The Voice of the Mother: Embedded Maternal Narratives in Twentieth-Century Women's Autobiographies

The Voice of the Mother: Embedded Maternal Narratives in Twentieth-Century Women's Autobiographies

by Jo Malin
     
 

Every woman autobiographer is a daughter who writes and establishes her identity through her autobiographical narrative. In The Voice of the Mother, Jo Malin argues that many twentieth-century autobiographies by women contain an intertext, an embedded narrative, which is a biography of the writer/daughter’s mother.

Analyzing this narrative practice,

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Overview

Every woman autobiographer is a daughter who writes and establishes her identity through her autobiographical narrative. In The Voice of the Mother, Jo Malin argues that many twentieth-century autobiographies by women contain an intertext, an embedded narrative, which is a biography of the writer/daughter’s mother.

Analyzing this narrative practice, Malin examines ten texts by women who seem particularly compelled to tell their mothers’ stories: Virginia Woolf, Sara Suleri, Kim Chernin, Drusilla Modjeska, Joan Nestle, Carolyn Steedman, Dorothy Allison, Adrienne Rich, Cherríe Moraga, and Audre Lorde. Each author is, in fact, able to write her own autobiography only by using a narrative form that contains her mother’s story at its core. These texts raise interesting questions about autobiography as a genre and about a feminist writing practice that resists and subverts the dominant literary tradition.

Malin theorizes a hybrid form of autobiographical narrative containing an embedded narrative of the mother. The textual relationship between the two narratives is unique among texts in the auto/biographical canon. This alternative narrative practice—in which the daughter attempts to talk both to her mother and about her—is equally an autobiography and a biography rather than one or the other. The technique is marked by a breakdown of subject/object categories as well as auto/biographical dichotomies of genre. Each text contains a “self” that is more plural than singular, yet neither.

            

In addition to being a theoretical and textual analysis, Malin’s book is also a mother-daughter autobiography and biography itself. She shares her own story and her mother’s story as a way to connect directly with readers and as a way to bridge the gap between theory and practice.

            

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Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

“There is a ‘heart’ to The Voice of the Mother that gives it pace and momentum both steady and strong. . . . I find the primary texts chosen the most compelling aspect of the project as a whole. The critical voices that converse in the secondary sources seem just right. And Malin’s own voice resonating regularly works well.”—Fran Bartkowski, author of Feminist Utopias and Travelers, Immigrants, Inmates: Essays in Estrangement

Booknews
Through a critique of ten texts of as many 20th century women writers (e.g. Woolf, Rich, Lorde, Moraga, Steedman) who embed their mother's stories in a hybrid form of autobiography with multiple voices, an administrator at the State U. of New York at Binghamton frames intriguing questions about the genre and feminist writing practice. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Product Details

ISBN-13:
9780809322664
Publisher:
Southern Illinois University Press
Publication date:
05/28/2000
Edition description:
1st Edition
Pages:
136
Product dimensions:
6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.50(d)
Lexile:
1160L (what's this?)

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