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Mary R. Reichardt - A web of relationship: women in the short stories of Mary Wilkins Freeman

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Although a prolific and popular writer in her day, Mary Wilkins Freeman has only recently been rediscovered and reevaluated as a realistic recorder of the status and sensibility of the New England woman in the early years of this century. Women form the backbone of her stories. Within a framework tightly controlled by patriarchal and religious tradition, Freemans women strive for an understanding of the roles assigned to them. Through their relationships and responses, they test the limits of their freedom and learn the moral and personal consequences of rejecting or acquiescing to the roles the larger community has imposed on them.The rebellious woman became a key these in Freemans stories and a major image in her gallery of fictional portraits of women. A Web of Relationship reveals how she sharply delineates the lives and personalities of women who accept of reject the ideal Victorian code of true womanhood as mother and wife. This study of Freemans stories throws light upon the other women her rich fictional narratives portray--women who are rejected by men and who feel their lives are thus worthless and their futures bleak; women frustrated yet submissive to the confines of marriage; women whose sole means of solidarity with other women is through self-aggrandizing gossip; women who must deal with day with the twin hardships of advancing age and poverty. Freemans unifying theme is the web of relationships connecting every type of New England woman struggling towards selfhood despite straitened circumstances and repression by family and community. Freemans collective portraits of New England women not only give insight into her art but also reveal her penetrating vision of women frustrated by the confusing and confining roles forced upon them in this time and place.

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title A Web of Relationship Women in the Short Stories of Mary Wilkins - photo 1

title:A Web of Relationship : Women in the Short Stories of Mary Wilkins Freeman
author:Reichardt, Mary R.
publisher:University Press of Mississippi
isbn10 | asin:087805555X
print isbn13:9780878055555
ebook isbn13:9780585226538
language:English
subjectFreeman, Mary Eleanor Wilkins,--1852-1930--Characters--Women, Women and literature--New England--History, Women in literature, Short story.
publication date:1992
lcc:PS1713.R45 1992eb
ddc:813/.4
subject:Freeman, Mary Eleanor Wilkins,--1852-1930--Characters--Women, Women and literature--New England--History, Women in literature, Short story.
Page iii
A Web of Relationship
Women in the Short Stories of Mary Wilkins Freeman
Mary R. Reichardt
University Press of Mississippi
Jackson & London
Page iv
Copyright 1992 by University Press of Mississippi
All rights reserved
Manufactured in the United States of America
95 94 93 92 4 3 2 1
The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Publication Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Reichardt, Mary R.
A web of relationship : women in the short stories of Mary Wilkins Freeman /
Mary R. Reichardt.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.
ISBN 0-87805-555-x
1. Freeman, Mary Eleanor Wilkins, 1852-1930CharactersWomen.
2. Women in literature. 3. Short story. 1. Title.
PS1713.R45 1992
813'.4dc20 91-32352
CIP
British Library Cataloging-in-Publication data available
Page v
to
J. E.
Page vii
Contents
Acknowledgments
ix
Introduction
xi
1. Backgrounds
3
2. Contexts
18
3. Women as Daughters in the Family: "The Web of Self-Strangulation"
44
4. Women, Men, and Marriage: "Reckoning Them in with Providence"
74
5. Women as Friends and Rivals: "Friend of My Heart"
102
6. Women Alone: "I Hadn't Orter Feel This Way"
125
Conclusion
152
Appendix: Bibliography of Mary Wilkins Freeman's Works
157
Notes
171
Works Cited
177
Index
181

Page ix
Acknowledgments
Parts of the following chapters appeared in earlier forms in journals and collections. The author gratefully acknowledges permission to use this material:
Picture 2
Chapter 3, in Legacy 4 (Fall, 1987), reprinted in Critical Essays on Mary Wilkins Freeman, ed. Shirley Marchalonis (Boston: G. K. Hall, 1991).
Picture 3
Chapter 4, in Joinings and Disjoinings: The Significance of Marital Status in Literature, eds. JoAnna Stephens Mink and Janet Doubler Ward (Bowling Green, Ohio: Popular Press, 1991).
Picture 4
Chapter 6, in American Literary Realism 22 (Winter, 1990).
Picture 5
Appendix (list of Freeman's short stories), compiled with Philip Eppard, in American Literary Realism 23 (Fall, 1990).
In addition, I would like to express my appreciation to others who have helped bring this project to fruition: the National Endowment for the Humanities, for a travel grant that allowed me to conduct research in Randolph, Massachusetts, and Brattleboro, Vermont; the Interlibrary Loan Department at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, for patient handling of many requests; and the Faculty Development Center and English Department of the University of St. Thomas, for the grant and release-time support requisite to completing this work. I would also like to thank Edna Hesford of Randolph, Massachusetts, and Henry Cooke IV, historian at the Randolph First Congregational Church, for their kind assistance.
Page xi
Introduction
In Mary Wilkins Freeman's superb short story "The Revolt of 'Mother,'" mother Sarah Penn, frustrated by her husband's refusal to tell her why he is building yet another barn when he has failed to provide his own family with an adequate home, admonishes her young daughter, "You ain't found out yet we're women-folks, Nanny Penn.... You ain't seen enough of men-folks yet to. One of these days you'll find it out, an' then you'll know that we know only what men-folks think we do, so far as any use of it goes, an' how we'd ought to reckon men-folks in with Providence, an' not complain of what they do any more than we do of the weather."1
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