Heroines
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A manifesto reclaiming the wives and mistresses of literary
modernism that inspired a generation of writers and scholars,
reissued after more than a decade.I am beginning to realize that
taking the self out of our essays is a form of repression. Taking
the self out feels like obeying a gag order—pretending an
objectivity where there is nothing objective about the experience
of confronting and engaging with and swooning over literature.On
the last day of December 2009, Kate Zambreno, then an unpublished
writer, began a blog called ",Frances Farmer Is My Sister,",
arising from her obsession with literary modernism and her recent
transplantation to Akron, Ohio, where her partner held a university
job. Widely reposted, Zambreno's blog became an outlet for her
highly informed and passionate rants and melancholy portraits of
the fates of the modernist “wives and mistresses,", reclaiming the
traditionally pathologized biographies of Vivienne Eliot, Jane
Bowles, Jean Rhys, and Zelda Fitzgerald: writers and artists
themselves who served as male writers' muses only to end their
lives silenced, erased, and institutionalized. Over the course of
two years, Frances Farmer Is My Sister helped create a community of
writers and devised a new feminist discourse of writing in the
margins and developing an alternative canon. In Heroines, Zambreno
extends the polemic begun on her blog into a dazzling, original
work of literary scholarship. Combing theories that have dictated
what literature should be and who is allowed to write it—she traces
the genesis of a cultural template that consistently exiles
feminine experience to the realm of the “minor,” and diagnoses
women for transgressing social bounds. “ANXIETY: When she
experiences it, it's pathological,” writes Zambreno. “When he does,
it's existential.” With Heroines, Zambreno provided a model for a
newly subjectivized criticism, prefiguring many group biographies
and forms of autotheory and hybrid memoirs that were to come in the
years to follow. A book that has become its own canon, Heroines was
named one of the ",50 Books that define the past 5 Years in
Literature", by Flavorwire, an ",Essential Feminist Manifesto", by
Dazed, and one of the ",50 Greatest Books by Women", in Buzzfeed.