Willa Cather\u27s O Pioneers! (1913) has traditionally been read within the twin contexts of Cather\u27s pioneering childhood and her nostalgic reminiscences that glorify the lives of prairie settlers. These critics interpreted the novel in light of Walt Whitman\u27s poem of the same name in Leaves of Grass, which celebrates the conquering American pioneer who civilizes the land for production.1 More recent critics have contextualized it within her family history, agricultural history, domestic plots, American migration, and women leaving the home.2 However, if we consider O Pioneers! in relation to the gender role redefinitions of Cather\u27s adult life, we discover a work that is not primarily about homesteading pioneers, but rather abo...
At the conclusion of Willa Cather\u27s 1913 novel O Pioneers!, Alexandra Bergson muses about landown...
The purpose of this thesis is to explore pioneer prairie women of fiction, in the novels of O. E. R...
When A Lost Lady appeared in 1923, readers immediately recognized Willa Cather\u27s achiever ment. T...
Willa Cather\u27s O Pioneers! (1913) has traditionally been read within the twin contexts of Cather\...
In 1913 Willa Cather created a female protagonist who is single, independent, entrepreneurial, manag...
Most studies of Willa Cather\u27s O Pioneers! (1913) comment on Alexandra Bergson\u27s mystic relati...
Willa Cather\u27s move to Nebraska as a child, the people she met there, and the seemingly endless p...
In a dissertation submitted to the Department of Rhetoric and Oratory at the University of Wisconsin...
By comparing Eleanor Gate\u27s The Plow-Woman (1906), Willa Cather\u27s O Pioneers! (1913), Edna Fer...
In her preface to the 1922 edition of Alexander\u27s Bridge and in the 1931 essay My First Novels: ...
As I began to make decisions about what I wanted to write on, I started to consider the novels that ...
An independent and strong-minded woman gains control of a farm and determines to effect its fruition...
The dissertation examines those Nebraska works by Willa Cather in which agrarian characters strive t...
In her essay Uses of the Erotic: The Erotic as Power, Audre Lorde writes, There are many kinds of...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 78-83)Many of Willa Cather's early short stories and two ...
At the conclusion of Willa Cather\u27s 1913 novel O Pioneers!, Alexandra Bergson muses about landown...
The purpose of this thesis is to explore pioneer prairie women of fiction, in the novels of O. E. R...
When A Lost Lady appeared in 1923, readers immediately recognized Willa Cather\u27s achiever ment. T...
Willa Cather\u27s O Pioneers! (1913) has traditionally been read within the twin contexts of Cather\...
In 1913 Willa Cather created a female protagonist who is single, independent, entrepreneurial, manag...
Most studies of Willa Cather\u27s O Pioneers! (1913) comment on Alexandra Bergson\u27s mystic relati...
Willa Cather\u27s move to Nebraska as a child, the people she met there, and the seemingly endless p...
In a dissertation submitted to the Department of Rhetoric and Oratory at the University of Wisconsin...
By comparing Eleanor Gate\u27s The Plow-Woman (1906), Willa Cather\u27s O Pioneers! (1913), Edna Fer...
In her preface to the 1922 edition of Alexander\u27s Bridge and in the 1931 essay My First Novels: ...
As I began to make decisions about what I wanted to write on, I started to consider the novels that ...
An independent and strong-minded woman gains control of a farm and determines to effect its fruition...
The dissertation examines those Nebraska works by Willa Cather in which agrarian characters strive t...
In her essay Uses of the Erotic: The Erotic as Power, Audre Lorde writes, There are many kinds of...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 78-83)Many of Willa Cather's early short stories and two ...
At the conclusion of Willa Cather\u27s 1913 novel O Pioneers!, Alexandra Bergson muses about landown...
The purpose of this thesis is to explore pioneer prairie women of fiction, in the novels of O. E. R...
When A Lost Lady appeared in 1923, readers immediately recognized Willa Cather\u27s achiever ment. T...