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Sandra Gilbert
Sandra Gilbert
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Sandra Mortola Gilbert (born Sandra Ellen Mortola; December 27, 1936 – November 10, 2024) was an American literary critic and poet who published in the fields of feminist literary criticism, feminist theory, and psychoanalytic criticism. She was best known for her collaborative critical work with Susan Gubar, with whom she co-authored, among other works, The Madwoman in the Attic (1979). Madwoman in the Attic is widely recognized as a text central to second-wave feminism.[1][2] She was Professor Emerita of English at the University of California, Davis.[3]

Key Information

Background

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Sandra Ellen Mortola was born in New York City on December 27, 1936, and grew up in Jackson Heights, Queens.[4] In 1957, she married Elliot Gilbert.[4]

Gilbert received her B.A. from Cornell University, her M.A. from New York University, and her Ph.D. in English literature from Columbia University in 1968.[4]

Career

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She taught at California State University, Hayward, Williams College, Johns Hopkins University, Stanford University, and Indiana University. She held the C. Barnwell Straut Chair of English at Princeton University from 1985 until 1989.[5]

According to reports in The New York Times, Gilbert, along with Emory Elliott, Valerie Smith, and Margaret Doody all resigned from Princeton in 1989.[6] The reports suggest that the four were unhappy with the leniency shown to Thomas McFarland after he was accused of sexual misconduct. McFarland was initially put on a one-year suspension, but eventually took early retirement after these resignations and threats of student boycotts.[7]

She was named the inaugural M. H. Abrams Distinguished Visiting Professor at Cornell University for spring 2007,[8] and the Lurie Distinguished Visiting Professor in the Creative Writing MFA program at San Jose State University in 2009.[9]

Collaboration with Susan Gubar

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Gilbert and Gubar met in the early 1970s at Indiana University. In 1974, they collaborated to co-teach a course on literature in English by women; their lectures led to the manuscript for Madwoman in the Attic. They continued to co-author and co-edit, and were jointly awarded several academic distinctions. Notably, they were jointly named Ms. magazine's "Woman of the Year" in 1986 for their work as head editors of The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women: The Traditions in English.[4]

Because of the success of their joint publications, Gilbert and Gubar are often cited together in the fields of Feminist literary criticism and Feminist theory.

Feminist literary criticism and theory

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Gilbert's critical and theoretical works, particularly those co-authored with Gubar, are generally identified as texts within the realm of second-wave feminism.[10]

"The Anxiety of Authorship"

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In The Madwoman in the Attic, Gilbert and Gubar take the Oedipal model of the anxiety of influence developed by literary critic Harold Bloom, centred around writers' Oedipal fear and jealousy for their perceived literary "fore-fathers", and adapt it to their own purposes as feminist critics.[11] According to Bloom's theory, the developing writer must struggle to break free from his most immediate, direct influences, to form his own voice, and to break away from identification to find his own imaginative space.[12] Gilbert and Gubar extend this male-oriented model to incorporate a female "Anxiety of Authorship",[13] whereby lack of predecessors makes the very act of writing problematic.

Where Bloom wonders how the male author can find a voice that is his own, Gilbert and Gubar – building on Virginia Woolf's analysis of the "difficulty...that they had no tradition behind them"[14] – emphasise the problem a woman writer may have in seeing herself as possessing a literary voice at all, given the absence of a maternal precursor.[15] Where Bloom finds aggression and competition between male literary figures in terms of self-consciously feeling influenced and desiring to be influential, the "anxiety of authorship" identifies a "secret sisterhood" of role models within the Western tradition who show that women can write,[13] the recuperation of the tradition of which becomes a feminist project.[16] However, these models too may be "infected" with a lack of confidence, and with internal contradiction of ambition, hampered by the culturally induced assumption of "the patriarchal authority of art."[17]

In later works, the pair explore "the 'double bind' of the woman poet...the contradictions between her vocation and her gender" (Shakespeare's Sisters), as well as the development (in the wake of Sylvia Plath) of a new genre of 'mother poets'.[18]

Personal life and death

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Gilbert lived in Berkeley, California, and lived, until 2008, in Paris, France. Her husband, Elliot L. Gilbert, with whom she had three children, was chair of the Department of English at University of California, Davis, until his death from surgical complications in 1991.[4] His death was the subject of her 1995 book Wrongful Death: A Medical Tragedy; she sued for medical malpractice, and received a settlement.[4]

Gilbert also had a long-term relationship with David Gale, mathematician at University of California, Berkeley, until his death in 2008.[4] She later began a relationship with Dick Frieden.[4]

On November 10, 2024, Gilbert died from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease at Alta Bates Summit Medical Center in Berkeley, California, at the age of 87.[4][19]

Published works

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Critical works

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  • "I, TOO, WILL BE "UNCLE SANDRA"". Titanic Operas. Archived from the original on July 15, 2010.
  • Acts of Attention: The Poems of D.H. Lawrence (Cornell University Press, 1972)

Poetry

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  • In the Fourth World (University of Alabama Press, 1979)
  • The Summer Kitchen (Heyeck Press, 1983)
  • Emily's Bread (W. W. Norton, 1984)
  • Blood Pressure (W. W. Norton, 1989)
  • Ghost Volcano (W. W. Norton, 1997)
  • Kissing the Bread: New and Selected Poems 1969-1999 (W. W. Norton, 2000)
  • The Italian Collection (Depot Books, 2003)
  • Belongings (W. W. Norton, 2006)
  • Aftermath: Poems (W. W. Norton, 2011)

Non-fiction

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  • Wrongful Death: A Medical Tragedy (W. W. Norton, 1995)
  • Death's Door: Modern Dying and The Ways We Grieve (W. W. Norton, 2006)
  • Rereading Women: Thirty Years of Exploring Our Literary Traditions (W. W. Norton, 2011)
  • The Culinary Imagination: From Myth to Modernity (W. W. Norton, 2014)

Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Sandra M. Gilbert (née Mortola; December 27, 1936 – November 10, 2024) was an American poet, literary critic, and academic whose work focused on feminist interpretations of canonical literature, particularly the constraints imposed on female authorship by patriarchal traditions. Born in to Italian-American parents, Gilbert graduated from with a in 1957, later earning a Ph.D. from , and held teaching positions at several universities before becoming Professor Emerita of English at the . Her most enduring contribution came in collaboration with Susan Gubar, co-authoring The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination (1979), which posited that 19th-century women writers experienced an "anxiety of authorship" under male-dominated literary norms, using figures like Charlotte Brontë's as metaphors for repressed female creativity. This text, a cornerstone of second-wave feminist criticism, influenced subsequent scholarship on gender and literature but drew critiques for overemphasizing victimhood in women's writing and underplaying individual agency. Gilbert's broader oeuvre included poetry collections such as Invention (1984) and critical volumes like Acts of Attention (1972), alongside joint works with Gubar such as No Man's Land (1988–1994), which examined modernist literature through a gendered lens. She served as president of the Modern Language Association in 1985 and, with Gubar, received the National Book Critics Circle's Ivan Sandrof Lifetime Achievement Award in 2012 for advancing feminist literary analysis. Her later scholarship, including Still Mad: Gender, Politics, and 2020 (2021), extended these themes to contemporary issues, though her foundational arguments have been reevaluated amid evolving views on essentialism in gender studies.

Early Life and Education

Family Background and Childhood

Sandra Mortola Gilbert was born on December 27, 1936, in to Alexis Joseph Mortola, a , and Angela Caruso Mortola, a public-school . Her family was of Italian descent, reflected in her maiden name and maternal surname, which aligned with her later engagements in Italian-American literary themes. She spent her early years in Jackson Heights, Queens, where her mother's large extended family—characterized by two sisters and seven brothers—influenced childhood routines, such as memorizing the names of numerous uncles. Family anecdotes included her mother's recollection of initial disappointment upon learning of her birth as a girl, highlighting gendered expectations in the household. Gilbert attended the academically rigorous in , an experience that foreshadowed her pursuit of higher education in literature. Her upbringing in a working-class Italian-American environment in provided a foundation for her later critical examinations of identity, , and , though she described limited formal religious observance in the home.

Academic Formation

Sandra Gilbert earned her degree in English from in 1957, graduating with high honors after studying under the influential critic . She subsequently pursued graduate studies at , where she obtained her degree in English. Gilbert completed her in English literature at in 1968, with a dissertation titled "Acts of Revision: The History of William Carlos Williams," focusing on the modernist poet's revisionary practices.

Academic and Professional Career

Early Teaching Positions

Gilbert's academic career commenced shortly after earning her Ph.D. from in 1968, with an appointment as of English at , Hayward, where she focused on and . During this period, she published her first monograph, Acts of Attention: The Poems of (1972), which examined Lawrence's poetic techniques through , establishing her early scholarly voice in modernist . She also held a Visiting position at St. Mary's College in , contributing to undergraduate courses in English literature amid her burgeoning research interests. By the early 1970s, Gilbert transitioned to Indiana University as an associate professor, a role that facilitated her collaboration with Susan Gubar on foundational feminist literary projects, including the development of ideas later expanded in The Madwoman in the Attic (1979). She taught there for several years, delivering courses on 19th- and 20th-century literature, before departing for the University of California, Davis in 1975. These initial positions, primarily at state universities and in visiting capacities, provided Gilbert with platforms to refine her pedagogical approach, emphasizing textual analysis and emerging feminist perspectives, while navigating the constraints of pre-tenure academic environments in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

Collaboration with Susan Gubar

Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar initiated their scholarly partnership in the early 1970s at , where they co-taught a course on by women, fostering a collaborative approach that shaped their joint analyses of female authorship. This early teamwork culminated in their landmark co-authored book, : The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination, published in 1979 by , which examined the constraints and revisions imposed on by patriarchal literary traditions. Expanding their inquiry into modern literature, Gilbert and Gubar produced the three-volume series : The Place of the Woman Writer in the Twentieth Century, published by , with The War of the Words (Volume 1) in 1988, Sexchanges (Volume 2) in 1989, and Letters from the Front (Volume 3) in 1994. These works traced the evolution of women's literary responses to , transformations, and cultural conflicts during the twentieth century. Their joint efforts also included editing in 1985, which compiled key texts to highlight the female literary canon. The duo's collaborations extended into later projects, such as Feminist Literary Theory and Criticism: A Norton Reader (2007) and Still Mad: American Women Writers and the Feminist Imagination (2021), demonstrating sustained productivity over decades. This partnership earned recognition, including the 2013 National Book Critics Circle Lifetime Achievement Award for their contributions to criticism.

Professorships and Institutional Roles

Gilbert began her academic career with assistant and associate professorships at , Hayward, from 1968 to 1971. She also served as a visiting at St. Mary's College in , and held a temporary teaching position at Sacramento State College. From 1973 to 1975, Gilbert was an associate professor of English at . In 1975, she joined the (UC Davis) as an associate professor of English, advancing to full professor by 1985. That year, she departed for , where she held the C. Barnwell Straut Chair of English until 1989. Gilbert returned to UC Davis in 1989 and remained there until her retirement in 2005 as Distinguished Professor of English Emerita. During her tenure, she was appointed Research Lecturer in 1996, recognizing her contributions to women's literature . Post-retirement, she served as the inaugural Distinguished Visiting Professor at in 2006, teaching undergraduate and graduate seminars on .

Later Career Developments

Following her tenure at major institutions, Gilbert retired from the in 2005, where she had served as Distinguished Professor of English since the mid-1970s. In the years after retirement, she maintained an active presence in literary scholarship and , focusing on and collaborative feminist criticism. Her post-retirement output included poetry collections such as Aftermath: Poems (, 2011), which explored themes of loss and resilience, and (2018), reflecting on mortality and historical memory. These works built on her earlier poetic career, earning recognition for their lyrical engagement with personal and cultural narratives. Gilbert continued her longstanding collaboration with Susan Gubar, culminating in Still Mad: American Women Writers and the Feminist Imagination (W. W. Norton, 2021), which examined the role of broadsheets, pamphlets, and poetry in shaping through analysis of key American women writers. This volume extended their influential framework from (1979), applying it to twentieth-century contexts while addressing evolving feminist literary histories. Her emerita status allowed for editorial contributions and public discourse on women's writing, though she shifted emphasis toward creative genres amid declining institutional roles in academia. Later honors affirmed her enduring impact, including the Ivan Sandrof Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Book Critics Circle in 2012, shared with Gubar for their collective contributions to criticism. In 2019, she received the Fred Cody Lifetime Achievement & Service Award from the Book Awards, recognizing her six-decade career in and education. These accolades highlighted her transition from active professorship to influential emerita scholar, with ongoing influence through publications rather than administrative leadership.

Literary Contributions

Critical Theory and Feminist Analysis

Gilbert's most influential contribution to feminist literary criticism is her co-authored book The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination (1979), which analyzes the works of authors such as Charlotte Brontë, Emily Dickinson, and George Eliot to reveal how patriarchal structures shaped female authorship. The text introduces the concept of women's "anxiety of authorship," a psychological conflict arising from internalized male-dominated literary traditions, distinct from the male "anxiety of influence" theorized by Harold Bloom, as women writers navigated societal demands for domestic conformity while expressing subversive impulses. Drawing on the figure of Bertha Mason in Jane Eyre, Gilbert and Gubar interpret the madwoman archetype as a projection of the female author's divided self—embodying both angelic passivity and monstrous rebellion against confinement—thus highlighting causal links between cultural oppression and literary motifs of madness and enclosure. This framework critiques canonical interpretations by demonstrating empirically, through close readings of texts like Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights and Christina Rossetti's poetry, how women writers encoded resistance within seemingly compliant narratives, challenging assumptions of universal authorship unburdened by biological sex. Gilbert's approach integrates elements of to trace unconscious ambivalences in female creativity, positing that aesthetic infection from patriarchal "forefathers" compelled revisions of myths like to affirm gynocentric alternatives. Building on these ideas, Gilbert co-authored the No Man's Land trilogy (1988–1994) with Gubar, applying feminist lenses to twentieth-century literature amid modernism's disruptions, including World War I and suffrage movements. The first volume, The War of the Words (1988), examines how male and female modernists like D.H. Lawrence, Virginia Woolf, and H.D. reflected "sex wars" through genre shifts and gender role upheavals, arguing that literary battles mirrored broader erotic and social transformations driven by evolving sex roles. Subsequent volumes, Letters from the Front (1989) and Letters from the Ark (1994), extend this to interwar and postwar contexts, analyzing figures such as Marianne Moore and Edna St. Vincent Millay to show how women's writing contested masculine modernism's dominance, often through ironic appropriations of male forms. Gilbert's emphasizes causal realism in literary history, linking empirical shifts in women's legal and —such as property gains post-1920—to innovations in form and theme, while cautioning against overgeneralizing feminist readings without textual evidence. Her essays, including those on poetic revisionism, further deploy these methods to interrogate how female artists reclaim agency from mythic archetypes, influencing subsequent debates in gender-inflected formalism.

Poetry and Creative Writing

Sandra Gilbert authored eight collections of poetry, published primarily by W. W. Norton, spanning themes of personal loss, transformation, and the intersections of , , and . Her debut volume, In the Fourth World (University of Alabama Press, 1979), established her voice through introspective explorations of domesticity and existential displacement. Subsequent works include Emily's Bread (W. W. Norton, 1984), which meditates on culinary metaphors and female creativity; Blood Pressure (W. W. Norton, 1986), addressing bodily and emotional intensities; Ghost Volcano (W. W. Norton, 1997), winner of the Paterson Poetry Prize for its elegiac reflections on following her husband's death in 1972; Belongings (W. W. Norton, 2005), examining inheritance and relocation; Kissing the Major: Poems of a New Old Woman (W. W. Norton, 2010), confronting aging and renewal; Aftermath: Poems (W. W. Norton, 2011), processing aftermaths of personal and historical upheavals; and The Italian Collection (W. W. Norton, 2020), drawing on her experiences in to evoke cultural and sensory displacements. Gilbert's poetry is characterized by erudition, formal precision, and a blend of intellectual rigor with emotional depth, often echoing her scholarly interests in feminist literary traditions without overt didacticism. She received fellowships supporting her creative work from the Guggenheim Foundation, the , and the . In 1990, she shared the International Poetry Forum's Charity Randall Citation for Poetry with Karl Shapiro, recognizing her contributions to contemporary verse. Her poems have appeared in outlets such as and , underscoring her integration of creative practice with critical acclaim.

Memoirs and Non-Fiction

Gilbert's memoir Wrongful Death: A Medical Tragedy, published in 1995 by W. W. Norton, recounts the sudden death of her husband, the poet and scholar Elliot Gilbert, in 1991 following routine surgery at a major medical center. The book details the family's shock and the subsequent investigation revealing , including inadequate monitoring in the recovery room that led to fatal complications. Drawing on , legal proceedings, and personal reflection, Gilbert critiques systemic failures in American healthcare, emphasizing how such errors, though underreported, occur frequently yet are obscured by institutional opacity. In 2006, Gilbert extended her exploration of loss in Death's Door: Modern Dying and the Ways We Grieve, also from W. W. Norton, blending with interdisciplinary analysis of evolving attitudes toward mortality. Prompted by her husband's demise, the work examines how 20th- and 21st-century traumas—such as , 9/11, and advances in medical technology—have reshaped rituals, elegiac literature, and societal denial of . Gilbert contrasts historical of mortality with contemporary tendencies toward sanitized, privatized , incorporating poetic examples and anthropological insights to argue that modern interventions often prolong suffering without honoring natural processes. Gilbert's non-fiction also includes essay collections like Rereading Women: Thirty Years of Exploring Our Literary Traditions (2011, W. W. Norton), which reflects on feminist reinterpretations of texts while interweaving personal influences from her scholarly . These works underscore her shift from strictly academic criticism to broader meditations on personal and cultural bereavement, informed by empirical encounters with institutional and historical shifts in end-of-life practices.

Reception and Critiques

Scholarly Praise and Influence

Gilbert and Gubar's (1979) received acclaim for its analysis of the "anxiety of authorship" afflicting nineteenth-century , interpreting figures like the madwoman in as symbolic doubles embodying authors' internal conflicts with patriarchal literary traditions. The book pioneered feminist rereadings of canonical texts by authors such as , Charlotte Brontë, and , revealing subversive undercurrents of female frustration and rebellion against male-dominated authorship models. Its enduring scholarly impact is evidenced by its continued inclusion in university syllabi and its role in establishing an alternative canon prioritizing women's literary experiences. Critics have highlighted Gilbert's foundational contributions to , crediting her with legitimizing interdisciplinary approaches that integrate psychoanalytic and -based insights into literary history. Her collaborative series (1988–1994), examining twentieth-century ' responses to , extended this influence by documenting shifts in female creativity amid cultural upheavals. Scholars compare the transformative scope of her work to seminal interventions in other fields, such as Edward Said's in postcolonial studies, for reshaping interpretive paradigms around and power. In 2013, Gilbert and Gubar were awarded the National Book Critics Circle's Ivan Sandrof Lifetime Achievement Award, recognizing their collective role in advancing feminist literary scholarship over decades. Gilbert further solidified her institutional influence as president of the in 1987, during which she advocated for expanded attention to women's contributions in academia. Additional honors, including the 2019 Fred Cody Lifetime Achievement Award from the Book Awards, underscored her sustained impact on and .

Methodological Criticisms

Critics have argued that Gilbert's gynocritical methodology, which emphasizes the shared "anxiety of authorship" among and posits a unified female literary tradition rooted in patriarchal constraints, risks by assuming a monolithic female experience detached from historical, cultural, or individual variances. , in Sexual/Textual Politics (1985), contends that this approach constructs an ahistorical "woman" as a universal category, oversimplifying diverse authorial strategies and reducing textual analysis to binaries without sufficient attention to linguistic or discursive specificities. Similarly, Mary Jacobus critiques the framework in Reading Woman (1986) for implying an innate, biologically inflected female imagination that essentializes creativity as inherently oppositional to male norms, potentially reinforcing rather than dismantling reductive stereotypes. A prominent methodological objection centers on the neglect of intersectional factors, particularly race and , in Gilbert's readings of canonical texts. In her 1985 essay "Three Women's Texts and a Critique of Imperialism," faults Gilbert and Gubar's interpretation of Charlotte Brontë's for psychologizing solely as Jane's "dark double"—a manifestation of repressed rage—while disregarding Bertha's racialized identity as a Creole woman from colonial , thereby eliding the novel's imperialist underpinnings and the subaltern's silencing. argues this oversight methodologically replicates the text's own evasion of colonial violence, prioritizing feminist solidarity over empirical engagement with racial hierarchies evident in Brontë's portrayal, such as Bertha's exoticized "otherness" tied to British imperial expansion in the during the . Further critiques highlight an overreliance on Freudian psychoanalytic models, which Gilbert adapts to trace metaphors of confinement and rebellion but which some scholars view as methodologically flawed for importing patriarchal assumptions into feminist analysis. For instance, the madwoman archetype, central to Gilbert's exegesis of attic-bound figures as authorial alter egos, has been faulted for its deterministic view of female psychology, limiting interpretive flexibility and failing to account for socio-economic contexts beyond gender, as noted in Annette R. Federico's edited collection Gilbert and Gubar's The Madwoman in the Attic: After Thirty Years (2009), where contributors like Keren R. McGowan point to the paradigm's inadequacy for non-Western or postcolonial narratives. These methodological constraints, while innovative in recovering women's voices, have prompted calls for more pluralistic approaches integrating materialist history and decolonial perspectives to avoid reductive universalism.

Debates on Ideological Bias in Interpretation

Critics of Sandra Gilbert's literary interpretations, especially in her seminal collaboration (1979) with Gubar, have contended that her feminist framework introduces ideological bias by projecting modern egalitarian ideals onto nineteenth-century texts, thereby constructing a teleological narrative where female authors' works inevitably anticipate contemporary feminist consciousness. This approach, reviewers argue, selectively emphasizes motifs of patriarchal constraint and madwoman rebellion while downplaying aesthetic, psychological, or historical contingencies that do not align with a victim-oppressor binary, resulting in readings detached from the era's cultural meanings. For example, in analyzing authors like or , Gilbert's method has been faulted for imputing an "anxiety of authorship" rooted in systemic gender oppression, potentially overlooking individual agency or stylistic innovations independent of . Such critiques highlight a broader methodological concern: the risk of in feminist , where preconceived ideological commitments—such as the universality of "" for —distort primary sources to fit a revisionist of literary toward liberation. Conservative literary scholars, including Carol Iannone in a 1988 Commentary , have portrayed this as part of feminism's ascendancy in academia, where interpretive supplants textual fidelity with political advocacy, reducing complex works to allegories of struggle and marginalizing non-feminist perspectives. , in exchanges with Gubar, similarly questioned the ideological neutrality of such readings, arguing that they impose a dogmatic lens that privileges over intrinsic artistic value, though Gilbert's defenders counter that uncovering embedded patriarchal ideologies requires precisely this corrective reorientation. Empirical assessments of Gilbert's influence reveal mixed scholarly reception on this front; while her work galvanized feminist rereadings—evidenced by its citation in over 10,000 academic papers by 2020—subsequent quantitative analyses of have documented a prevailing left-leaning skew in departments, amplifying ideologically aligned interpretations like hers while sidelining dissent. Critics from traditionalist quarters, such as those in PMLA reviews, warn that this teleological imposition fosters an , where evidence contradicting the paradigm (e.g., female authors' endorsements of domestic roles) is reframed as internalized rather than authentic worldview. Gilbert has responded indirectly through later works like Still Mad (2021), reiterating the necessity of ideological vigilance against historical erasure, yet debates persist on whether her method advances truth or exemplifies academia's systemic partiality toward progressive narratives.

Personal Life

Marriage and Family

Sandra Gilbert married Elliot L. Gilbert, a literary scholar whom she met while studying at Cornell University, on an unspecified date in 1957. The couple's marriage lasted 34 years until Elliot Gilbert's death in 1991. They had three children: a son, Roger, and two daughters, Katherine and Susanna. Following her husband's death, Gilbert entered a long-term companionship with mathematician , with whom she lived in , and , , until his death in 2008 at age 85. No further marriages are recorded. Gilbert was survived by her three children and four grandchildren.

Health and Death

Sandra Gilbert died on November 10, 2024, in , at the age of 87. Her death occurred in a hospital and was attributed to end-stage , as confirmed by her son, Roger Gilbert. Gilbert had been battling a prolonged illness prior to her death. No public records detail earlier specific health conditions beyond the progression of her , which reached its terminal stage by late 2024.

References

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