The Red Shoes
eBook - ePub

The Red Shoes

Margaret Atwood Starting Out

  1. 359 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Red Shoes

Margaret Atwood Starting Out

About this book

International award-winning and best-selling author, Canadian cultural icon, feminist role model, "man-hater," wife, mother, private citizen and household name -- who is Margaret Atwood? Rosemary Sullivan, award-winning literary biographer, has penned The Red Shoes: Margaret Atwood Starting Out, the first portrait of Canada's most famous novelist, focusing on her childhood and formative years as a writer and the generation she grew up in.

When Margaret Atwood was a little girl in 1949, she saw a movie called The Red Shoes. It is the story of a beautiful young woman who becomes a famous ballerina, but commits suicide when she cannot satisfy one man, who wants her to devote her entire life to her art, and another who loves her, but subjugates her to become his muse and inspiration. She struggles to choose art, but the choice eventually destroys her.

Margaret Atwood remembers being devastated by this movie but unlike many young girls of her time, she escaped its underlying message. Always sustained by a strong sense of self, Atwood would achieve a meteoric literary career. Yet a nurturing sense of self-confidence is just one fascinating side of our most famous literary figure, as examined in Rosemary Sullivan's latest biography. The Red Shoes is not a simple biography but a portrait of a complex, intriguing woman and her generation.

The seventies in Canada was the decade of fierce nationalist debate, a period during which Canada's social imagination was creating a new tradition. Suddenly everyone, from Robertson Davies to Margaret Laurence was talking, and writing, about a Canadian cultural identity. Margaret Atwood was no exception.

For despite her tremendous success that transcends the literary community, catapulting into the realm of a "household name," Margaret Atwood has remained very much a private person with a public persona.

Rosemary Sullivan reveals the discrepancy between Atwood's cool, acerbic, public image and the down-to-earth, straight-dealing and generous woman who actually writes the books. Throughout, she weaves the issues of female creativity, authority and autonomy set against the backdrop of a generation of women coming of age during one of the most radically shifting times in contemporary history.

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Information

Year
2012
eBook ISBN
9781443402620
Print ISBN
9780006385585

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Dedication
  4. Contents
  5. Introduction: The Red Shoes
  6. 1 Kitchen Stories
  7. 2 Reading Families
  8. 3 Prelude: The Bush
  9. 4 The Thenness of Then
  10. 5 Peggy Nature
  11. 6 The Sibylline Touch
  12. 7 The Canadian Clubbers
  13. 8 “A Descent through the Carpet”
  14. 9 The Wall
  15. 10 The Summer of Love
  16. 11 Learning to Make Fire
  17. 12 Mythographers
  18. 13 Transfixed
  19. 14 Mulmur Township
  20. 15 Survivalwoman
  21. 16 No Trains in Sight
  22. Afterword
  23. Notes
  24. Index
  25. Acknowledgements
  26. About the Author
  27. Praise for Rosemary Sullivan’s: Shadow Maker
  28. Copyright
  29. About the Publisher