VALENTA, Markha Gabrielle. " The radical folly of love in (post)modern America: The autobiographical narratives of Dorothy Day "

culture* bibliographieLiterature. AutobiographieDAY, Dorothy (Brooklyn, New York, 8/11/1897 - 29/11/1980)literature: memoirs

Ph. D. The University of Iowa, 1999. 523 p. Adviser: Barbara Eckstein. ISBN: 0-599-47184-0
DAI-A 60/08, p. 2987, Feb 2000

"This dissertation takes as its subject the four book- length autobiographical narratives of the Catholic anarchist-pacifist Dorothy Day (1897-1980). Written over the course of forty years, and repeatedly renarrating many of the same events in Day’s life, these books … reveal the maturation of Day’s narrative self-presentation, the evolving relation of religiosity, social radicalism, and writing in her life, the significant accompanying shifts in her writings’ formal structure as well as in its themes, and the way these shaped and were shaped by Day’s personal and socio- cultural context.

… Day’s autobiographical narratives exhibit many qualities associated by scholars with postmodern writing - fragmentation, multiplicity of standpoints, a lack of teleology and closure, extensive dialogism, and the lack of a self-originating, clearly bounded ’self’. In this respect, both the content and form of Day’s writing differ significantly from the canonical American and Western autobiographical tradition, in which the narrator has generally sought to establish a distinct and plenary ’self’ as well as a sense of narrative coherence and control to reflect and sustain that ’self’.

Significantly, however, these postmodern qualities derive not from specifically literary aspirations on Day’s part, but from her commitment to offering an alternative, pacifist, communal worldview and way of life that would radically challenge American capitalism, individualism, and bellicosity".