January 20, 2018

Miniter on Cather's My Antonia and Legal Thought in the Late Nineteenth Century @CreightonLawRev

Paulette C. Miniter has published Willa Cather's My Antonia and Legal Thought in the Late Nineteenth Century at 51 Creighton Law Review 119 (2017). Here is the abstract.
In the 1918 novel My Ántonia, Willa Cather offered an unusual portrait of the American experience. Cather’s method was to present a central female character through the eyes of a male narrator. The narrator, Jim Burden, is a Harvard-educated lawyer in New York for “one of the great Western railways.” Ántonia Shimerda is a friend from his childhood in Nebraska during the waning days of the frontier. Jim tells the story of how Ántonia, the daughter of poor Bohemian homesteaders, survives the suicide of her father and the disgrace of being an unwed mother to build a life on the land and thus bear out the “pioneer ideal.” Despite their disparate social statuses and divergent life paths, Jim sees Ántonia as the utmost symbol of “the country” and “conditions” of his youth.
Download the article at this link.

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