Gendered Genres: Female Experiences and Narrative Patterns in the Works of Matilde Serao

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Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press, 1999 - Literary Criticism - 189 pages
Matilde Serao's richly detailed narratives created a metamorphical city of women negotiating the social and cultural byways of turn-of-the-century Italy. With each text, Serao (1856-1927) added another stratum to her imaginary metropolis, grounding her works in realistic detail and acute social observation. Over the course of almost thirty novels, more than one hundred short stories, and innumerable newspaper articles, Serao articulated her own vision of female destiny in a society governed by traditional, often restrictive, paradigms of female behavior. This study examines how Serao refashioned traditional genres throughout her long literary career, a narrative strategy that allowed her to focus specifically on the depiction of female experiences.
 

Contents

Acknowledgments
9
Realist Revisions
28
Romantic Interlude
73
Family Gothic
116
A Literary Legacy
148
Bibliography
178
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