The Public Is Invited to Dance: Representation, the Body, and Dialogue in Gertrude SteinStanford University Press, 1989 - 247 pages A Stanford University Press classic. |
Common terms and phrases
Alice Toklas Anna Anna's appears argues attempt authority Autobiography Autobiography of Alice becomes beginning birth Birthday Book Blood bodily body claim concept creation culture daughter Dear Ida DeKoven difference Dining-Room Floor discourse double écriture féminine Emerson erotic essay Everybody's Autobiography female feminist figure gender Gentle Lena Gertrude Stein Ibid Ida's identity imagined intimacy Irigaray Irigaray's Jeff Kristeva language lesbian letter Lifting Belly linguistic listening literally literary LO&P male marks marriage masculine Melanctha metaphor Mildred Aldrich Miss Mathilda mode modernist mother mystery narrative narrator narrator's nature novel object object relations theory Patriarchal Poetry poem poet portrait possibility presence question reader reading relation relationship remains representation represents resembles Room of One's rose semiotic sense sexuality significant Stein's writing Steinian Stimpson story storytelling suggests talking telling Tender Buttons Three Lives tion Toklas's traditional twin voice William Gass Winnie woman women words