This book follows the figure of the clever girl from the post-war to the present and focuses on the fiction, plays and memoirs of contemporary British women writers. Spurred on by an ethic of meritocracy, the clever girl is now facing austerity and declining social mobility. Though suggesting optimism, a public discourse of opportunity, aspiration and choice is often experienced as an anxious and chancy process. In a wide-ranging study, the book explores the struggle to move away from home and traditional notions of femininity; the persistent problems associated with womens embodiment; the pressures of class and racial divisions; the new subjectivities of the neoliberal era; and the generational conflict underpinning austerity. The book ends with a consideration of feminisms place as a phantom presence in this history of clever girls. This study will appeal to readers of contemporary womens writing and to those interested in what has been one of the dominant social narratives of the post-war period from upward to declining mobility.
1. Introduction: The Language of Upward Mobility.
2. Escaping Origins.
3.Relative Values: Career, Marriage, Maternity.
4. Troublesome Bodies.
5. New Forms, New Selves.
6. Top Girls and Other Epithets.
7. The Haves and the Have-Nots.
8. Coda: Phantom Feminism.
A rich study of social mobility that combines a cultural history of a rapidly changing Britain with an authoritative literary critical analysis of the texts (primarily novels, but also autobiography and drama) that address womens roles and shifting aspirations across the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. & Eagleton writes with authority and style, presenting a text that is urgent, compelling, and eminently readable. (Fiona Tolan, English - Journal of the English Associatló: