Introduction: American Women Activists and Autobiography: Rhetorical Lives 1 The Progressive Cassandra: Rhetoric in Jane Addam’s Twenty Years at Hull-House 2 Anarchism and the Rhetoric of Womanhood: Emma Goldman’s Living My Life 3 Dorothy Day and the Rhetoric of Paradox 4 Angela Davis: An Autobiography and the Rhetoric of Race Consciousness 5 Rhetorical Sovereignty and the Gendered Body in Mary Crow Dog’s Lakota Woman 6 Betty Friedan’s Life So Far and New Activist Paradigms
Heather Ostman is the author or editor of multiple books, including Kate Chopin and Catholicism (2020). She teaches English at Westchester Community College in Valhalla, NY, where she also serves as Director of the Humanities Institute.
'Heather Ostman approaches the autobiographical projects of Jane
Addams, Emma Goldman, Dorothy Day, Angela Davis, Mary Crow Dog, and
Betty Friedan by looking at what they shared and what they did not,
especially regarding the authors’ feminist rhetorics and the
various ways their lives and social justice causes were entangled.
This premise is particularly exciting for scholars interested in
the relationship between life writing and social justice. Ostman’s
volume can be read as an evolution of themes (womanhood,
sisterhood,
motherhood, marriage, class, race, gendered body, conversion)
threaded along each chapter.'- Ana Belén Martínez García, Associate
Professor of English at the University of Navarra
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