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Sandra Gilbert - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sandra Gilbert

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dr. Sandra M. Gilbert (born 1936), Professor Emerita of English at the University of California, Davis, is an influential literary critic and poet who has published widely in the fields of feminist literary criticism, feminist theory, and psychoanalytic criticism. She is perhaps best known for her collaborative critical work with Susan Gubar, with whom she co-authored, among other works, The Madwoman in the Attic (1979), a landmark in 1970s American feminism. Madwoman in the Atttic is widely recognized as a text central to second-wave feminism.

The mother of three and grandmother of four, Gilbert lives in Berkeley, California, and in Paris, France. Her late husband, Elliot Gilbert, was the head of the English Department at UC, Davis. He died in 1991. She also had a long term relationship with David Gale, renowned mathemitician until his death in 2004.

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[edit] Academia

Gilbert received her B. A. from Cornell University, her M. A. from New York University, and her Ph.D. in English literature from Columbia University in 1968. She has taught at California State University, Hayward, Williams College, Johns Hopkins University, Stanford University, and Indiana University. She held the C. Barnwell Straut Chair of English at Princeton University from 1985 until 1989. She was named the M.H. Abrams Distinguished Visiting Professor at Cornell University for the spring 2007 semester.

[edit] Awards

She is a former president of the Modern Language Association in 1996. She has been a recipient of Guggenheim, Rockefeller, NEH, and Soros Foundation fellowships, and she has held residencies at Yaddo, MacDowell, Bellagio, and Bogliasco. In 1988 she was awarded a D. Litt. by Wesleyan University, and in 1990, she was (with Karl Shapiro) a co-recipient of the International Poetry Forum’s Charity Randall Award. More recently, she has won a Patterson Prize (for Ghost Volcano), an American Book Award (for Kissing the Bread), the John Ciardi Award for Lifetime Achievement in Poetry (from the Italian-American Foundation), the Premio Lerici Pea awarded by the Liguri nel Mondo association, and several awards from Poetry magazine. In 2004 she was awarded the degree of Doctor Philosophiae Honoris Causa by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

[edit] Collaboration with Susan Gubar

Gilbert and Gubar met met in 1973, while both were professors at the Indiana University. They shortly collaborated to co-teach a course on women's literature, out of which the eventual manuscript for Madwoman in the Attic arose. They have continued to co-author and -edit, as well as being awarded several academic distinctions as a pair. Notably, they were jointly named Ms. magazine's "Woman of the Year" in 1986 for their co-editing of The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women: The Traditions in English.

Because of the success of their joint publications, Gilbert and Gubar are often cited together in the fields of Feminist literary criticism and Feminist theory.

[edit] Feminist literary criticism and theory

Gilbert's critical and theoretical works, particularly those co-authored by Susan Gubar, are generally identified as texts within the realm of second-wave feminism. As such, they represent part of a concerted effort to move beyond the simple assimilationist theories of first-wave feminism, either by rejecting entirely the given, oppressive, patriarchal, male-dominated order of society, or by seeking to reform that order. Gilbert's texts, also lay themselves open to many of the criticisms levelled by third-wave feminism, or thinkers who regard patriarchy not as an integrated and foundational system, but a set of repeated practices which may vary over time and space.

Gilbert is often said to find her theoretical roots in the earlier 1970s works of Ellen Moers and Elaine Showalter, because the basic premise of her thought is that women writers may categorized just so, that all women share a set of similar experiences and that male oppression or patriarchy is everywhere essentially the same.

[edit] "The Anxiety of Authorship"

In The Madwoman in the Attic, Gilbert and Gubar take the famous and influential Oedipal model developed by literary critic Harold Bloom and adapt it to their own purposes as feminist critics. Bloom's well-known theory of the anxiety of influence argues that writers suffer from an Oedipal fear and jealousy for their perceived literary "fore-fathers". As such, the unpublished writer puts himself under a great deal of pressure to break free from his most immediate, direct influences, to form his own voice, even to "kill" the threatening and over-bearing "father" of his particular literary experience and inspirations. Gilbert and Gubar argue that this model is male-oriented, as certainly the associations of Oedipus are, and offer for women a theory of "The Anxiety of Authorship". Here, they question the ability of the anxious woman writer even to contemplate her status as an author. In a culture whose literary tradition is in vast majority a patriarchal one, with a distinct dearth of female writers, and an overabundance of flighty female characters appearing in texts authored by members of both sex, how can a woman arrive at the confident self-conception necessary to write successfully?

Where Bloom wonders how the male author can find a voice that is his own, Gilbert and Gubar wonder how a woman writer can see herself as possessing a literary voice at all. Where Bloom finds aggression and competition between male literary figures in terms of self-consciously feeling influenced and desiring to be influential, the "anxiety of authorship" identifies a "secret sisterhood" of role-models within the Western tradition who show that women can write. Even these, though, they find to be "infected" with a lack of confidence and insoluble internal contradiction of ambition curdled by the culturally-induced assumption of "the patriarchal authority of art".

[edit] Criticisms

Gilbert's theoretical works have come under fire from several later thinkers, particularly those attached to third-wave feminism and/or post-feminist theories. Writers such as Barbara Smith, Gloria Anzaldua, Judith Butler, Mary Daly, Rosemary Radford Ruether, and Ann Oakley have challenged the general assumptions of the type of second-wave feminism that Gilbert represents. Her works have not usually been marked out for criticism because of their specific content, but rather, because of the general associations that they bear, and the theoretical perspective out of which they are borne. Her approach has been called-out as "Anglo-American" and overly "liberal" feminist. She has been criticized for seeming to lump together all forms of female experience, displaying a naive failure to consider issues of race, class, sexuality, ethnicity, and historical period - her yoking together of Anne Sexton and Charlotte Brontë is a pertinent example.

Put simply, Gilbert's most oft-cited error is that of creating universal standards, both for women and for the patriarchal systems which oppress them.

[edit] Critical works

  • Acts of Attention: The Poems of D.H. Lawrence (1973)

[edit] Co-authored with Susan Gubar
  • A Guide to The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women: The Tradition in English (W.W. Norton, 1985; revised second edition 1996)
  • The War of the Words, Volume I of No Man's Land: The Place of the Woman Writer in the Twentieth Century (Yale University Press, 1988)
  • Sexchanges, Volume II of No Man's Land: The Place of the Woman Writer in the Twentieth Century (Yale University Press, 1989)
  • Letters from the Front, Volume III of No Man's Land: The Place of the Woman Writer in the Twentieth Century (Yale University Press, 1994)
  • Masterpiece Theatre: An Academic Melodrama (Rutgers University Press, 1995)

[edit] Poetry

Gilbert is the author of seven collections of poetry:

  • In the Fourth World (University of Alabama Press)
  • The Summer Kitchen (Heyeck Press)
  • Emily’s Bread (W. W. Norton)
  • Blood Pressure (W. W. Norton)
  • Ghost Volcano (W. W. Norton)
  • Kissing the Bread: New and Selected Poems 1969-1999 (W. W. Norton)
  • The Italian Collection (Depot Books)
  • Belongings (W. W. Norton, 2006), her latest book of poems.

[edit] Non-fiction

  • Wrongful Death: A Medical Tragedy (W. W. Norton)
  • Death’s Door: Modern Dying and The Ways We Grieve (W. W. Norton, 2006)

[edit] Other publications

Gilbert has edited a collection of elegies:

  • Inventions of Farewell (W. W. Norton)

With Susan Gubar, she has co-edited several collections:

  • Shakespeare's Sisters: Feminist Essays on Women Poets (Indiana University Press)
  • The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women: The Traditions in English (W.W. Norton)
  • Women Poets, Special Double Issue of Women's Studies (1980)
  • The Female Imagination and the Modernist Aesthetic (New York: Gordon and Breach, 1986)

With Susan Gubar and Diana O'Hehir, she has co-edited a collection of poetry:

  • MotherSongs: Poetry by, for, and about Mothers (W.W. Norton, 1995)

With Wendy Barker, Gilbert has co-edited a collection of essays on the work of Ruth Stone:

  • The House is Made of Poetry

[edit] References

[edit] External links


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