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American Geographical Society Harvesting Willa Cather's Literary Fields Author(s): Beth Rundstrom Reviewed work(s): Source: Geographical Review, Vol. 85, No. 2 (Apr., 1995), pp. 217-228 Published by: American Geographical Society Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/216064 . Accessed: 29/04/2012 23:39 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. American Geographical Society is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Geographical Review. http://www.jstor.org HARVESTING WILLA CATHER'S LITERARY FIELDS* BETH RUNDSTROM Feminist criticism provides a theoretical base for interpreting gendered space in literature. The relationship of fictional women with the environment and their portrayal in the literary landscape are important considerations and reveal an author's geographies. This theory is the framework for an analysis of the prairie saga, "O Pioneers!," by Willa Cather. She uses independent houses, homes, and homesteads to symbolize women; her houses reflect the social roles and status of women in the early 1900s. Key words: Cather[Willa],feminist criticism, human-land relationships, literary geography, prairie settlement. ABSTRACT. Literary geography examines relationships between landscape and its portrayal in literature. Virtually all scholarly work in the field cites the humanistic interpretation of perceived landscape: individuals experience, perceive, and then conceptually re-createspace (Tuan1977).Interpretationsvary because individuals bring differentmind-sets and affinities to the same landscape. Writerstransform geographical facts into literary symbols through topophilia, the bond or sentiment between people and place (Tuan 1974). Human-land relationships are the inspiration and impetus for invented landscapes; people best express that which they know and feel. Authors use invented literarysettings, the where of a story, to represent landscape symbolically. Literary geographers examine an author's conceptual sense of place to enhance understanding and to enrich readers' geographies. Sensitive to gender in spatial issues, feminist geographers agree that women are important subjects for geographical research (Monk 1984; Domosh 1991;Kay 1991) and that feminist geographical practices should be grounded in theory (McDowell 1988, 1989). For literary geography I propose a theoretical foundation called feminist criticism. Currently, there is general agreement that researchin literarygeography is a humanistic endeavor that uses subjective assessment of creative literature to clarify relationships between individuals and their spatial environment. With abundant text and thought, literary geography is indeed a field ready to harvest with respect to content and methodology. Assuming that literary landscapes are open to interpretation,authors are both cognizant of and influenced by their social milieu in their use of setting to express perceived conditions of society. I proffer this theoretical approach as a beginning of literary-geographical theory and criticism. I then analyze "O Pioneers!"by novelist Willa Cather in this framework. * I thank JosephS. Woodfor his assistancewith this article. Ms. RUNDSTROM is an instructor in geography at George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia 22030-4444. Copyright? 1995by theAmericanGeographical Societyof NewYork 218 THE GEOGRAPHICAL REVIEW FEMINISTCRITICISM The purpose of feminist criticism is to produce a reading of gendered space in literary text. It interprets women's experience with the environment as expressed in woman-centered fiction. This viewpoint concurrently dislodges traditional masculinist ideologies and celebrates the uniqueness of the female perspective. Feminist criticism analyzes the female author's subjective view of reality. Her portrayal of landscape is truthful in that it represents her feelings and attitudes about a place. When the transparent, surface meanings of settings are accepted as authorintended landscape descriptions, the different viewpoint can be understood and appreciated. Such a reading of literary setting descriptions elucidates an author's geography, her sense of place. Women use and interpret language in unique and different ways (Tannen 1990). Their metaphors and free associations reflect their sense of connection as they relate ideas, people, and places to themselves (Gilligan 1982). It is important to look for recurring landscape symbols in women's writings to uncover their intended, yet hidden meanings. On walking through a wooded glade and witnessing a wild sow suckling her young in the lush greenery, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings referred to her fertile Floridian lakeside hammock as "the universe," "the cosmic life" (Rawlings 1942, 39). To Sarah Orne Jewett (1886), an elusive white heron symbolized freedom in the Maine woods. Significantly, she used a girlchild to keep the location of the heron's nest a secret from a male hunter. Though poor, the girl understood and valued freedom above the handsome monetary reward the hunter would have paid her for the information. Here, too, it is important to consider how an author symbolizes women in a landscape and the image of women that this produces. These symbols may indicate women's cultural roles. For example, when Meridel Le Sueur (1991) was pregnant, she likened herself to a curling-branched pear tree, heavy with ripening fruit. It is an image of a fertile earth-woman who provides for her inhabitants-children. Using soil as metaphor for women, Marge Piercy illustrates women's fertility and universal low social status in her poem, "The Common Living Dirt" (Piercy 1991, 341): You can live thousands of years undressing in the spring your black body, your red body, your brown body penetrated by the rain. Here is the goddess unveiled, the earth opening her strong thighs. Authorial intention and the cultural contexts of time and place are important considerations in analyzing landscape images. WILLA CATHER'S LITERARY FIELDS 219 A woman's geography is found in her writings. Her literaturepresents her perception of her environment and her relationship to it. Feminist criticism is the means to understand such perceptions. When reading for the author's intended or transparentmeaning, we appreciatea new view; when we read for the hidden intended and unintended meanings, we gain a fuller view. These viewpoints are importantin knowing a woman's place. "O PIONEERS!" Willa Cather was born in Virginia in 1873; she moved to a Nebraska ranch in the mixed-grass prairiewith her family when she was nine years old. Two years later the Cathers moved to the town of Red Cloud in Webster County, Nebraska. In 1884 Red Cloud was a new town in a corn-growing region, and approximately 10 to 15 percent of its immigrant population was foreign born (Baltensperger 1985, 74). Cather was especially attracted to Scandinavian, French, German, and Bohemian immigrant women and their cultural arts. She used her childhood memories of people and places, pioneers on the Nebraska prairie, to create literary images wherein the "country is hero" (Sergeant 1992, 102). Cather wrote "O Pioneers!" for her own enjoyment of art, not for money or the entertainment of others (Cather1949).The book was published in 1913 (Cather 1913). "O Pioneers!" opens with a winter landscape scene. Snow and wind bluster about buildings in the small Nebraska town of Hanover. Swedish homesteader John Bergson dies and leaves his only daughter,Alexandra, to manage a 640-acrefarm and a family that includes her mother and three brothers. Alexandra revels in her relationship with the seasons and the soil. Even during a drought, she feels a closeness with the country and decides to purchase more land, against the wishes of her brothers. She prospers in spite of difficult circumstances,which include the murder of her youngest brother. By the time Alexandra is forty years old, she has one of the richest farms in the region. In "O Pioneers!"Cather veered from traditional masculinist ideology that characterizedmid-nineteenth-centuryAmerican literature:man conquers land. If woman had a central role in that literature,she was a docile woman at home (Dotterer and Bowers 1992). Cather rejected gender-related stereotypes in fiction; she created female individualists rather than female imitations of male protagonists (Thomas 1990).Although she was not the first or only writer to do so, Cather portrayed women as active shapers of the environment. The women in Cather's writings have an inner strength and are connected with the land. Cather did not portray a Darwinian prairie wherein the physically strong persevere (Ostwalt 1990).Physical strength did not ensure success on her plains; characteristicssuch as imagination 220 REVIEW THEGEOGRAPHICAL and understanding did. When Alexandra carries a lantern into the night, she is light in a deep, dark country.Difficulties make her more vigorous, but she remains calm. She is truthful, steadfast, a "triumphantkind of person" (Cather 1913, 302) who soothes animals and makes people feel good about themselves. Gatherportrays harmonious relationships between women and land. This connection is partially inherent, because women and the earth experience similar seasonal-menstrual rhythms and reach out to and are responsive to others (Benjamin 1986; Weedon 1987). The connection is also social, in that women's cultural roles bind them to the land. Gather recognizes that prairie women were economically and socially central on the frontier landscape (Gilbert and Guber 1989). The protagonists in "O Pioneers!" preserve both land and life as they bottle fox grapes and ground cherries. Alexandra, whose name hails from a Greekword meaning "to defend," insists on keeping the farmsteadwhen her brotherswant to leave it. The women in Gather's writings understand the strengths of the land and adapt to the prairie to preserve it, not to conquer it (Thacker 1989). Alexandra maintains close connections with the land through farming;she loves, manages, daydreams about, and defends her property. After two years of drought, her garden continues producing sweet potatoes, rhubarb,asparagus, and flowers, while neighboring farmerssell out and move away. There is no defeat for Alexandra, because there never was competition. She treats her land as herself because she is part of it and will one day return to it. It is also useful to analyze Gather's literary imagery.In "O Pioneers!" she uses a recurring association of house, home, and homestead in the prairie landscape that symbolizes women. This image reflects the social values and cultural contexts in the United States at the time the novel was written, the early 1900s, and is Gather's prognosis for change in these values and history. The association is plausible in terms of the accepted role for women in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. By the mid-nineteenth century, the percentage of population in the United States practicing agriculturedeclined as manufacturingand service industries expanded. Prior to this, economic production and reproduction were carried out by men and women largely in the same place: at home. Nineteenth-century industrialization separated workplace and home. Factories replaced homes as the place wherein traditional household work such as the making of textiles, foodstuffs, soap, and candles was accomplished. Carolyn Merchant(1989) terms that period of change the capitalist ecological revolution, because the expanding global market economy brought about massive exploitation of resources to benefit members of the consumption-conscious middle class. During that period men assumed virtually all responsibility for economic production outside the home, while reproductive roles were relegated to women, who re- WILLA CATHER'S LITERARY FIELDS 221 mained at home. Women were discouraged from entering the workplace by male-established unequal pay structures (Chodorow 1978).Moreover, the rise of suburban communities distanced women geographically from central-city workplaces. Women were accountable for home and all within. Because they spent more time at home than men did, they were responsible for nurturing children. Physical care-giving and social education fell to women (Wright 1981), who were essentially responsible for household moral values, especially those of their children. Ministers preached that inhabitants' values could be known from the appearance of their homes. Because homes were under feminine control, a woman could be known by observing her home; it represented her. In this way, a home was an extension of a woman. A social construct, home continues to be a place imbued with moral meaning where biosocial needs are met (Tuan1991). Feminists and psychologists have long recognized the interrelatedness tendencies of women (Chodorow 1978; Gilligan 1982; Hartsock 1983). Women seek connections with people and with landscape. People and the environment connected in nineteenth-century houses. Children were conceived and born in the home, and family members met there after work. In this comparison, a home is likened to a womb; homewoman was the place where relationshipswere createdand strengthened. Women were home through association: they performed functions that were home related, and they performed them at home. Although factories produced multitudes of goods, many farm families lacked the funds to purchase necessities such as clothing and soap. Rural women continued to manufacture these goods, although on the frontier the activity was not considered gainful employment (Myres 1982). Women were essential in nineteenth-century ruralhouseholds, because they provided essential material substance and conserved scarce financial resources. They grew, preserved, and prepared foods and made cloth and clothing-activities that occurred in or near their homes. Women and homes were factories; each was a source of production, each was necessary in frontier settlement. Frontier-bred Willa Cather was aware of the essential association between prairiewomen and homes. As a drama and literarycritic,Cather was familiar with the use of symbolism in artisticworks before she wrote her own books. On at least one occasion she acknowledged using house imagery in a story (Cather1949,31). In "TheProfessor's House," she filled stifling rooms with the trivialities and trappings of material culture. The house represented contemporary vanities and jealousies, which stood in stark contrast to unassuming visitors and their simple stories. Cather (1949) admittedly experimented with form and language; it is not unlikely that she used houses and homes to symbolize women on the prairie 222 THEGEOGRAPHICAL REVIEW landscape in order to explicate women's social milieu during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. THE HOUSETHATCATHERBUILT "OPioneers!"opens with a description of a small railroadtown on the Nebraska plains (Cather 1913, 3). One January day, thirty years ago, the little town of Hanover, anchored on a windy Nebraska tableland, was trying not to be blown away. A mist of fine snowflakes was curling and eddying about the cluster of low drab buildings huddled on the gray prairie, under a gray sky. The dwelling-houses were set about haphazard on the tough prairie sod; some of them looked as if they had been moved in overnight, and others as if they were straying off by themselves, headed straight for the open plain. None of them had any appearanceof permanence,and the howling wind blew under them as well as over them. This setting influences the charactersand the action that follow. Typical of the backlighting technique (Thacker 1989) in pastoral literature, wherein setting description supersedes and facilitates characterdescription, Hanover is introduced in detail. Humans do not appear until two pages later, a technique that makes the landscape itself a characterto be analyzed. I assert that the dwellings Cather created to be seen in the mind's eye are not merely the first evidence of humanity in the story; they are humanity itself, female humanity. Prairie women were central to the frontierlandscape, as Catherknew (Gilbertand Guber 1989).The houses appear front and center to call attention to women. A survey of the description and location of houses in the novel leads to better understanding of women's condition in society. Cathercreatedhouses and women thatwere drab (1913,3), "crouching in a hollow" (15), and "smalland usually tucked away in low places" (19). Diminutive in social status, those women lacked rights to property and wealth under English common law (Faragher1979). In marriage the wife was subservient and secondary to the husband, who directed the farm and disciplined the family.A woman silently followed her husband, even when he sold her prenuptial property without consulting her (Dick 1937). It is likely that many women crouched in fearbecause their husbands beat and abused them-legal and not uncommon behavior (Weatherford1986). They may have crouched in loneliness and social neglect as well, because women were seldom involved in the excitement of town life. Drab, demanding domestic duties kept women home, out of public life. Figuratively hidden away in homesteads on empty, open plains where all should have been visible, "you did not see them until you came directly upon them" (Cather 1913, 19). FIELDS WILLACATHER'SLITERARY 223 Patriarchalhierarchyconstrained these women, kept them geographically and socially home, away from political and cultural affairs. "The homesteads were few and far apart" (Cather 1913, 15). The resulting isolation represents women's difficulty organizing themselves in a maleestablished political structure. The layout of dwellings in Hanover"haphazard on the tough prairie sod"-further supports this premise. Male-created and male-frequented towns were polling sites. On voting day, a holiday, men filled towns with drunken festivities (Faragher1979). Women were neither invited nor allowed. Men were reluctant to extend voting rights and associated tokens of male privilege to women. They daunted women's attempts to organize politically; they facilitated disorder among women. Male-established social structures made prairie life even more difficult. "[T]hehowling wind blew under [the houses] as well as over them" (Cather 1913, 3). The prairie winds that tormented and tossed anything unrooted represented the limited choices and resources available to prairie women who were cut off from familiarpeople and places. Inhabitants but not legal entities, women had no recourse against laws that allowed men to separate them forcibly from their families and that awarded children and dowry to husbands in divorce settlements (Faragher1979). The drab invisibility of women suggests that they were merely the background against which frontier settlement took place-or so it seems in Part I of "O Pioneers!" In Part II, the location and description of houses and women change. Sixteen years have passed since Alexandra's father died and left her in charge of the family property.Cather does not cover the struggles during that interval, but the changed conditions of the homestead clearly convey Alexandra's triumph. Her success is revealed by Cather's portrayalof the house from the perspective of riders in a wagon. They drove "toward a big white house that stood on a hill, several miles across the fields" (Cather 1913, 83). Significantly,this house is big-Cather describes it as big twice in one paragraph-and it stands on a hill. A woman has asserted herself on the landscape! No longer low in status or insufficient in function, she is in the middle of the frontier situation, as Cather understood her to be (Gilbert and Guber 1989).Not only is the woman standing ratherthan crouching, but also she has achieved even higher status because she is on a hill. Perhaps Cather acknowledges that women's status was higher on the plains than in the East, where women had less effect on socioeconomic structures. On the prairie women are no longer hidden from public view; neighbors see and revere them. People see that women are socially productive and attractively beneficial. Houses and women are more numerous and "gayly painted" (Cather 1913, 75). No longer drab and temporary look- 224 THEGEOGRAPHICAL REVIEW ing, women as houses are beautiful and fruitful. Womenhave established their identities and brought order to a previously haphazard scene: "There is something individual about the great farm, a most unusual trimness and care for detail" (Cather 1913, 83). It is important to consider location of houses and women because space is essential in interpreting social history. In this construct, the meaning and use of space elucidate the status and condition of women. Conventionally, homesteads in traditional societies agglomerated for defense purposes in nucleated villages surrounded by farm fields. In "O Pioneers!"Gatherplaced Alexandra'shouse in the midst of her other farm buildings. At this microscale, Alexandra's house on the hill symbolizes a woman's confidence in her ability to provide for her household; she is source of social security and protection. During the nineteenth century the independent homestead embodied basic American ideals: self-sufficiency,order,attractiveness,culture, morality, stability, and permanence. Alexandra's finely arranged and comfortablehomestead celebrateswomen's sense of order and independence. Gather depicts a symmetrically laid out farm. The significance of this description is in the Greek root of the word symmetry, which means commensurate. The connotation here is that all parts of the farm are related proportionatelyto each other and to the whole. This arrangement exemplifies the feminine idea of connectivity, in which women pursue relationships with people and places in their environment. When Gathersituated Alexandra's lone house on a hill, she lauded the high moral value of prairie women. In contrast with the assumption that settlement and nation-building were male privileges, Gather portrayed women as the solid, stable base for a growing nation. Even though Alexandra's homestead was far distant from others, on her property it was the focus of sheds and outbuildings. This arrangement symbolizes the political and social organization of women. They gathered and prevailed in midst of seemingly overwhelming winds, that is, the male political systems. When Gatherwrote "OPioneers!"only nine states had granted women full voting privileges; social equality had not yet occurred.Gatheris making a hopeful statement about the positive future of women's rights when she portrays women as productive, respected, and connected with other women. She is saying that women as a group will enjoy higher privilege and status. What empowered a fictional woman to overcome constraining social structures and elevate herself to a higher status? Gatherasserts that "the great fact was the land itself" (Cather 1913, 15). Just as women draw meanings and power from the landscape, fictional landscapes are the origin of power and change in prairie literature. Alexandra owns and works her land. She adjusts to and lives by the rhythms of nature. She perseveres during drought, storm, and fire. Womensucceed because they WILLA CATHER'S LITERARY FIELDS 225 live in harmony with the land; women connect with ratherthan conquer the environment. Through the juxtaposition of houses and plains Gather created descriptivelandscapeswherein humans and the environmentinteract.House and home invariably join earth to sky, human to earth, human to human. In the case of sod houses that crouched on the prairie, the connection is even more apparent. Soddies were constructed from thick blocks of soil and grass. Usually built by the impoverished or most recent settlers, they were considered practical but temporary; their solid walls protected inhabitants from extreme heat and cold but enticed snakes and burrowing animals (Nelson 1986).In this house-image, sky, earth, and creaturesmeet in women. "Most of [the houses] were built of the sod itself, and were only the unescapable ground in another form" (Cather 1913, 19). This passage is a reminder that prairie women knew they were figuratively, and would become literally, dust of the earth (Daiches 1951). Gather describes the country as "fortunate"that it would "receivehearts like Alexandra's into its bosom, to give them out again in the yellow wheat, in the rustling corn, in the shining eyes of youth!" (1913, 309). Women would eventually be sustenance for the very earth from which they humbly sustained their households. The connection between women and the earth is further emphasized by Gather's comment, "Alexandra'shouse is the big out-ofdoors" (84);by extension women and homes are the earth. Houses also symbolize feminine connections between humans. Geraniums and fuchsias brighten windowsills of the houses in "O Pioneers!" The sharing of flower cuttings was a link between people and places (Fairbanks 1986; Weatherford 1986). Within a house these links were forged. Alexandra's homestead looks like a tiny village, with sheds and buildings grouped about the main house. The physical proximity and relatedness of the buildings mimic the social cohesiveness of women. So important is the human connection that Alexandra employs three immigrants to work in her kitchen just "to hear them giggle" and to keep her company. The few scenes that take place indoors involve several people: the nuclear family meets in council; the extended family shares dinner;and neighbors visit. Veryseldom is anyone alone in Gather'shouses; they are the origins of feminine connections. Gather's houses elucidate her feelings about immigrants. In her opening description of Hanover, some of the houses "looked as if they had been moved in overnight, and others as if they were straying off by themselves." In my interpretation, these houses are female European immigrants. Germans, Swedes, and Czechs arrived on the prairies after several weeks of grueling travel by ship and train. Until soddies or dugouts were constructed, they lived in tents that were constantly buf- 226 THE GEOGRAPHICAL REVIEW feted by winds. It is thus understandable that the structures looked hastily put together. Many immigrants had never been farmersand were unaccustomed to plains farming. Some were skilled in crafts that counted for naught on the plains. Immigrantwomen were far fromtheir friends and families and had no hope of returninghome. Unfamiliar foods, language, and terrains had a disorienting effect on these women, who "clustered"on the tableland (Cather 1913, 3). Geographers have noted that rural settlement tended to be homogeneous based on wealth and social status;immigrants settled according to ethnicity (Zelinsky 1973).Gatherclusters immigrant women to reflect her experience with Scandinavian and Bohemian immigrants in Nebraska. Gather sympathizes with immigrants' plight in "O Pioneers!," and furthermore she uses house imagery to emphasize the industrious and moralnatureof femaleimmigrants.Swedish immigrantAlexandraBergson first lives in a low log house, because her mother will not live in a sod house (Cather 1913, 29). Mrs. Bergson prefers logs to sod; the family works hard to purchase logs. Although both sod and log homes were temporary structures,log houses were more civilized (Wright1981). Gather showed that far from being amoral, immigrant women were industrious, were cultured, and appreciated beautiful things. Alexandra's new house on the hill has several rooms that are papered, carpeted, and furnished (Cather 1913, 83). Swedish heirlooms gracing the sitting room are a reminder that immigrantsbrought their cultural heritage with them and that women perpetuate their heritage (Squire1993).The dining room is filled with varnished wood, bright glass, and china; guest rooms contain fancy candlesticks and jars. Alexandra "liked plain things herself" (Cather 1913, 97), but she accommodates her guests' tastes. Guests were probably immigrants themselves; when they saw tokens of prosperity in Alexandra's house, they were reassured that they could be productive, successful citizens. Such signs of wealth may be construed to indicate growing materialism (Murphy 1984), especially in Alexandra. However, it is not unlikely that Gather implies that female immigrants will not be an economic burden on Americansociety and that immigrantsarenot unsavory.Gather once wrote that she preferred immigrant women in Nebraska to "traveled" people in Virginia and Washington and that "their words counted extra" (Slote 1966, 448). Some may assert that immigrants had little hope in the United States, but I think Gatherbelieved that immigrants would persevere and advance in status. Alexandra has a recurring dream in which a strong man lifts and carries her across the fields to her home. At first she chides herself for imagining such a fantasy (Cather 1913, 206), but she eventually accepts the dream and finds comfort in it (282). In these episodes, Alexandra is WILLACATHER'SLITERARYFIELDS 227 carried figuratively to her land and home, both of which are extensions of herself. She does not recognize her self-sufficiency and self-identity.As she interacts with the prairie environment, she learns that relationship with the land is a source of strength. Open plains open her soul; she becomes self-aware. Nature's rhythms are her rhythms. She belongs to the land (Cather 1913, 307). To be troubled by illusory dreams no more, Alexandra finds a permanent home within herself. When the saga closes, Alexandra comments that she feels peaceful and free when she is home. A woman has drawn meaning and power from landscape and has freed herself from social constraints. CONCLUSION Feminist criticism is a method for interpreting the geography of a literary setting. The method celebrates women's subjective experience with landscapes and includes analysis of recurring landscape symbols. Female-written literary settings reveal women's perception and conceptualization of space. These conceptualizations may be transparent or metaphorical landscape images that symbolize women and their interaction with the social and natural environments. Of the many symbols on Gather's prairie landscape, houses, homes, and homesteads merit special attention. She creates intriguing houses in a dynamic landscape. Her houses are prairiewomen who connect people and environment. These women and houses shelter the daydreamers and the weary, who reach for stars while founded in firm prairie sod. Integrated into the landscape, houses and women were essential to prairie settlement. Cooperative land-human relationships empowered woman to overcome traditional patriarchal structures and effect changes on landscape. Gather's houses are the source and substance of early-twentieth-century women's self-awareness and changing roles. When a woman comes home she comes to herself, and there she finds greatest freedom. Woman is home. CITATIONS B. H. 1985. a Nebraska, Baltensperger, geography. Boulder: Westview Press. Benjamin, J. 1986. A desire of one's own: psychoanalytic feminism and intersubjective space. Feminist studies, critical studies, ed. T. DeLauretis, 78-101. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. Cather, W. 1913. O Pioneers! Boston: Houghton Mifflin. . 1949. Willa Cather on writing. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. Chodorow, N. J. 1978. 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