Women's Memoirs From Britain, Africa, Asia and the United States
Written by Herself, Volume 2
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
October 1, 1996
In contrast to the first volume of Written by Herself (LJ 12/92), which showcased the singular achievements of American trailblazers in a variety of fields, this second volume of women's memoirs is concerned with the ways that women have engaged the forces of social and political change around the world. Conway (True North, Knopf, 1994) has selected the autobiographical excerpts with an eye for expedient storytelling rather than comely prose, and her editing is merciless. Her choices of British, African, and Indian women are strongest, including Vera Brittain's moving account of the devastation of her generation in World War I; Elspeth Huxley's portrait of a changing African through a child's eyes; the activist Ruth First's powerful South African prison narrative; and Meena Alexander's exquisite "broken geography" of her cosmopolitan memory. The "postcolonial" American selections (by Vivian Gornick, Gloria Wade-Gayles, and Edith T. Mirante) are more uneven. Together, however, the volumes form an excellent starting point for group discussion and schools in exploring the rich contribution and consciousness of women of vastly different backgrounds.--Amy Boaz, "Library Journal
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