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Journal ArticleDOI

Women's Ways in War: The Poetry and Politics of the Woman's Peace Party, 1915-1917

Mark W. Van Wienen
- 01 Jan 1992 - 
- Vol. 38, Iss: 3, pp 687-714
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TLDR
The Swarthmore College Peace Collection as discussed by the authors contains two and a half file boxes of miscellaneous "peace poetry" sorted alphabetically by author, most of which date from before 1940.
Abstract
In the Swarthmore College Peace Collection, there are two and a half file boxes of miscellaneous "peace poetry" sorted alphabetically by author—the productions of hundreds of obscure and forgotten poets. Most of these poems survive in one-of-a-kind pamphlets, newspaper clippings, and rare journals. Judging from the items identified by date of publication and from historical references scattered through the poems, virtually all were written in this century, and most date from before 1940.1 More than the introduction of individual writers into the canon, this mass of poems, all in some way entering into dialogue with pacifist politics, undermines our confidence that the literary history of modernism is something we already know. Furthermore, much of the poetry in the Swarthmore Collection challenges our usual literary critical methodologies, which even when they concern themselves with questions of politics and history often conceive of individual authors or literary coteries as in relief against a historical-political backdrop, less participants than critics of society. The poems in the Swarthmore collection particularly work against this view because so many of them have transparent ties to a specific political organization, the Woman's Peace Party (WPP), which was one of the groups most active in opposing American intervention in World War I.

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Citations
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The Art of Citizenship: Suffrage Literature as Social Pedagogy

TL;DR: The Art of Citizenship as mentioned in this paper examines the largely forgotten literary tradition that emerged as part of the women's suffrage movement in the United States, exploring through these texts and their history the relationship between literature, pedagogy, and social change.
Journal ArticleDOI

Winds of Doctrine

TL;DR: In this paper, it is suggested that adult educators be given a distinct training of their own, in order to produce a special professionally trained body of workers duly initiated into mysteries that have been whispered to them while under some special spell.
Book ChapterDOI

‘The Huge Gun with Its One Blind Eye’: Scale and the War Poetry and Writings of Harriet Monroe

TL;DR: According to Nosheen Khan in Women's Poetry of the First World War, the writing of women during the time between 1914 and 1918 is a hitherto neglected part of the huge literature inspired by the war.
Journal ArticleDOI

Poetics of the Frugal Housewife: A Modernist Narrative of the Great War and America

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on poems treating the politics of food conservation, including poems by writers associated with the US Food Administration, with the Woman's Peace Party (WPP) and the Socialist Party, and with the Vigilantes, a patriotic writers' syndicate, giving access to a political and poetic narrative illuminating American literature and culture in the 1910s.
References
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Book

American Heroine: The Life and Legend of Jane Addams

TL;DR: The best known account of Addams's life, work, and ideas remains the standard biography of any great American woman as mentioned in this paper, with a new Introduction by the author and a new introduction by William L. O'Neill.
Book

Modernism : 1890-1930

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the ideas, groupings and social tensions that shaped the transformation of life caused by the changes of modernity in art, science, politics and philosophy.
Book

Peace and bread in time of war

Jane Addams
TL;DR: In "The Long Road of Women's Memory", an extended musing on the roles of memory and myth in women's lives, Addams also recalls attacks by the press and defends her political ideals as discussed by the authors.
Book

Repression and recovery: Modern American poetry and the politics of cultural memory, 1910-1945

Cary Nelson
TL;DR: A poststructuralist literary history as discussed by the authors aims to recover the political questions many forgotten modern poets looked straight in the eye, and the history of modernist culture is one we no longer know we have forgotten.