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Teaching the New Woman In this section of The Latchkey, we focus on teaching the New Woman and her issues in the classroom. Think of it as a treasure chest of ideas, texts, and resources to help in putting together class sessions or even whole teaching sequences on the New Woman. Invitation to readers: We hope to expand this archive with every new issue and warmly invite you to send us a brief report of teaching ideas and resources of your own. For example, we would love to see further references to New Woman texts and useful secondary sources, or handouts of your own design you would like to share with other teachers. You may email us these materials or/and comments or ideas to the Latchkey editors at unbolt@gmail.com. Please include a sentence or two addressing a) your specific teaching idea and/or goals for these materials in the classroom, and b) the student level for which these materials would be appropriate (such as high school, college/undergraduate, graduate students, etc.).
RESOURCES In each issue, we aim to introduce at least one particularly useful primary or secondary resource in depth. This time, it is the anthology Daughters of Decadence: Women Writers of the Fin de Siècle, edited and introduced by Elaine Showalter (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1993), which is probably the most often taught anthology of New Woman fiction in U.S.-American classrooms today—many readers will already be familiar with it. The anthology is wonderfully put together to include both British and American New Woman writers (many of them writing under male pseudonym) as well as the South African Olive Schreiner. It includes the following texts:
As the title indicates, Showalter’s anthology does not include New Woman works written by men (such as Thomas Hardy, George B. Shaw). It does offer a useful introduction with an overview of New Woman issues and the authors included in the anthology, which can serve as a good general introduction for students (undergraduate and graduate) who are just beginning to familiarize themselves with the topic and these writers, and which I like to assign together with the introduction to A New Woman Reader: Fiction, Articles, and Drama of the 1890s, edited by Carolyn Christensen Nelson (Peterborough et al.: Broadview Press, 2001), see below under “Teaching Ideas.” -Petra Dierkes-Thrun, October 2008 PRACTICAL IDEAS FOR TEACHING
A typical introductory session to the New Woman writers and issues in one of my undergraduate classes might include the following reading assignments:
I usually start this class with a brief introduction to Chopin and Schreiner (biographical basics), then launch right into a close comparative reading of “Life’s Gifts” and “Emancipation: A Life Fable,” then move on to and interweave our discussion with the facts and information contained in Showalter’s and Nelson’s introductions. Class ends with a final reflection of the two primary texts and their fictional as well as historical relations with the New Woman controversy (I may fill in some more facts about Chopin’s and Schreiner’s lives and careers here as well). -Petra Dierkes-Thrun, October 2008 |