PLENARY REMARKS
I'm honored to be a participant in the plenary session of this pathbreaking conference. And I'm delighted to be sharing that platform with three women whose work has been important to me, whom I greatly admire, and with whom I've been traveling along life's course for many years....
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description | I'm honored to be a participant in the plenary session of this pathbreaking conference. And I'm delighted to be sharing that platform with three women whose work has been important to me, whom I greatly admire, and with whom I've been traveling along life's course for many years. It's exciting, too, to see so many well-known names in the conference program and to note the volume and scope of new work being done by so many scholars working on so many writers. If this new society wants to ensure that "gains made in the study of women's literature in the late-twentieth century not be lost in the twenty-first" (as its founding manifesto phrases it), the present gathering testifies wonderfully to its likely success. As for personal history, I'm more comfortable talking about women writers than about Nina Baym, the woman scholar. I've never been good at self-disclosure, and I've suffered some catastrophic results on the few occasions when I spilled the wrong beans at the wrong time. I can say, however, that as a woman scholar, the most rewarding aspect of my career by far has been mentoring women students. Of the thirty-four Ph.D. students I've turned out to date, twenty-three have been women, and most have worked on women writers. Two of those former students are at this conference, in this audience -- Jill Bergman, now at the University of Montana, and Karen Tracey, now at the University of Northern Iowa. I want to close by returning to the larger discipline and the situation of the woman scholar within it, with the discipline here being "American literature" rather than "American women writers," which I take to be a subfield within the larger field. The great majority of those in the subfield are themselves women; women outnumber men overwhelmingly at this conference, for example. In that women are a minority in the larger field overall, the large number of women working on women writers means that the number working on male writers is extremely small. In the field of "American literature" as represented, say, by an American literature anthology, women writers must enter as part of the whole picture. I would never counsel women to abandon their work on women writers and start writing about men, but I would urge scholars to remember the whole picture. In the highly gender-asymmetric culture that we still inhabit, a woman-centered specialty pursued almost entirely by women necessarily becomes a minor enterprise. The habit of dismissing women writers for their p |
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And I'm delighted to be sharing that platform with three women whose work has been important to me, whom I greatly admire, and with whom I've been traveling along life's course for many years. It's exciting, too, to see so many well-known names in the conference program and to note the volume and scope of new work being done by so many scholars working on so many writers. If this new society wants to ensure that "gains made in the study of women's literature in the late-twentieth century not be lost in the twenty-first" (as its founding manifesto phrases it), the present gathering testifies wonderfully to its likely success. As for personal history, I'm more comfortable talking about women writers than about Nina Baym, the woman scholar. I've never been good at self-disclosure, and I've suffered some catastrophic results on the few occasions when I spilled the wrong beans at the wrong time. I can say, however, that as a woman scholar, the most rewarding aspect of my career by far has been mentoring women students. Of the thirty-four Ph.D. students I've turned out to date, twenty-three have been women, and most have worked on women writers. Two of those former students are at this conference, in this audience -- Jill Bergman, now at the University of Montana, and Karen Tracey, now at the University of Northern Iowa. I want to close by returning to the larger discipline and the situation of the woman scholar within it, with the discipline here being "American literature" rather than "American women writers," which I take to be a subfield within the larger field. The great majority of those in the subfield are themselves women; women outnumber men overwhelmingly at this conference, for example. In that women are a minority in the larger field overall, the large number of women working on women writers means that the number working on male writers is extremely small. In the field of "American literature" as represented, say, by an American literature anthology, women writers must enter as part of the whole picture. I would never counsel women to abandon their work on women writers and start writing about men, but I would urge scholars to remember the whole picture. In the highly gender-asymmetric culture that we still inhabit, a woman-centered specialty pursued almost entirely by women necessarily becomes a minor enterprise. The habit of dismissing women writers for their political incorrectness intensifies this minoritizing message because the men seem somehow better able to withstand ideological criticism than the women do, which is taken in turn as a sign of their esthetic superiority. If we women are working on inferior writers, are we not inferior scholars? How can we change this possible Catch-22? To achieve full parity, women do need to write about male writers -- to demonstrate what I call range -- so that they can occupy the whole cultural field. Men, too, will need to be coaxed into working on women's writing in much greater numbers, but they will do this only when the subfield presents itself as valuable. I have directed several dissertations by men working on women writers; but, overwhelmingly, the male graduate students in my department are not choosing to write about women authors. The last time I gave a course in American women writers from 1870-1915 only one male enrolled in it. Thus, it is both more realizable and probably more important for women to demonstrate range by working on men. That this is so is regrettable, but it is a fact of our gender-asymmetric culture. This culture, after all, is what called feminism into being in the first place. We've come a long way, but we are less removed from the dilemmas of nineteenth-century women authors than we might like to think; like them, we have to insist on women's right to occupy public space in the print mode, while simultaneously demonstrating women's fitness to do so.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0748-4321</identifier><identifier>ISSN: 1534-0643</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1534-0643</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1353/leg.2003.0002</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press</publisher><subject>American literature ; Anthologies ; College students ; Culture ; Dickinson, Emily (1830-1886) ; Females ; Feminism ; Fuller, Margaret ; Gender ; Ideology ; Legacies ; Literary criticism ; Literature ; Males ; Men ; Novels ; Politics ; Role models ; Semiotics ; United States history ; Women ; Writers ; Writing</subject><ispartof>Legacy (Amherst, Mass.), 2002-01, Vol.19 (1), p.1-9</ispartof><rights>2003 University of Nebraska Press</rights><rights>Copyright © 2002 The University of Nebraska.</rights><rights>Copyright University of Nebraska Press Apr 30, 2002</rights><lds50>peer_reviewed</lds50><woscitedreferencessubscribed>false</woscitedreferencessubscribed><citedby>FETCH-LOGICAL-c1756-e45e292e3d9305e8560b3a66abdc51a513941e5289f2e1b1d3a7ae1b0f9a240a3</citedby></display><links><openurl>$$Topenurl_article</openurl><openurlfulltext>$$Topenurlfull_article</openurlfulltext><thumbnail>$$Tsyndetics_thumb_exl</thumbnail><linktopdf>$$Uhttps://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/25679406$$EPDF$$P50$$Gjstor$$H</linktopdf><linktohtml>$$Uhttps://www.jstor.org/stable/25679406$$EHTML$$P50$$Gjstor$$H</linktohtml><link.rule.ids>314,776,780,799,27901,27902,57992,58225</link.rule.ids></links><search><creatorcontrib>Baym, Nina</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Fetterley, Judith</creatorcontrib><title>PLENARY REMARKS</title><title>Legacy (Amherst, Mass.)</title><description>I'm honored to be a participant in the plenary session of this pathbreaking conference. And I'm delighted to be sharing that platform with three women whose work has been important to me, whom I greatly admire, and with whom I've been traveling along life's course for many years. It's exciting, too, to see so many well-known names in the conference program and to note the volume and scope of new work being done by so many scholars working on so many writers. If this new society wants to ensure that "gains made in the study of women's literature in the late-twentieth century not be lost in the twenty-first" (as its founding manifesto phrases it), the present gathering testifies wonderfully to its likely success. As for personal history, I'm more comfortable talking about women writers than about Nina Baym, the woman scholar. I've never been good at self-disclosure, and I've suffered some catastrophic results on the few occasions when I spilled the wrong beans at the wrong time. I can say, however, that as a woman scholar, the most rewarding aspect of my career by far has been mentoring women students. Of the thirty-four Ph.D. students I've turned out to date, twenty-three have been women, and most have worked on women writers. Two of those former students are at this conference, in this audience -- Jill Bergman, now at the University of Montana, and Karen Tracey, now at the University of Northern Iowa. I want to close by returning to the larger discipline and the situation of the woman scholar within it, with the discipline here being "American literature" rather than "American women writers," which I take to be a subfield within the larger field. The great majority of those in the subfield are themselves women; women outnumber men overwhelmingly at this conference, for example. In that women are a minority in the larger field overall, the large number of women working on women writers means that the number working on male writers is extremely small. In the field of "American literature" as represented, say, by an American literature anthology, women writers must enter as part of the whole picture. I would never counsel women to abandon their work on women writers and start writing about men, but I would urge scholars to remember the whole picture. In the highly gender-asymmetric culture that we still inhabit, a woman-centered specialty pursued almost entirely by women necessarily becomes a minor enterprise. The habit of dismissing women writers for their political incorrectness intensifies this minoritizing message because the men seem somehow better able to withstand ideological criticism than the women do, which is taken in turn as a sign of their esthetic superiority. If we women are working on inferior writers, are we not inferior scholars? How can we change this possible Catch-22? To achieve full parity, women do need to write about male writers -- to demonstrate what I call range -- so that they can occupy the whole cultural field. Men, too, will need to be coaxed into working on women's writing in much greater numbers, but they will do this only when the subfield presents itself as valuable. I have directed several dissertations by men working on women writers; but, overwhelmingly, the male graduate students in my department are not choosing to write about women authors. The last time I gave a course in American women writers from 1870-1915 only one male enrolled in it. Thus, it is both more realizable and probably more important for women to demonstrate range by working on men. That this is so is regrettable, but it is a fact of our gender-asymmetric culture. This culture, after all, is what called feminism into being in the first place. We've come a long way, but we are less removed from the dilemmas of nineteenth-century women authors than we might like to think; like them, we have to insist on women's right to occupy public space in the print mode, while simultaneously demonstrating women's fitness to do so.</description><subject>American literature</subject><subject>Anthologies</subject><subject>College students</subject><subject>Culture</subject><subject>Dickinson, Emily (1830-1886)</subject><subject>Females</subject><subject>Feminism</subject><subject>Fuller, Margaret</subject><subject>Gender</subject><subject>Ideology</subject><subject>Legacies</subject><subject>Literary criticism</subject><subject>Literature</subject><subject>Males</subject><subject>Men</subject><subject>Novels</subject><subject>Politics</subject><subject>Role models</subject><subject>Semiotics</subject><subject>United States history</subject><subject>Women</subject><subject>Writers</subject><subject>Writing</subject><issn>0748-4321</issn><issn>1534-0643</issn><issn>1534-0643</issn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>article</rsrctype><creationdate>2002</creationdate><recordtype>article</recordtype><sourceid>8G5</sourceid><sourceid>BEC</sourceid><sourceid>BENPR</sourceid><sourceid>GUQSH</sourceid><sourceid>M2O</sourceid><sourceid>PAF</sourceid><sourceid>PQLNA</sourceid><sourceid>PROLI</sourceid><sourceid>QXPDG</sourceid><recordid>eNpFkM1LAzEQxYMoWKt48iiI960zmSSbHEtpVVw_aPXgKaTbrLi0bk3ag_-9CZV6mjn83nu8x9gFwgBJ0s3Sfww4AA0AgB-wHkoSBShBh6wHpdCFII7H7CTGNhModY-dv1Tjp-H0_Wo6fhxOH2an7Khxy-jP_m6fvU3Gr6O7onq-vR8Nq6LGUqrCC-m54Z4WhkB6LRXMySnl5otaopNIRqCXXJuGe5zjglzp0gONcVyAoz673vmuQ_e99XFj224bvlKk5Zw06VKrBBU7qA5djME3dh0-Vy78WASbK9tU2ebKNhdKPO1NW19vVtvo_33JcFJ2llfJowBhEmFOudyp2rjpwj6CS1WaRNIvTlpeUA</recordid><startdate>20020101</startdate><enddate>20020101</enddate><creator>Baym, Nina</creator><creator>Fetterley, Judith</creator><general>University of Nebraska Press</general><scope>AAYXX</scope><scope>CITATION</scope><scope>3V.</scope><scope>4T-</scope><scope>4U-</scope><scope>7R6</scope><scope>7XB</scope><scope>888</scope><scope>8FK</scope><scope>8G5</scope><scope>ABUWG</scope><scope>AFKRA</scope><scope>AIMQZ</scope><scope>AZQEC</scope><scope>BEC</scope><scope>BENPR</scope><scope>CCPQU</scope><scope>CLO</scope><scope>DWQXO</scope><scope>GNUQQ</scope><scope>GUQSH</scope><scope>LIQON</scope><scope>M2O</scope><scope>MBDVC</scope><scope>PAF</scope><scope>PPXUT</scope><scope>PQEST</scope><scope>PQGEN</scope><scope>PQLNA</scope><scope>PQQKQ</scope><scope>PQUKI</scope><scope>PRINS</scope><scope>PROLI</scope><scope>Q9U</scope><scope>QXPDG</scope></search><sort><creationdate>20020101</creationdate><title>PLENARY REMARKS</title><author>Baym, Nina ; Fetterley, Judith</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c1756-e45e292e3d9305e8560b3a66abdc51a513941e5289f2e1b1d3a7ae1b0f9a240a3</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>articles</rsrctype><prefilter>articles</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2002</creationdate><topic>American literature</topic><topic>Anthologies</topic><topic>College students</topic><topic>Culture</topic><topic>Dickinson, Emily (1830-1886)</topic><topic>Females</topic><topic>Feminism</topic><topic>Fuller, Margaret</topic><topic>Gender</topic><topic>Ideology</topic><topic>Legacies</topic><topic>Literary criticism</topic><topic>Literature</topic><topic>Males</topic><topic>Men</topic><topic>Novels</topic><topic>Politics</topic><topic>Role models</topic><topic>Semiotics</topic><topic>United States history</topic><topic>Women</topic><topic>Writers</topic><topic>Writing</topic><toplevel>peer_reviewed</toplevel><toplevel>online_resources</toplevel><creatorcontrib>Baym, Nina</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Fetterley, Judith</creatorcontrib><collection>CrossRef</collection><collection>ProQuest Central (Corporate)</collection><collection>Docstoc</collection><collection>University Readers</collection><collection>GenderWatch</collection><collection>ProQuest Central (purchase pre-March 2016)</collection><collection>GenderWatch (Alumni Edition)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central (Alumni) (purchase pre-March 2016)</collection><collection>Research Library (Alumni Edition)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central (Alumni Edition)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central UK/Ireland</collection><collection>ProQuest One Literature</collection><collection>ProQuest Central Essentials</collection><collection>eLibrary</collection><collection>ProQuest Central</collection><collection>ProQuest One Community College</collection><collection>Literature Online Core (LION Core) (legacy)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central Korea</collection><collection>ProQuest Central Student</collection><collection>Research Library Prep</collection><collection>One Literature (ProQuest)</collection><collection>Research Library</collection><collection>Research Library (Corporate)</collection><collection>ProQuest Learning: Literature</collection><collection>Literature Online Premium (LION Premium) (legacy)</collection><collection>ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition (DO NOT USE)</collection><collection>ProQuest Women's & Gender Studies</collection><collection>Literature Online (LION) - US Customers Only</collection><collection>ProQuest One Academic</collection><collection>ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition</collection><collection>ProQuest Central China</collection><collection>Literature Online (LION)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central Basic</collection><collection>Diversity Collection</collection><jtitle>Legacy (Amherst, Mass.)</jtitle></facets><delivery><delcategory>Remote Search Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>Baym, Nina</au><au>Fetterley, Judith</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>PLENARY REMARKS</atitle><jtitle>Legacy (Amherst, Mass.)</jtitle><date>2002-01-01</date><risdate>2002</risdate><volume>19</volume><issue>1</issue><spage>1</spage><epage>9</epage><pages>1-9</pages><issn>0748-4321</issn><issn>1534-0643</issn><eissn>1534-0643</eissn><abstract>I'm honored to be a participant in the plenary session of this pathbreaking conference. And I'm delighted to be sharing that platform with three women whose work has been important to me, whom I greatly admire, and with whom I've been traveling along life's course for many years. It's exciting, too, to see so many well-known names in the conference program and to note the volume and scope of new work being done by so many scholars working on so many writers. If this new society wants to ensure that "gains made in the study of women's literature in the late-twentieth century not be lost in the twenty-first" (as its founding manifesto phrases it), the present gathering testifies wonderfully to its likely success. As for personal history, I'm more comfortable talking about women writers than about Nina Baym, the woman scholar. I've never been good at self-disclosure, and I've suffered some catastrophic results on the few occasions when I spilled the wrong beans at the wrong time. I can say, however, that as a woman scholar, the most rewarding aspect of my career by far has been mentoring women students. Of the thirty-four Ph.D. students I've turned out to date, twenty-three have been women, and most have worked on women writers. Two of those former students are at this conference, in this audience -- Jill Bergman, now at the University of Montana, and Karen Tracey, now at the University of Northern Iowa. I want to close by returning to the larger discipline and the situation of the woman scholar within it, with the discipline here being "American literature" rather than "American women writers," which I take to be a subfield within the larger field. The great majority of those in the subfield are themselves women; women outnumber men overwhelmingly at this conference, for example. In that women are a minority in the larger field overall, the large number of women working on women writers means that the number working on male writers is extremely small. In the field of "American literature" as represented, say, by an American literature anthology, women writers must enter as part of the whole picture. I would never counsel women to abandon their work on women writers and start writing about men, but I would urge scholars to remember the whole picture. In the highly gender-asymmetric culture that we still inhabit, a woman-centered specialty pursued almost entirely by women necessarily becomes a minor enterprise. The habit of dismissing women writers for their political incorrectness intensifies this minoritizing message because the men seem somehow better able to withstand ideological criticism than the women do, which is taken in turn as a sign of their esthetic superiority. If we women are working on inferior writers, are we not inferior scholars? How can we change this possible Catch-22? To achieve full parity, women do need to write about male writers -- to demonstrate what I call range -- so that they can occupy the whole cultural field. Men, too, will need to be coaxed into working on women's writing in much greater numbers, but they will do this only when the subfield presents itself as valuable. I have directed several dissertations by men working on women writers; but, overwhelmingly, the male graduate students in my department are not choosing to write about women authors. The last time I gave a course in American women writers from 1870-1915 only one male enrolled in it. Thus, it is both more realizable and probably more important for women to demonstrate range by working on men. That this is so is regrettable, but it is a fact of our gender-asymmetric culture. This culture, after all, is what called feminism into being in the first place. We've come a long way, but we are less removed from the dilemmas of nineteenth-century women authors than we might like to think; like them, we have to insist on women's right to occupy public space in the print mode, while simultaneously demonstrating women's fitness to do so.</abstract><cop>Lincoln</cop><pub>University of Nebraska Press</pub><doi>10.1353/leg.2003.0002</doi><tpages>9</tpages></addata></record> |
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subjects | American literature Anthologies College students Culture Dickinson, Emily (1830-1886) Females Feminism Fuller, Margaret Gender Ideology Legacies Literary criticism Literature Males Men Novels Politics Role models Semiotics United States history Women Writers Writing |
title | PLENARY REMARKS |
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