
doi: 10.1353/lm.1997.0015
pmid: 9368226
This article explores Gertrude Stein's ambivalent participation in eugenic and medical discourse by reading Three Lives as a kind of modernist medical chart. Stein's immigrant and mulatto women characters represent sites of medical-literary experim entation, and her narrators articulate nationalist and racialist (eugenic) anxieties through non-native, non-white female bodies.
Literature, Modern, Famous Persons, Medicine in Literature, Humans, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, United States
Literature, Modern, Famous Persons, Medicine in Literature, Humans, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, United States
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