Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Stafford, Jean - Mary Ellen Williams Walsh (essay date 1982)
Stafford, Jean - Mary Ellen Williams Walsh (essay date 1982)
Mary Ellen Williams Walsh (essay date 1982)
SOURCE: "The Young Girl in the West: Disenchantment in Jean Stafford's Short Fiction," in Women and Western American Literature, The Whitston Publishing Company, 1982, pp. 230-43.
[In this essay, Walsh examines the role of women and girls in the western stories in The Collected Stories of Jean Stafford.]
In the Pulitzer Prize-winning The Collected Stories of Jean Stafford, Stafford groups ten stories under the heading, "Cowboys and Indians, and Magic Mountains." The heading, which suggests a romantic, mythic West of the past filled with red men and white men in conflict, ironically comments on the contemporary, restricted lives of the characters in Stafford's stories who grow up overshadowed by that myth. For Stafford's central characters are girls and young women and a small Indian boy. They live in a modern West, most of them in one small town, a vantage point from which they get only...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Howard Mumford Jones (review date 1953)
- William Peden (review date 1953)
- Olga W. Vickery (essay date 1962)
- Eleanor Perry (review date 1964)
- Honor Tracy (review date 1964)
- Thomas Curley (review date 1965)
- Guy Davenport (review date 1969)
- Morris Dickstein (review date 1969)
- Irving Malin (review date 1969)
- Joyce Carol Oates (essay date 1979)
- Mary Ellen Williams Walsh (essay date 1982)
- William G. Leary (essay date 1983)
- Mary Ellen Williams Walsh (essay date 1985)
- William G. Leary (essay date 1986)
- Maureen Ryan (essay date 1987)
- Bruce Bawer (essay date 1988)
- Stacey D'Erasmo (essay date 1992)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
