Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > Gilman, Charlotte Perkins - Thomas Galt Peyser (essay date spring 1992)
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins - Thomas Galt Peyser (essay date spring 1992)
Thomas Galt Peyser (essay date spring 1992)
SOURCE: “Reproducing Utopia: Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Herland,” in Studies in American Fiction, Vol. 20, No. 1, spring, 1992, pp. 1-16.
[In the following essay, Peyser argues against prevailing interpretations of Herland, claiming that “the imagination of utopia depends on the pre-existence of a utopian imagination.”]
According to the prevailing view of Charlotte Perkins Gilman's Herland, the utopian novel suited the aims of a radical feminism by subverting the confinements of a realism dedicated to the representation of, and thus acquiescence to, a patriarchal order. Summing up this position, Susan Gubar argues that “women abused by the probable refuse it by imagining the possible in a revolutionary rejection of patriarchal culture;” “feminism imagines an alternative reality that is truly fantastic.”1 Along these lines, Herland is seen...
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Criticism
- Linda Wagner-Martin (essay date 1989)
- Lillian S. Robinson (essay date fall 1991)
- Thomas Galt Peyser (essay date spring 1992)
- Minna Doskow (essay date 1992)
- Frank G. Kirkpatrick (essay date 1992)
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