louisa May Alcotts Little Women
24
Sarah Orne Jewetts A Country Doctor
50
Charlotte Perkins Gilmans Herland
72
Willa Cathers O Pioneers and My Antonia
97
Clara Bow in Victor Flemings Hula
120
Carson McCullerss The Member of the Wedding
145
Ann Bannons Women in the Shadows
171
Tatum ONeal in Peter Bogdanovichs Paper Moon
195
The Tomboy Comes Into the Light Transformations to White Feminism the Emergence of Whiteness Studies and the End of Racialized White Tomb...
221
Selected Bibliography
241
Works Cited
257
Index
281
Copyright

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About the author (2008)

Michelle Ann Abate is an Assistant Professor of English at Hollins University.

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