A New Home, Who'll Follow? Or, Glimpses of Western LifeSet in the frontier of Michigan int he 1830s, A New Home is the first realistic portrayal of western village life in the United States. Based on Caroline Kirkland's own experiences - and written from a woman's perspective - it narrates with a keen eye and wit the absorbing story of the establishment of the village of Montacute, Michigan. A New Home is a vivid contribution to a new kind of narrative developed during the antebellum period, ethnographic fiction. Kirkland highlights the importance and the drama of local practices and everyday life in Montacute. She traces the way two groups of settlers slowly adjust to each other - the old hands and the newcomers from the East;. Dramatizing differences of class and culture, she also shows how the groups finally form a genuine community and a new, diverse culture. Kirkland also gives ethnographic fiction an original twist: she satirizes the provincialism and the rigidity of both groups of settlers. After writing A New Home, Kirkland became a professional literary woman, working as an editor as well as a writer. In her introduction, Sandra Zagarell explores the implications of Kirkland's writing and professional career for our understanding of women, writing, and the world of literature in antebellum America. |
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Agnes ague American antebellum Audrey Roberts baby Bayard Taylor beauty Beckworth began better Brent called Caroline Caroline Kirkland Catharine Maria Sedgwick Cathcart CHAPTER charming Clavers's comfort Cora cultural door Doubleday dress editor Everard eyes Faerie Queene feel felt female feminine fortunately friends girl Godey's Lady's Book hand Henry honour hour husband Jenkins jist Judith Fetterley Kirkland land least LILILI literary live log-house looked Lydia Maria Child marsh Mary Clavers Mazard Michigan Miss Fidler Montacute morning mother neighbours never night Nippers once poet poor pretty reader Rivers Rose Terry Cooke Sarah Hale Sartain's satire scarcely seemed settlers Shafton Shakespeare society soon sort story sure tell thing thought Tinkerville tion Titmouse told took village sketch walk West western wife wild window woman woods word