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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Julie KoserPublisher: Northwestern University Press Imprint: Northwestern University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 23.10cm Weight: 0.515kg ISBN: 9780810132344ISBN 10: 0810132346 Pages: 312 Publication Date: 30 March 2016 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsIn this elegantly written and well-researched book, Julie Koser explores the representation of the woman warrior in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century. By treating all texts equally and unapologetically, Koser crystallizes late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century attitudes towards women in the public sphere and the related crisis of masculinity in the aftermath of the Goethe Yearbook 303 French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. This, in turn, enables her to establish a convincing connection in her epilogue to present-day debates on women in the military. --Goethe Yearbook A central strength to Armed Ambiguity is that Koser approaches texts that have been long overdue for attention, such as those by Naubert, Huber, von Gu]nderrode, and de la Motte Fouqu . Koser's insightful readings contribute to the ongoing project of questioning the male representation of women as well as perform equally rigorous analyses of female-authored representations. --Eighteenth Century Fiction Essential. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty; general readers. --CHOICE With extensive research, deep knowledge of the field, and persuasive argumentation, Julie Koser articulates the social and cultural importance of the woman warrior in the age of Goethe. I highly recommend this book. --Patricia Anne Simpson, Professor of German Studies, Montana State University Julie Koser's Armed Ambiguity: Women Warriors in German Literature and Culture in the Age of Goethe presents a comprehensive and thoroughly researched study of the figure of the woman warrior around 1800. All in all, Koser's book is both diligent and insightful. Koser does not confine women writers to the ghetto of trivial literature but situates them alongside male writers of the period and thus is able to offer readings that shed light on previously hidden connections within larger discursive contexts. Her interpretations are innovative and she does not overstate her claims. In short, her book has much to offer to scholars of late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century German literature and to anyone interested in women writers of the period. --German Studies Review [A] complex exercise in pinpointing the extent to which the stereotypical gender hierarchy controlled even the efforts to resist it. --Monatshefte Armed Ambiguity brilliantly combines new historicism, discourse analysis, and feminist thought to explore depictions of women warriors in German-language print culture, novels, dramas, and lyrical texts at the turn of the nineteenth century. Koser's project is innovative, in that she sets male and female writers side by side and explores both canonical and noncanonical works between the outset of the French Revolution and the downfall of Napoleon... Overall, her writing is lucid, informative, and engaging--both in terms of her interaction with existing scholarship and her provocative close readings of texts--and Koser leaves the reader ready to set out into the world with a more critical eye and appreciation of (often ambiguous) depictions of warrior women. --Eighteenth-Century Studies In this elegantly written and well-researched book, Julie Koser explores the representation of the woman warrior in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century. By treating all texts equally and unapologetically, Koser crystallizes late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century attitudes towards women in the public sphere and the related crisis of masculinity in the aftermath of the Goethe Yearbook 303 French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. This, in turn, enables her to establish a convincing connection in her epilogue to present-day debates on women in the military. --Goethe Yearbook A central strength to Armed Ambiguity is that Koser approaches texts that have been long overdue for attention, such as those by Naubert, Huber, von Gu]nderrode, and de la Motte Fouqu . Koser's insightful readings contribute to the ongoing project of questioning the male representation of women as well as perform equally rigorous analyses of female-authored representations. --Eighteenth Century Fiction [A] complex exercise in pinpointing the extent to which the stereotypical gender hierarchy controlled even the efforts to resist it. --Monatshefte Armed Ambiguity brilliantly combines new historicism, discourse analysis, and feminist thought to explore depictions of women warriors in German-language print culture, novels, dramas, and lyrical texts at the turn of the nineteenth century. Koser's project is innovative, in that she sets male and female writers side by side and explores both canonical and noncanonical works between the outset of the French Revolution and the downfall of Napoleon... Overall, her writing is lucid, informative, and engaging--both in terms of her interaction with existing scholarship and her provocative close readings of texts--and Koser leaves the reader ready to set out into the world with a more critical eye and appreciation of (often ambiguous) depictions of warrior women. --Eighteenth-Century Studies Essential. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty; general readers. --CHOICE With extensive research, deep knowledge of the field, and persuasive argumentation, Julie Koser articulates the social and cultural importance of the woman warrior in the age of Goethe. I highly recommend this book. --Patricia Anne Simpson, Professor of German Studies, Montana State University Julie Koser's Armed Ambiguity: Women Warriors in German Literature and Culture in the Age of Goethe presents a comprehensive and thoroughly researched study of the figure of the woman warrior around 1800. All in all, Koser's book is both diligent and insightful. Koser does not confine women writers to the ghetto of trivial literature but situates them alongside male writers of the period and thus is able to offer readings that shed light on previously hidden connections within larger discursive contexts. Her interpretations are innovative and she does not overstate her claims. In short, her book has much to offer to scholars of late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century German literature and to anyone interested in women writers of the period. --German Studies Review In this elegantly written and well-researched book, Julie Koser explores the representation of the woman warrior in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century. By treating all texts equally and unapologetically, Koser crystallizes late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century attitudes towards women in the public sphere and the related crisis of masculinity in the aftermath of the Goethe Yearbook 303 French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. This, in turn, enables her to establish a convincing connection in her epilogue to present-day debates on women in the military. --Goethe Yearbook A central strength to Armed Ambiguity is that Koser approaches texts that have been long overdue for attention, such as those by Naubert, Huber, von Gu]nderrode, and de la Motte Fouque. Koser's insightful readings contribute to the ongoing project of questioning the male representation of women as well as perform equally rigorous analyses of female-authored representations. --Eighteenth Century Fiction [A] complex exercise in pinpointing the extent to which the stereotypical gender hierarchy controlled even the efforts to resist it. --Monatshefte Armed Ambiguity brilliantly combines new historicism, discourse analysis, and feminist thought to explore depictions of women warriors in German-language print culture, novels, dramas, and lyrical texts at the turn of the nineteenth century. Koser's project is innovative, in that she sets male and female writers side by side and explores both canonical and noncanonical works between the outset of the French Revolution and the downfall of Napoleon... Overall, her writing is lucid, informative, and engaging--both in terms of her interaction with existing scholarship and her provocative close readings of texts--and Koser leaves the reader ready to set out into the world with a more critical eye and appreciation of (often ambiguous) depictions of warrior women. --Eighteenth-Century Studies Essential. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty; general readers. --CHOICE With extensive research, deep knowledge of the field, and persuasive argumentation, Julie Koser articulates the social and cultural importance of the woman warrior in the age of Goethe. I highly recommend this book. --Patricia Anne Simpson, Professor of German Studies, Montana State University Julie Koser's Armed Ambiguity: Women Warriors in German Literature and Culture in the Age of Goethe presents a comprehensive and thoroughly researched study of the figure of the woman warrior around 1800. All in all, Koser's book is both diligent and insightful. Koser does not confine women writers to the ghetto of trivial literature but situates them alongside male writers of the period and thus is able to offer readings that shed light on previously hidden connections within larger discursive contexts. Her interpretations are innovative and she does not overstate her claims. In short, her book has much to offer to scholars of late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century German literature and to anyone interested in women writers of the period. --German Studies Review In this elegantly written and well-researched book, Julie Koser explores the representation of the woman warrior in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century. By treating all texts equally and unapologetically, Koser crystallizes late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century attitudes towards women in the public sphere and the related crisis of masculinity in the aftermath of the Goethe Yearbook 303 French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. This, in turn, enables her to establish a convincing connection in her epilogue to present-day debates on women in the military. --Goethe Yearbook A central strength to Armed Ambiguity is that Koser approaches texts that have been long overdue for attention, such as those by Naubert, Huber, von Gu]nderrode, and de la Motte Fouqu�. Koser's insightful readings contribute to the ongoing project of questioning the male representation of women as well as perform equally rigorous analyses of female-authored representations. --Eighteenth Century Fiction [A] complex exercise in pinpointing the extent to which the stereotypical gender hierarchy controlled even the efforts to resist it. --Monatshefte Armed Ambiguity brilliantly combines new historicism, discourse analysis, and feminist thought to explore depictions of women warriors in German-language print culture, novels, dramas, and lyrical texts at the turn of the nineteenth century. Koser's project is innovative, in that she sets male and female writers side by side and explores both canonical and noncanonical works between the outset of the French Revolution and the downfall of Napoleon... Overall, her writing is lucid, informative, and engaging--both in terms of her interaction with existing scholarship and her provocative close readings of texts--and Koser leaves the reader ready to set out into the world with a more critical eye and appreciation of (often ambiguous) depictions of warrior women. --Eighteenth-Century Studies Essential. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty; general readers. --CHOICE With extensive research, deep knowledge of the field, and persuasive argumentation, Julie Koser articulates the social and cultural importance of the woman warrior in the age of Goethe. I highly recommend this book. --Patricia Anne Simpson, Professor of German Studies, Montana State University Julie Koser's Armed Ambiguity: Women Warriors in German Literature and Culture in the Age of Goethe presents a comprehensive and thoroughly researched study of the figure of the woman warrior around 1800. All in all, Koser's book is both diligent and insightful. Koser does not confine women writers to the ghetto of trivial literature but situates them alongside male writers of the period and thus is able to offer readings that shed light on previously hidden connections within larger discursive contexts. Her interpretations are innovative and she does not overstate her claims. In short, her book has much to offer to scholars of late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century German literature and to anyone interested in women writers of the period. --German Studies Review Author InformationJulie Koser is an assistant professor in the Department of Germanic Studies at the University of Maryland, USA. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |