1. Home
  2. stella dallas

The Feminist Press At Cuny Stella Dallas, Paperback, Indigo Chapters

$ 17.00

4.5 (301) In stock

This pulp classic of motherhood and money introduced the immortal character portrayed on film by Barbara Stanwyck and Bette Midler-a feminist gem\" (Michael Bronski).An ambitious woman from working-class roots, Stella sets her sights on marrying rich-and hits a bullseye. But her unshakable crudeness becomes too much for her husband. When he leaves her, she keeps their daughter Laurel. And now Stella sets her sights one again-this time, on giving her daughter the life she could never achieve for herself. Originally published in 1923, this epic tale inspired the first radio soap opera, a Broadway play, and multiple films, including the Oscar-nominated 1937 movie starring Barbara Stanwyck and the 1990 movie Stella starring Bette Midler. Stella Dallas is a razor-sharp critique of our societal obsession with the judgment of mothers, offering cultural commentary that is still shockingly relevant nearly one hundred years after its initial publication.\""Olive Higgins Prouty (1882 - 1974), like many of her characters a wealthy Bostonian, was the author of ten novels, including Stella Dallas (1923), which became the basis for three films and a long-running radio serial. A graduate of Smith College, Prouty endowed a writer's scholarship at Smith that was received by Sylvia Plath, who later portrayed her patron unflatteringly in The Bell Jar . | Stella Dallas, Paperback | Indigo Chapters

The Joyful Science / Idylls from Messina / Unpublished Fragments

Ken White Stella by Ken White, Hardcover

Entitled Princeton University Press

2018 Festival Authors – Texas Book Festival

Ken White Stella by Ken White, Hardcover

Buy Feminism Books Online

Feminist Press

Kristina Neudakhina Archives - Mombian

Staff — Feminist Press

The Feminist Press At Cuny Against Memoir, Paperback

Used Book in Good Condition

Indigo: In Search of the Color That Seduced the World

Archives Archive - The Center

February 1, 2020: Volume LXXXVIII, No 3 by Kirkus Reviews - Issuu