Woman House

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1970s LA trauma
A01=Lauren W. Westerfield
addiction and resilience in family narrative
American family memoir
and power in female lives
art and memory
art and memory in dysfunctional families
art as therapy memoir
artistic lineage
artistic memory
Author_Lauren W. Westerfield
beauty
body and illness
body trauma memoir
caregiving and family legacy
caretaking a parent
caretaking memoir
Category=DNB
Category=DNBA
Category=DNC
Category=JBSF1
Category=VFV
childhood in America
childhood shaped by trauma
chronic illness experience in caregiving
chronic illness memoir
collage memoir
coming of age memoir about mothers and daughters
complex mother daughter relationship
complexities of mother-daughter intimacy
complicated love in family memoir
confronting shame and truth in memoir
creative expression as healing
creative nonfiction
creativity and trauma
critical essays on female portraiture
Cultural trauma and recovery in poetry
daughter of an artist
daughters of artists
embodied feminism
emotional labor of caregiving
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_health-lifestyle
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
exploring pleasure and pain through art
family and identity
family secrets memoir
female body in memoir
female identity and self-discovery
feminist body politics
feminist coming of age amidst trauma
feminist exploration of body and agency
feminist literature 2025
feminist memoir
feminist memoir of survival and resistance
feminist reckoning memoir
feminist trauma writing
finding voice amid family dysfunction
fragmented
Gen X millennial memoir
generational trauma
generational trauma in women's lives
growing up with an artist mother
healing family wounds
healing fractured family relationships
healing from violence
honest look at maternal relationships
hybrid form memoir
hybrid memoir
illness and creativity
illness and identity
inherited pain and pleasure in families
intergenerational pain
intergenerational reckoning with violence
life writing about chronic illness
literary memoir
Los Angeles 1970s women's history
maternal inheritance
memoir about anxiety and trauma
memoir about assault
memoir across decades
memoir during lockdown
memoir of addiction and recovery
memory and narrative in women's nonfiction
mother and artist legacy during pandemic
mother and daughter trauma
mother daughter memoir
mother daughter memoir and healing
mother illness memoir
mother's past trauma shaping present
narratives of inheritance and autonomy
pandemic and mental health
pandemic memoir
patriarchy and the body
personal history meets cultural critique
portrait of resilience and female strength
post-1970s women's lives
psychological inheritance
recovery through writing
redefining control and beauty in womanhood
reimagining female bodies in memoir
sexual assault aftermath
silence
storytelling as resistance in memoir
surviving generational abuse
the impact of illness on family bonds
trauma embodied
trauma healing book
trauma legacy
visual and written memoir
women and agency
women reclaiming narrative
women resisting silence
women's bodies and patriarchal control
women's intergenerational struggle for agency
women's memoir 2025
writing as healing
writing through pain

Product details

  • ISBN 9781625349231
  • Weight: 313g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Mar 2026
  • Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A compelling and inventive memoir exploring how pain and pleasure are passed down through generations of women

For years, Lauren W. Westerfield looked back at her childhood as an imaginative playscape lovingly crafted by her artist mother. But in truth, theirs was always a fraught relationship, close yet turbulent. It wouldn’t be until her mid-twenties that Westerfield would learn that her mother was assaulted while living as a single woman in 1970s Los Angeles, or until her mid-thirties when caretaking for her now chronically ill mother during pandemic lockdown would reveal how that earlier incident and its ripple effects had shaped both their lives.

The essays and assemblages in this book plumb the depths of two women’s experiences, exploring the pain and pleasure they find in their bodies, in culture, and in their own art. Violence, beauty, and love reverberate and dissipate and shape the forms and psyches of these two profoundly connected family members. At once raw and refined, narrative and lyrical, nostalgic and blunt, the stories and images presented here explore Westerfield’s life—from childhood to adulthood—passing through innocence, self-discovery and familial tethers. In unpacking her mother’s history and the complexities of their relationship, Westerfield finds herself confronted with her own story: one grounded in a yearning for agency and individuation, of a body and mind groomed to be at odds with one another, of a feminist politics examining deeply rooted patriarchal understandings of beauty, control, and power.

Part memoir, part critical sense-making, part reckoning with family, identity, illness, addiction, art, and inheritance, Woman House draws on diverse inspirations in an attempt to recontextualize the female body—in danger, in pleasure, in portraiture, in proximity, in resistance—and challenge the structures that silence and restrict female expression.

Lauren W. Westerfield is author of Depth Control. Her essays and poetry have been published in FENCE, Seneca Review, Willow Springs, Denver Quarterly, Indiana Review, Ninth Letter, and elsewhere. Westerfield is a 2022 Idaho Commission on the Arts Literary Fellow. She teaches at Washington State University, where she serves as the editor-in-chief of Blood Orange Review.

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