- Showalter, Elaine
-
▪ American literary critic and teacherborn Jan. 21, 1941, Boston, Mass., U.S.American literary critic and teacher, and founder of gynocritics, a school of feminist criticism concerned with “woman as writer . . . with the history, themes, genres, and structures of literature by women.”Showalter studied English at Bryn Mawr College (B.A., 1962), Brandeis University (M.A., 1964), and the University of California, Davis (Ph.D., 1970). She joined the faculty of Douglass College, the women's division of Rutgers University, in 1969, where she developed women's studies courses and began editing and contributing articles to books and periodicals about women's literature. She later taught at Rutgers and Princeton University, neither of which hired women when she began her teaching career; she retired from Princeton as professor emeritus in 2003. Showalter also spent time as a freelance journalist and media commentator.Showalter developed her doctoral thesis into her first book, A Literature of Their Own: British Women Novelists from Brontë to Lessing (1977), a pioneering study in which she created a critical framework for analyzing literature by women. Her next book, The Female Malady: Women, Madness, and English Culture, 1830–1980 (1985), was a historical examination of women and the practice of psychiatry. She also wrote Sexual Anarchy: Gender and Culture at the Fin de Siècle (1990); Sister's Choice: Tradition and Change in American Women's Writing (1991); Hystories: Historical Epidemics and Modern Culture (1997), a controversial exploration of the history of mass hysteria; Inventing Herself: Claiming a Feminist Intellectual Heritage (2001), which follows the evolution of the feminist intellectual from the 18th to the 21st century; Teaching Literature (2003); and Faculty Towers: The Academic Novel and Its Discontents (2005), an analysis of the academic novel and its relation to real-world institutes of higher education. Showalter edited several volumes, including The New Feminist Criticism (1985) and Daughters of Decadence: Women Writers of the Fin de Siècle (1993).
* * *
Universalium. 2010.