"Charlotte Perkins Gilman and a Woman's Place in America offers an important new set of geographical, material, and textual centers for Gilman studies, and productive, wide-ranging ways to rethink place studies. The essays in this edited collection broaden this focus within and beyond domestic space, diversifying the range of texts for inspection, situating familiar works in new regional and interpretive lenses, expanding work on media and genre, and contextualizing the reception of their works. Bergman's volume invites further engagement with writings that exceed the domestic sphere and provides a range of new insights and directions for both Gilman scholars and place studies."
—Studies in American Naturalism
"Offering much that enhances scholarship on Gilman, this collection is an important engagement with her place in US literary history. Highly recommended."
—CHOICE
“As a perennial favorite of feminist readers, Gilman makes for an interesting study. Her life and work is explored by the contributors in this collection in a way no other book about her has attempted to address.”
—Martha J. Cutter, author of Lost and Found in Translation: Contemporary Ethnic American Writing and the Politics of Language Diversity
"This uniformly strong collection of essays from both familiar figures and new voices will prove a valuable resource for Gilman scholars."
—Cynthia J. Davis, author of Charlotte Perkins Gilman: A Biography