The Modernist Madonna: Semiotics of the Maternal Metaphor"A well-organized, profound case for the reinterpretation of the creative woman in the nineteenth century." --Carol Ravenal Focusing on Harriet Beecher Stowe, Louisa May Alcott, Mary Cassatt, Tillie Olsen, and Alice Walker, Van Buren uses present-day critical and theoretical concepts to explore the relations among artists' lives, works, and cultures. |
Other editions - View all
The Modernist Madonna: Semiotics of the Maternal Metaphor Jane Silverman Van Buren Limited preview - 1989 |
The Modernist Madonna: Semiotics of the Maternal Metaphor Jane Silverman Van Buren Limited preview - 1989 |
The Modernist Madonna: Semiotics of the Maternal Metaphor Jane Silverman Van Buren No preview available - 1989 |
Common terms and phrases
adolescence Alfred Silver alter ego American artist aspects baby Beth Bion birth capacity Cassie Celie characters Cixous Color Purple concept creative culture death death instinct disavowed dream elements emotional Eva's experience exploration father feelings female Feminist Frances Tustin Freud function girl goddess Grotstein Harriet Beecher Harriet Beecher Stowe his/her human Ibid images individual infant infantile inner integration internal interpretation Irigaray Jo's Julia Kristeva Kristeva Lacan language Legree Legree's Lévi-Strauss Little Women Louisa May Alcott madonna male Mary Cassatt maternal meaning Melanie Klein mental mind moral mother and child mother's body motherhood mythology narrative notion object Oedipus complex Oedipus myth Oedipus's Olsen opposition parents phantasies primitive processes Psychoanalysis relations relationship semiotic sense sensual sexual Shug signify signs slavery social society split Stowe Stowe's suggests superego symbolic order theory thoughts transformation Tustin Uncle Tom's Cabin unconscious University Press Walker woman York