Napalm and After: The Politics of Grace Paley's Short Fiction


Autoria(s): Newman, Judie
Data(s)

2001

Resumo

Comparatively few contemporary writers have accompanied American POWs home from Hanoi, been arrested on the White House Lawn, or been dragged off in shackles to serve time in the Greenwich Village Women's House of Detention. Paley's pacifist, socialist politics are also deeply rooted in a family past where memories were still fresh of Tsarist oppression - one uncle shot dead carrying the red flag, and parents who reached America only because the Tsar had a son and amnestied all political prisoners under the age of twenty-one. At this point, Paley's father (imprisoned in Archangel) and her mother (in exile) took their chances (and all their surviving relatives) and very sensibly ran for their lives. Her grandmother recalled family arguments around the table between Paley's father (Socialist), Uncle Grisha (Communist), Aunt Luba (Zionist), and Aunt Mira (also Communist). Paley's own street-wise adolescence involved the usual teenage gang fights, between adherents of the Third and Fourth Internationals. This article is copyright MHRA 2001, and is included in this repository with permission.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/539/1/YES_31_2001_2-9.pdf

Newman, Judie (2001) Napalm and After: The Politics of Grace Paley's Short Fiction. Year Book of English Studies, 31 . pp. 2-9.

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Modern Humanitites Research Association

Relação

http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/539/

Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed