Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Oates, Joyce Carol (Vol. 108) - Eleanor J. Bader (review date Winter 1993–94)


Oates, Joyce Carol (Vol. 108) - Eleanor J. Bader (review date Winter 1993–94)

Eleanor J. Bader (review date Winter 1993–94)

SOURCE: "A Working-Class Sorority," in Belles Lettres: A Review of Books by Women, Vol. 9, No. 2, Winter, 1993–94, p. 15.

[In the review below, Bader elucidates the feminist themes of Foxfire, noting the questions raised by the text.]

The place is Hammond, New York, far upstate, near Canada. For five girls—Legs Sadovsky, Goldie Siefried, Lana Maguire, Rita O'Hagan, and Maddy Wirtz—working class kids from the shabby, hopeless section of town, the truth is indisputable: "We didn't belong and never would."

Foxfire, the girl gang they create in 1953, is their antidote, their way of thumbing their noses at the teachers, bosses, upper-class students, landlords, and politicians who disdain them. The brainchild of Legs, Foxfire starts as a tiny, secret society and gradually evolves into a complex organization dedicated to exacting justice for the disenfranchised, especially...

[The entire page is 775 words long]

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