The Locator -- [(title = "Eudora ")]

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Author:
Wolff, Sally, author.
Title:
A dark rose : love in Eudora Welty's stories and novels / Sally Wolff.
Publisher:
Louisiana State University Press,
Copyright Date:
2015
Description:
xxv, 222 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm.
Subject:
Welty, Eudora,--1909-2001--Criticism and interpretation.
Love in literature.
Welty, Eudora,--1909-2001.
Love in literature.
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 202-212) and index.
Contents:
"A fruitful marriage. that simple thing": early stories of rural love -- "The quiet arcade of identity": grief and aloneness -- "Like a rose forced into premature bloom": dreaming and telling in "a memory" -- "Gossamer and roses": fantasy and responsibility in The robber bridegroom -- "Got thorns": the complex loves of delta wedding -- A "little sweetheart rose in his lapel": the heart of the ponders -- "With rosettes": the golden apples -- "Roses as headlights": the bride of the innisfallen -- "Like the stamens in a dainty bess rose": the love story in losing battles -- "It was the old wood that did the blooming": the optimist's daughter and one writer's beginnings -- "A dark rose": Eudora Welty's love stories.
Summary:
"From the heartbroken protagonist she depicted in her first published story, "Death of a Traveling Salesman," to the reflective widow she described in her last novel, The Optimist's Daughter, Eudora Welty wrote realistically about the shadows and radiance of love. In a meticulous exploration of this theme, Sally Wolff combines new readings of Welty's fiction with biography and contextual information drawn from Wolff's nineteen-year friendship with the author. A signature image in most of Welty's fiction, the rose imparts symbolic power as it places Welty in the age-old tradition of love literature. Wolff argues that the dark rose--from the height of its brilliance to the end of its life--serves as a deft metaphor for the dichotomies Welty presents, equally suggestive of beauty and sadness, and the comic, tragic, and mysterious qualities of love. While some of Welty's characters are clearly autobiographical renderings--a daughter remembering her parents' marriage, or a broodingly hopeful member of a large family wedding--at other times, Welty analyzes from afar the dynamics of successful and troubled loving relationships. Although Welty fell in love more than once during her life, she never married, and Wolff argues that writing from the vantage point of the unattached gave Welty an objective perspective from which to examine in her fiction the varied dimensions of love. A Dark Rose navigates effortlessly among texts and examines Welty's portrayal of love in all its nuance and intricacy. Though love in Welty's fiction may fail, wear thin, or quietly take the hand of that grimmest of bridegrooms--death--it nonetheless remains a vital force, alive in the heart." -- Publisher's description.
Series:
Southern literary studies
ISBN:
0807158275 (cloth)
9780807158272 (cloth)
OCLC:
(OCoLC)880499959
LCCN:
2014019893
Locations:
USUX851 -- Iowa State University - Parks Library (Ames)
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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