Gayle Greene | |
---|---|
Occupation(s) | Writer, editor, professor |
Academic background | |
Education | University of California at Berkeley (BA, MA) |
Alma mater | Columbia University (PhD) |
Academic work | |
Discipline | English literature |
Sub-discipline | Interdisciplinary Humanities |
Institutions | Scripps College |
Notable works | The Woman Who Knew Too Much: Alice Stewart and the Secrets of Radiation Insomniac The Woman's Part: Feminist Criticism of Shakespeare Making a Difference: Feminist Literary Criticism |
Website |
www |
Gayle Greene (born 1943) is an American literary critic, writer, editor, and professor emerita at Scripps College, Claremont, California. [1] She is the author of six books, including the biography The Woman Who Knew Too Much and the memoir Insomniac. She has also co-edited anthologies of writing by feminist literary scholars, including The Woman's Part: Feminist Criticism of Shakespeare and Making a Difference: Feminist Literary Criticism.
Greene received degrees from U.C. Berkeley (BA and MA) and Columbia (PhD). She taught at Queens College and Brooklyn College of the City University of New York. In 1974 she began teaching at Scripps College. [2] Teaching at a women's college shifted her focus to women writers.
In Changing the Story: Feminist Fiction and the Tradition, in 1991, she argued that feminist fiction of the 1960s-1980s represents breakthroughs in narrative form and content that make it a literary movement comparable to Modernism. [3] Doris Lessing: The Poetics of Change, 1994, brings biographical, historical, intertextual, formalist, feminist, psychoanalytic, and Marxist approaches to the novels of Lessing, arguing that her primary project is change. [4]
Greene later focused on subjects aimed at a wider readership, and wrote the authorized biography of radiation epidemiologist and anti-nuclear guru Alice Stewart, The Woman Who Knew Too Much: Alice Stewart and the Secrets of Radiation, [5] which was first published in 1999. She is also the author of Insomniac (2008), an account of living with insomnia that combines memoir with scientific investigation and Missing Persons (2018), a memoir about loss of family and the transformation of the Santa Clara Valley to Silicon Valley.
Some of Greene's work drew her into a controversy about the role of ideology in reading that became the centerpiece for the anthology Shakespeare Left and Right. [6] She argued that traditional critical approaches are themselves enmeshed in ideology, though they're taken to be neutral and "objective" because they're familiar. [7] Her 1991 article "The Myth of Neutrality, Again" was criticized in 2018 as "ideological" and threatening to reduce the great thinkers of western culture to 'dead white men'. [8]
In 2012, Greene wrote a poem titled Death’s Brother: A Theogeny of Sleep. [9]
Since her retirement in 2014, Greene's writings have focused on the value of the liberal arts. [10] [11] [12] [13] [14]
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(
help)Gayle Greene | |
---|---|
Occupation(s) | Writer, editor, professor |
Academic background | |
Education | University of California at Berkeley (BA, MA) |
Alma mater | Columbia University (PhD) |
Academic work | |
Discipline | English literature |
Sub-discipline | Interdisciplinary Humanities |
Institutions | Scripps College |
Notable works | The Woman Who Knew Too Much: Alice Stewart and the Secrets of Radiation Insomniac The Woman's Part: Feminist Criticism of Shakespeare Making a Difference: Feminist Literary Criticism |
Website |
www |
Gayle Greene (born 1943) is an American literary critic, writer, editor, and professor emerita at Scripps College, Claremont, California. [1] She is the author of six books, including the biography The Woman Who Knew Too Much and the memoir Insomniac. She has also co-edited anthologies of writing by feminist literary scholars, including The Woman's Part: Feminist Criticism of Shakespeare and Making a Difference: Feminist Literary Criticism.
Greene received degrees from U.C. Berkeley (BA and MA) and Columbia (PhD). She taught at Queens College and Brooklyn College of the City University of New York. In 1974 she began teaching at Scripps College. [2] Teaching at a women's college shifted her focus to women writers.
In Changing the Story: Feminist Fiction and the Tradition, in 1991, she argued that feminist fiction of the 1960s-1980s represents breakthroughs in narrative form and content that make it a literary movement comparable to Modernism. [3] Doris Lessing: The Poetics of Change, 1994, brings biographical, historical, intertextual, formalist, feminist, psychoanalytic, and Marxist approaches to the novels of Lessing, arguing that her primary project is change. [4]
Greene later focused on subjects aimed at a wider readership, and wrote the authorized biography of radiation epidemiologist and anti-nuclear guru Alice Stewart, The Woman Who Knew Too Much: Alice Stewart and the Secrets of Radiation, [5] which was first published in 1999. She is also the author of Insomniac (2008), an account of living with insomnia that combines memoir with scientific investigation and Missing Persons (2018), a memoir about loss of family and the transformation of the Santa Clara Valley to Silicon Valley.
Some of Greene's work drew her into a controversy about the role of ideology in reading that became the centerpiece for the anthology Shakespeare Left and Right. [6] She argued that traditional critical approaches are themselves enmeshed in ideology, though they're taken to be neutral and "objective" because they're familiar. [7] Her 1991 article "The Myth of Neutrality, Again" was criticized in 2018 as "ideological" and threatening to reduce the great thinkers of western culture to 'dead white men'. [8]
In 2012, Greene wrote a poem titled Death’s Brother: A Theogeny of Sleep. [9]
Since her retirement in 2014, Greene's writings have focused on the value of the liberal arts. [10] [11] [12] [13] [14]
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