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Mary Hunter Austin - Beyond borders: the selected essays of Mary Austin

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Seventeen essays by Mary Hunter Austin (18681934), author of the western classic The Land of Little Rain (1903), demonstrate her wide-ranging interests and equally varied writing styles.Although she was born in Carlinville, Illinois, and graduated from Blackburn College, Mary Austin spent most of her writing career in California, New York, and finally Sante Fe, New Mexico. A well-known, popular, and prolific writer, Austin published thirty-three books and three plays and was closely associated with many important literary figures of her time, including H. G. Wells, George Bernard Shaw, Mabel Dodge Luhan, Jack London, and Willa Cather. Still best known today for her nature writing and southwestern cultural studies, Austin has been increasingly recognized for her work on feminist themes, including the play The Arrow Maker, the nonfiction The Young Woman Citizen, and the novels A Woman of Genius and No. 26 Jayne Street. What has been perhaps an overemphasis on Austins nature writing has, since her death, eclipsed the fact that Austin was known during her lifetime as a colorful, eccentric, and controversial person whose direct and outspoken opinions engaged a wide variety of topics.Beyond Borders demonstrates that variety. In addition to her monographs, Austin also published her short fiction and essays in periodicals. In fact, like many a writer earning a living from her work, Austin wrote prolifically for the magazine market, producing during her career over two hundred individual pieces published in over sixty periodicals. Although a collection of her short fiction appeared in 1987, Austins nonfiction periodical work has remained uncollected until now.In support of Austins essays, Reuben J. Ellis provides an introduction that establishes a biographical and historical context for Austins work. In addition, each Austin essay is prefaced by brief introductory remarks by the editor. A selected bibliography of Austins essays is also included.

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title Beyond Borders The Selected Essays of Mary Austin author - photo 1

title:Beyond Borders : The Selected Essays of Mary Austin
author:Austin, Mary Hunter.; Ellis, Reuben J.
publisher:Southern Illinois University Press
isbn10 | asin:0809319977
print isbn13:9780809319978
ebook isbn13:9780585030173
language:English
subject
publication date:1996
lcc:PS3501.U8A6 1996eb
ddc:814/.52
subject:
Beyond Borders
THE SELECTED ESSAYS OF Mary Austin EDITED WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY REUBEN - photo 2
THE SELECTED ESSAYS OF Mary Austin
EDITED & WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY REUBEN J. ELLIS
Southern Illinois University Press
Carbondale & Edwardsville
Beyond Borders
Copyright 1996 by the Board of Trustees Southern Illinois University All - photo 3
Copyright 1996 by
the Board of Trustees,
Southern Illinois University
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
Designed by Richard Hendel
Production supervised by
Robyn Laur Clark
99 98 97 96
4 3 2 1
FRONTISPIECE: Mary Austin in Santa
Barbara, 1919. Reproduced by
permission of the Huntington Library,
San Marino, California.
Library of Congress
Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Austin, Mary Hunter, 18681934.
Beyond borders: the selected
essays of Mary Austin / edited and
with an introduction by
Reuben J. Ellis.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references.
I. Ellis, Reuben J., 1995
Title.
PS3501.U8A6 1996
814.52 dc20
ISBN 0-8093-1997-7
94-47456
CIP
The paper used in this publication
meets the minimum requirements of
American National Standard for
Information Sciences Permanence
of Paper for Printed Library Materials,
ANSI z39.48-1984.
Dedicated with love to
Dorothy Ruth Ellis,
Elizabeth Ione Ellis,.
Harriet Leora Medlin,
and
Brenna Ryan Ellis
Contents
Acknowledgments
ix
Introduction
1
One Hundred Miles on Horseback (1889)
24
A Land of Little Rain (1903)
31
from An Appreciation of H. G. Wells, Novelist (1911)
39
Sex Emancipation Through War (1918)
43
New York: Dictator of American Criticism (1920)
55
Wanted: A New Method in Mexico (1920)
62
from My Fabian Summer (1921)
70
Women as Audience (1922)
76
The American Form of the Novel (1922)
83
from Greatness in Women (1923)
89
from The Folly of the Officials (1924)
95
The Town That Doesn't Want a Chautauqua (1926)
103
Woman Alone (1927)
111
from How I Found Thing Worth Waiting For (1929)
120
Censorship (1930)
126
Regionalism in American Fiction (1932)
129
One Smoke Stories (1933)
141
A Selected Bibliography of the Essays of Mary Austin
145

Page ix
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank Richard Fleck, friend and mentor, for inspiring me to undertake this project and for encouraging it along the way. I am also very grateful to the Department of English at Hope College for making its resources available in the final preparation of the manuscript. In particular, my sincere thanks to Myra Kohsel for the many hours and talents she contributed to the project at a very busy time. My appreciation also goes to Kelly Jacobsma and Libby Bocks at Hope College, Sara S. Hodson, Curator of Literary Manuscripts at the Huntington Library, Jennifer A. Watts, Associate Curator of Photographs at the Huntington Library, Linda Lewis at Zimmerman Library of the University of New Mexico, and Melody Graulich at the University of New Hampshire. As always, thanks and love to Brenna, Isaac, and Daniel, for their friendship and support.
Page 1
Introduction
Mary Hunter Austin might have seen it as the right hat in the wrong place. Harrison Fisher's cover painting for the February 1913 issue of The Ladies' Home Journal depicts a carefully sophisticated, stylishly intelligent "ideal woman," already so confident and successful what does she need with the vote? On
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