PortadaGruposCharlasMásPanorama actual
Buscar en el sitio
Este sitio utiliza cookies para ofrecer nuestros servicios, mejorar el rendimiento, análisis y (si no estás registrado) publicidad. Al usar LibraryThing reconoces que has leído y comprendido nuestros términos de servicio y política de privacidad. El uso del sitio y de los servicios está sujeto a estas políticas y términos.

Resultados de Google Books

Pulse en una miniatura para ir a Google Books.

Cargando...

How to Suppress Women's Writing (1983)

por Joanna Russ

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
7292031,033 (4.29)36
"En 'Cmo acabar con la escritura de las mujeres', la galardonada novelista y ensayista Joanna Russ expone las estrategias sutiles, y no tan sutiles, que la sociedad usa para ignorar, condenar o menospreciar a las mujeres que producen literatura. Publicada originalmente en 1983 y nunca traducida al espaol, esta obra, tan relevante hoy como entonces, ha motivado a generaciones de lectores con su poderosa crtica feminista. Con un tono sarcstico e irreverente, Russ examina las fuerzas que sistemticamente impiden un amplio reconocimiento del trabajo creativo de las mujeres. Exhaustiva sin ser aburrida y seria sin carecer de sentido del humor, esta edicin cuenta con un nuevo prlogo de Jessa Crispin, autora de 'Por qu no soy feminista: un manifiesto feminista'".--Publisher's description.… (más)
Cargando...

Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará.

Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro.

» Ver también 36 menciones

Mostrando 1-5 de 20 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
By examining the progression of bad faith arguments used to belittle writing done by women, each progressively more desperate/illogical, Russ shows how flawed and dangerous much critical analysis of women’s work can be. As someone who doesn’t do a lot of academic reading, this was a slough in parts. However, Russ makes excellent points regarding the literary canon, college syllabi, and cultural values- and this was written in ‘83! While much has changed in the publishing industry, there are still gaps in racial diversity and pay rates, as well as in syllabi around the world. Overall, this was an excellent read, if a little dense for me at times, and is, unfortunately, still very relevant. ( )
  psalva | Oct 11, 2023 |
What a very good overview of the ways in which European and US women's writing/art has been trivialised or ignored in history and now. This book is the difference between instinctively knowing something to be true and seeing the facts laid out in front of you.

Russ' categories are well thought out and by her own admission not comprehensive (is it even possible to catalogue all the wrongs!) The book lays out the basic ways used to devalue and dismiss these women's works - which feels applicable to so many other forms of suppression.

I'd be interested to see the book expanded and updated to include non-Eurocentric histories, just to see if and how these minimisation attempts differ across cultures. From now on, I'll be keeping a sharper eye on reviews for these telltale attempts of belittlements. ( )
  kitzyl | Jan 11, 2021 |
Amazing. Generated a brand new reading list. ( )
  jostie13 | May 14, 2020 |
After years of running across references to [b:How to Suppress Women's Writing|1047343|How to Suppress Women's Writing|Joanna Russ|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1180491625s/1047343.jpg|158173], I have finally read it. (The timing on my acquiring and reading the book and my involvement in certain online arguments that I've stumbled upon lately about how sexism really still exists, no, really is probably not coincidental.)

ANYWAY. About the book. First off, it's a lit crit book with everything that that implies. For those of us without the heavy-duty lit background, this means the reading will be slow. Interesting, yes. Easy, no. The references/allusions/name-checks come fast and furious, but if, like me, you've never read, say Margaret Cavendish? The frequent citations of her work that assume a certain level of familiarity will be frustrating.

Keep going. It's worth it.

It's worth figuring out what gets left out or deemed unworthy and how -- and asking why. Because

A mode of understanding life which willfully ignores so much can do so only at the peril of thoroughly distorting the rest. A mode of understanding literature which can ignore the private lives of half the human race is not "incomplete"; it is distorted through and through. Feminist criticism of the early 1970s began by pointing out the simplist of these distortions, that is, that the female characters of even our greatest realistic "classics" by male writers are often not individualized portraits of possible women, but creations of fear and desire.


Each chapter picks apart a tool/belief that keeps women's writing invisible and excluded from the Canon. Misattribution. Impropriety of subject matter. Unimportance of subject matter. False categorization (or judging pieces against the standards of a genre they don't belong to). Exceptionalism. Isolation from (feminine) influences. Denial of agency. And while the title clearly sets these obstacles up as something deliberate... the text itself does a fantastic job of showing how these beliefs permeate culture, how the ideas embed themselves in the minds of essentially well-intentioned critics/authors/readers, men and women alike.

She periodically points out how these same tools of suppression are used to deny a literary history to other marginalized groups -- she may have set out to expose the tools of sexism, but they are also the tools of racism and colonialism and heterosexism and classism and...

In fact, in the afterward of my edition, Russ acknowledged that she'd fallen into the same traps set along racial lines and added an "idiosyncratic" collection of quotes from literary works by members of minority groups that had been similarly ignored and excluded by the gatekeepers of Literature, including herself-as-critic. ( )
  akaGingerK | Sep 30, 2018 |
Joanna Russ was a science fiction writer who came to prominence in the field in the 1960s, when women in the field were beginning to increase in numbers, but the explosion of women in science fiction of the 1970s was still in the future. She was also one of science fiction's home-grown scholars and critics, doing the work academics and more conventionally "respectable" literary critics were not yet ready to do.

In How to Suppress Women's Writing, she once again takes on work respectable academics and literary critics weren't willing to do: take a long, hard look at how and why women writers and artists, as well as other minority group writers and artists, keep disappearing from the record. Prominent in their own times, they quickly fade from view, leaving later generations to believe that only an exceptional few ever existed, or if they did exist, were inferior, forgettable talents. Emily Dickinson, for instance, is generally presented as springing from nothing, influenced by no predecessors or contemporaries, and influencing no women who came after her.

This is simply wrong. Emily Dickinson corresponded with other women writers, and other women writers and artists in every era had other women they knew, corresponded with, met, were aware of. They supported, influenced, competed with each other.

Often what they were doing appears thin, weak, or simply sui generis, because the literary tradition of which they are a part is invisible or forgotten. Or it's about women's experience, women's lives, women's perception of the world, which appear trivial and superficial in a literary tradition and a culture that centers white, male, heterosexual experiences and viewpoints.

This is a groundbreaking work, and yes, even thirty years later, you do want to read it. It will broaden and enrich your experience of literature, even as it alerts you to the ways in which women's creative work is still devalued.

Highly recommended.

I bought this book. ( )
  LisCarey | Sep 19, 2018 |
Mostrando 1-5 de 20 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
How to Suppress Women’s Writing invites re-reading; on second perusal, I found more than I had the first time. The humor is more obvious, the arguments doubly interesting with repetition, and the culminating effect all together different: the first time, I was understandably upset though struck with the clarity of the argument; the second time, I was pleased to have read it again, to have closely read Russ’s brilliant synthesis of information and to have appreciated her genius. The arguments are still great, and still immensely emotional for me as a writer in a tradition that has contributed as much as any to the erasure of women artists, but the book is more a treat. (And I still think it should be assigned reading for starting university students; what a difference it might make in how they see their continuing engagement with “the canon.”)
añadido por PhoenixFalls | editarTor.com, Brit Mandelo (Nov 2, 2011)
 
Russ never loses her cool or becomes accusatory in the text, though some of the examples might make the reader angry enough that they have to put the book down for a moment (me included). It’s engaging, witty and well-reasoned without ever plunging over the edge into “hopelessly academic.”
añadido por PhoenixFalls | editarTor.com, Brit Mandelo (Dec 13, 2010)
 

Pertenece a las series editoriales

Debes iniciar sesión para editar los datos de Conocimiento Común.
Para más ayuda, consulta la página de ayuda de Conocimiento Común.
Título canónico
Título original
Títulos alternativos
Fecha de publicación original
Personas/Personajes
Información procedente del conocimiento común inglés. Edita para encontrar en tu idioma.
Lugares importantes
Acontecimientos importantes
Películas relacionadas
Epígrafe
Dedicatoria
Información procedente del conocimiento común inglés. Edita para encontrar en tu idioma.
This book is dedicated to my students.
Primeras palabras
Información procedente del conocimiento común inglés. Edita para encontrar en tu idioma.
GLOTOLOG, n., stand. Intergalactic, current: Dominant sapients Tau Ceti 8 noted for the practice of frument, an art form combining aspects of Terrestrial hog calling, Martian slipping involuntarily upon the ice, and Uranian drof (lovingly nurturing the growth of slowly maturing crystals by enfolding them in all eight of one's limbs).
Citas
Últimas palabras
Información procedente del conocimiento común inglés. Edita para encontrar en tu idioma.
Aviso de desambiguación
Editores de la editorial
Blurbistas
Información procedente del conocimiento común inglés. Edita para encontrar en tu idioma.
Idioma original
DDC/MDS Canónico
LCC canónico

Referencias a esta obra en fuentes externas.

Wikipedia en inglés (1)

"En 'Cmo acabar con la escritura de las mujeres', la galardonada novelista y ensayista Joanna Russ expone las estrategias sutiles, y no tan sutiles, que la sociedad usa para ignorar, condenar o menospreciar a las mujeres que producen literatura. Publicada originalmente en 1983 y nunca traducida al espaol, esta obra, tan relevante hoy como entonces, ha motivado a generaciones de lectores con su poderosa crtica feminista. Con un tono sarcstico e irreverente, Russ examina las fuerzas que sistemticamente impiden un amplio reconocimiento del trabajo creativo de las mujeres. Exhaustiva sin ser aburrida y seria sin carecer de sentido del humor, esta edicin cuenta con un nuevo prlogo de Jessa Crispin, autora de 'Por qu no soy feminista: un manifiesto feminista'".--Publisher's description.

No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca.

Descripción del libro
Resumen Haiku

Debates activos

Ninguno

Cubiertas populares

Enlaces rápidos

Valoración

Promedio: (4.29)
0.5
1
1.5
2 4
2.5
3 11
3.5 4
4 37
4.5 6
5 51

¿Eres tú?

Conviértete en un Autor de LibraryThing.

 

Acerca de | Contactar | LibraryThing.com | Privacidad/Condiciones | Ayuda/Preguntas frecuentes | Blog | Tienda | APIs | TinyCat | Bibliotecas heredadas | Primeros reseñadores | Conocimiento común | 204,761,721 libros! | Barra superior: Siempre visible