Writing Her Own Life: Imogene Welch, Western Rural Schoolteacher (Literature of the American West Series)

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Description

Mary Clearman Blew’s aunt Imogene Welch embodied the hard-working values of depression-era western The usa. In Writing Her Own Life, Blew builds a narrative around excerpts from the diaries Imogene kept all through World War II even as she taught in rural Montana schools and later in Washington State. Through her diary entries we learn of the war’s effects on Imogene as she moved from rural, circle of relatives-centered life in Montana to independent if rather lonelier life in Washington State.

After growing up on an impoverished homestead in Montana, Imogene enjoyed the modest comforts of living in a small town in Washington, including electricity and running water. And she experienced the dramatic changes in a school system under stress from the war: separated families, crowded classrooms, and an an increasing number of mobile population. Imogene’s diaries find her exploring a new landscape, worrying about distant family and friends, dealing with her newfangled automobile, enduring roommates, and in the end learning to cherish her independence.

Blew explores the transitional experiences of the young schoolteacher and examines traditional and non-traditional ways during which fiction and creative nonfiction recreate the life recorded in the diaries. Moving beyond Imogene’s experiences, Blew asks what an inheritance of circle of relatives stories and text means to a generation of readers who are experiencing transitions different from Imogene’s but no less intense.

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