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A Creation of One’s Own: Depictions of the Female Artist in the Modernist Künstlerroman
- Publication Year :
- 2024
-
Abstract
- Modernist artist novels by and about women complicate traditional understandings of the künstlerroman genre by challenging the definition and status of the “artist” and presenting a broader range of options for women interested in the arts. Beginning with Wyndham Lewis’s Tarr and with specific attention to the character of Bertha Lunken, an art student, and continuing with readings of Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse, Mina Loy’s Insel, and Jessie Fauset’s Plum Bun, the dissertation analyzes representations of the female artist. Through their artist protagonists, these authors explore their ambivalence regarding the importance of talent, vision, and marketability. Their portrayals of amateur artists, students, and models focus on the social and material conditions that women in the period had to navigate in order to come to their own understanding of artistic success. Such portrayals also speak to the ways women participated in various modernist movements, both as visual artists and as writers. Ultimately, a reexamination of the female artist figure in these novels allows for an expanded definition of modernism by finding continuities between the Modernist period and the late Victorian period, interrogating regionalist specificity and transatlantic communication, and considering ways that high modernist experimental fiction relates to a commonly feminized and dismissed mass-market literature.
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenDissertations
- Publication Type :
- Dissertation/ Thesis
- Accession number :
- ddu.oai.etd.ohiolink.edu.miami1719413469160339