Lexington Books
Pages: 314
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-8319-9 • Hardback • October 2014 • $142.00 • (£109.00)
978-1-4985-0088-3 • Paperback • April 2016 • $59.99 • (£46.00)
978-0-7391-8320-5 • eBook • October 2014 • $57.00 • (£44.00)
Janet Boyd is assistant professor of English at Fairleigh Dickinson University.
Sharon J. Kirsch is an assistant professor of English and rhetorical studies at Arizona State University.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction. A Primer for Primary Stein
Sharon J. Kirsch and Janet Boyd
Chapter 1. Make It Plain: Stein and Toklas Publish the Plain Edition
Gabrielle Dean
Chapter 2. Woolfenstein, the Sequel
Rachel Blau DuPlessis
Chapter 3. “Come too”: 1920s Erotic Rights Discourse and Gertrude Stein’s “Patriarchal Poetry”
Jody Cardinal
Chapter 4. Long Dull Poems: Stein’s Stanzas in Meditation and Wordsworth’s The Prelude
Rebecca Ariel Porte
Chapter 5. tender buttons, notwithstanding
Neil Schmitz
Chapter 6. How to Read How to Write: Bothering with Gertrude Stein
Sharon J. Kirsch
Chapter 7. Framing Devices: Reading Background in the Sequence of Gertrude Stein’s Composition
Linda Voris
Chapter 8. Radio Free Stein: Rendering Queen and Country
Adam Frank
Chapter 9. “A Spare American Emotion”
E. L. McCallum
Chapter 10. “More light!—Electric Light.” Stein in Dialogue with the Romantic Paradigm in Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights
Sarah Posman
Chapter 11. Gertrude Stein’s Geographical History of Literature
Janet Boyd
Chapter 12. Modernist and Future Ex-Modernist: Postwar Stein
Kristin Bergen
Chapter 13. History, Narrative, and “Daily Living” in Wars I Have Seen
Phoebe Stein
Chapter 14. Mrs. Reynolds: Stein’s Anti-Nazi Novel
Steven Gould Axelrod
Appendix A: A Note on the Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas Papers in the Twenty-First Century
Nancy Kuhl
Appendix B: “The Gertrude Stein Collection” reprinted from The Yale Gazette 22.2 (October 1947)
Donald Gallup
Index
Notes on contributors
Primary Stein will become a primary source for our reading of Gertrude Stein, among the greatest of modern writers, among the most incessantly challenging. I am grateful for this smart, original book.— Catharine R. Stimpson, New York University
It is great to have an anthology that returns to the writing of Gertrude Stein, since her interesting life and times have often diverted attention from actually reading her work. Stein’s work is unlike any other writing—funny, challenging, almost physical in its rhythms, rhymes, and patterns of repetition, and it covers many genres and modes of writing. Sharon J. Kirsch and Janet Boyd’s volume Primary Stein: Returning to the Writing of Gertrude Stein is an inspiration to anyone who wants to read Gertrude Stein’s work, whether that one is a practiced reader or just beginning to read Stein. And anyone who teaches Stein’s writing will find the essays on a selection of works as well as on publication history and the poetics of Stein very useful.— Tania Ørum, University of Copenhagen
This is a terrific collection—lucid, wide ranging, and rich. Boyd and Kirsch have assembled a wonderful group of essays on a variety of Stein texts, representing a range of approaches to Stein’s work. This collection is an exciting contribution to Stein scholarship and will also appeal to scholars in feminist and gender studies, modernist studies, and other areas.— Deborah Mix, Ball State University
Primary Stein heralds a return to where the impetus of literary critical should lay: with the writing itself, rather than with a character assassination of a nearly 70 year-old Jewish lesbian who was just trying to save her life (as well as the life of her also Jewish lesbian partner, Alice B. Toklas) during World War II. With this collection of essays, Boyd and Kirsch remind us about the scope and sophistication — as well as the playfulness and sensuality — of Stein’s writing.— Lambda Literary
Janet Boyd and Sharon J. Kirsch’s Primary Stein: Returning to the Writing of Gertrude Stein fulfils its titular ambitions of sparking a revaluation and rethinking of Stein’s accomplishments through greater reference to her texts in published and archival forms while lessening the privileged position often accorded to her personality and coterie…. The attention here to the Stein archives, primarily at Yale but also important collections at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin and the Donald Gallup Collection at the Southern Methodist University, is rich…. The individual contributions should have a significant impact on studies of Stein.— Year's Work in English Studies