{"title":"现代性与性别空间的再协商:一篇评论文章","authors":"E. Birmingham","doi":"10.2979/NWS.2007.19.1.201","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In fall 2003, NWSA Journal's special issue \"Gender and Modernism Between the Wars, 1918-1939,\" Margaret McFadden noted in her editor's introduction, \"Making the Modern,\" that at the Modernist Studies Association conference of 2003 only about 8 percent of the sessions dealt with women or gender. She draws from that evidence the conclusion that \"gender questions have not yet made it to the academic mainstream of modernist studies\" (ix). That same issue of the journal included the review essay, \"Feminist Relocations of Gender and Modernism,\" by Bonnie Kime Scott. Scott reviewed seven books published from 1997 to 2001 in order to consider the intersections of gender and modernism. And since 2003, interest in modernity (and gender) has continued to fuel interdisciplinary scholarship and shape contemporary perceptions of the modern and how it was made. But despite the number of books on gender and modernity published in the past ten years, these books are underreviewed except in feminist journals like this one, suggesting that gender questions still are not making it into the mainstream of modernist studies, though modernist studies have found their way into the mainstream of feminist conversation. The three books with which this review concerns itself share a set of preoccupations with issues of not only gender and modernity but also of space (both literal and metaphoric) as a factor shaping and defining both. Liz Conor's book, The Spectacular Modern Woman, argues that Australian women who had the power to do so-usually white women-actively cultivated modern images of themselves to present in public spaces, reshaping notions of femininity by and against the figure of the \"modern appearing woman.\" Lucy Fischer also considers the image of the modern woman, but in Designing Women: Cinema, Art Deco, and the Female Form, she focuses instead on the stylistic and aesthetic aspects of cinematic space","PeriodicalId":88071,"journal":{"name":"NWSA journal : a publication of the National Women's Studies Association","volume":"19 1","pages":"201 - 210"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2007-04-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Modernity and the Renegotiation of Gendered Space: A Review Essay\",\"authors\":\"E. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
2003年秋天,在NWSA杂志的特刊“1918-1939年战争期间的性别与现代主义”中,玛格丽特·麦克法登在她的编辑引言“创造现代”中指出,在2003年的现代主义研究协会会议上,只有大约8%的会议涉及女性或性别。她从这些证据中得出结论,“性别问题还没有进入现代主义研究的学术主流”(ix)。同一期杂志包括了邦妮·金·斯科特(Bonnie Kime Scott)的评论文章《性别与现代主义的女权主义重新定位》(Feminist Relocations of gender and Modernism)。斯科特回顾了1997年至2001年间出版的七本书,以思考性别与现代主义的交集。自2003年以来,对现代性(和性别)的兴趣继续推动着跨学科的学术研究,并塑造了当代对现代性及其形成方式的看法。但是,尽管在过去的十年里出版了很多关于性别和现代性的书,但这些书除了在像这本这样的女权主义期刊上发表之外,都没有得到足够的评论,这表明性别问题仍然没有进入现代主义研究的主流,尽管现代主义研究已经进入了女性主义对话的主流。这三本评论所关注的书本身都有一系列的关注,不仅是性别和现代性的问题,还有空间(无论是字面上的还是隐喻上的)作为塑造和定义这两者的因素。利兹·康纳在《引人注目的现代女性》一书中认为,有能力这样做的澳大利亚女性——通常是白人女性——积极塑造自己在公共场所的现代形象,通过或反对“现代女性形象”来重塑女性气质的概念。露西·菲舍尔也考虑了现代女性的形象,但在《设计女性:电影、装饰艺术和女性形式》一书中,她关注的是电影空间的风格和美学方面
Modernity and the Renegotiation of Gendered Space: A Review Essay
In fall 2003, NWSA Journal's special issue "Gender and Modernism Between the Wars, 1918-1939," Margaret McFadden noted in her editor's introduction, "Making the Modern," that at the Modernist Studies Association conference of 2003 only about 8 percent of the sessions dealt with women or gender. She draws from that evidence the conclusion that "gender questions have not yet made it to the academic mainstream of modernist studies" (ix). That same issue of the journal included the review essay, "Feminist Relocations of Gender and Modernism," by Bonnie Kime Scott. Scott reviewed seven books published from 1997 to 2001 in order to consider the intersections of gender and modernism. And since 2003, interest in modernity (and gender) has continued to fuel interdisciplinary scholarship and shape contemporary perceptions of the modern and how it was made. But despite the number of books on gender and modernity published in the past ten years, these books are underreviewed except in feminist journals like this one, suggesting that gender questions still are not making it into the mainstream of modernist studies, though modernist studies have found their way into the mainstream of feminist conversation. The three books with which this review concerns itself share a set of preoccupations with issues of not only gender and modernity but also of space (both literal and metaphoric) as a factor shaping and defining both. Liz Conor's book, The Spectacular Modern Woman, argues that Australian women who had the power to do so-usually white women-actively cultivated modern images of themselves to present in public spaces, reshaping notions of femininity by and against the figure of the "modern appearing woman." Lucy Fischer also considers the image of the modern woman, but in Designing Women: Cinema, Art Deco, and the Female Form, she focuses instead on the stylistic and aesthetic aspects of cinematic space