Karen Blixen's Search for Self

LSU PRESSISBN: 9780807186077

"The Making of "Out of Africa""

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By Patti M. Marxsen
Imprint:
LSU PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
16 x 140 mm
Weight:

Pages:
224

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Description

Patti M. Marxsen is a biographer and independent scholar whose works have been published in the United States, Europe, and the Caribbean. Her books include Helene Schweitzer: A Life of Her Own and Jacques Roumain: A Life of Resistance.

"Patti M. Marxsen takes us on a fascinating tour of the multiple aspects that have contributed to the creation and reception of Karen Blixen's memoir. From the author's original quest to record her experience of Africa, to our contemporary issues of postcolonialism, feminism, and the influence of Hollywood, Marxsen is a keen-eyed, sure-footed guide, enriching our (re)reading experience at every turn." - Alison Anderson, author of The Summer Guest In this thorough and insightful re-evaluation of Blixen and the afterlife of Out of Africa, Marxsen introduces the author to a new generation of potential readers. Marxsen's enthusiasm for Blixen-balanced by judicious critique-makes for a highly readable as well as informative account of the Danish writer and her poignant memoir of colonial Kenya." - Simon Lewis, author of White Women Writers and Their African Invention "As Blixen deployed her selective memory and fervent, rebellious mind, she composed a myth of tenuous belonging that reveals as much about herself as about Africa. Those seeking a nuanced and fair reading of Out of Africa-one that confronts difficult political questions while honoring the evocative, feminist brilliance of its author-will find it in Marxsen's singular analysis." - Janet McIntosh, author of Unsettled: Denial and Belonging Among White Kenyans "Marxsen's excellent book on the making of Out of Africa reveals Blixen's contradictory perspectives on topics such as colonialism, feminism, and racism. In so doing, Marxsen explores how the inclusion/exclusion arrangement and emphasis inherent in memoir writing underscore the complexities of Blixen's character. In the end, the reader develops a deep admiration for Marxsen's remarkable subject." - Norman McMillan, author of Distant Son: An Alabama Boyhood

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