Mary Ellmann
Mary Ellmann was an American writer and literary critic. Magazines she reviewed included The New York Review of Books, The Nation, Encounter, The Atlantic Monthly, Commentary, The New Republic, the New Statesman and The American Scholar.
Literary criticism
Ellmann is particularly noted for her book of essays, Thinking About Women, which discusses the evolution of the representation of femininity in British and American literature, exhibiting sexual analogies and stereotypes from the texts and contrasting criticism by male and female authors. The literary historian Mary Eagleton cited Ellmann's book as one of two "significant texts" in early feminist theory. The work has been widely cited for its introduction of the concept "phallic criticism" as applied to writers of both sexes. In a review of academic studies of gender, Mary Poovey described Thinking About Women as an example of the "earliest U.S. incarnation" of feminist literary criticism, which, "with the excitement of pioneers discovering virgin territory... helped make writing about women academically acceptable."Personal life and death
Ellmann was born in Newburyport, Massachusetts. She attended the University of Massachusetts and Yale University, receiving a PhD in English from Yale. In 1949, she married the literary critic Richard Ellmann. The couple had three children, Stephen, Maud, and Lucy.In December 1969, Ellmann suffered a cerebral hemorrhage leaving her confined to a wheelchair for the rest of her life. She died from a second hemorrhage on June 3, 1989 in Oxford, England.