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Location: [Reed College] [Department of English] [Laura Arnold][ Nation and Narration]Daily Readings
1. There is a very good introduction to Fuller and her works at the beginning of our text, so I will not repeat that information here, but instead direct you towards it. I am interested, though, in how you see Fuller responding to issues that Hawthorne and Emerson have raised regarding travel, the sublime, nature, and the nation. I would like you to consider what difference Fuller implies it makes to be a women viewing (and writing about) these sights. For Tuesday please read the following:
1. Summer on the Lakes, chapters 1-42. Woman in the Nineteenth Century: pp. 247- 258 (up until "But to return to the historical); pp. 309 ("There are two aspects of women") to 313 (up until but not including the paragraph that begins "AMONG THE THRONG"); and pp. 341 ("And now I have designated this outline")-end. In The Essential Margaret Fuller, ed. Jeffrey Steele
3. Elaine Showalter's "Towards a Feminist Poetics" (Essentials of the Theory of Fiction **1988 Edition**, pp. 380-402)
2. What is a Female Narrative Style? In "Towards a Feminist Poetics" (Essentials of the Theory of Fiction 380-402), Elaine Showalter identifies three stages of women's writing: feminine, feminist, and female. In which category does Fuller belong? How does Fuller herself define "woman's nature" and its relationship to creativity? In the introduction The Essential Margaret Fuller, Jeffrey Steele suggests that Fuller writes in a female poetics when she
1.advocates ideals for friendship and community2.presents mythological images of the female realm (e.g. gardens, flowers)
3.shows that women embody an "electricity" that frightens men and draws individuals together.
Do you agree? What parts of Summer on the Lakes support such a reading? Would you add anything to this list?
3. Engendering the Sublime. In Women Poets and the American
Sublime, Joanne Diehl suggests that the sublime meant different
things for women and men. She argues 
How does Fuller's experience of the sublime differ from Emerson, Hawthorne, and Shelley's? Is gender the only factor here?
4. Characterization. For Thursday please finish reading Fuller's Summer on the Lakes (Chapters 5-7) and read pp. ix-xx and 226-235 of Werner Sollors' The Invention of Ethnicity. What sort of identity does Fuller "invent" for American Indians? What is their role within the nation's invented identity? Do American Indians help Fuller invent a white space and identity as well? How so? How do her portraits of American Indians compare to the portraits of American Indians made by George Catlin? What is the relationship between American Indians as characters and the Landscape as setting?
5. Why Travel? In class Wed. we discussed reasons why people travel. Click here for more information on pilgrimages, captivity narratives, Jeremiads.
Other useful hotlinks:
Laura.Arnold@Reed.edu