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Loretta Lynn: Writin’ Life
Author(s) -
Danny Shipka
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
online journal of rural research and policy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1936-0487
DOI - 10.4148/ojrrp.v5i4.205
Subject(s) - sociology , viewpoints , lesbian , art history , literature , history , art , gender studies , visual arts
The release of Loretta Lynn's 2004 album Van Leer Rose welcomed back after 33 years one of the premier feminist voices in recorded music.  The songs that Loretta wrote in 60s and early 70s were some of the most controversial and politically charged to hit the airwaves. They encompassed a microcosm of issues that rural women were facing including the changing sexual roles of women, ideas on marriage, the ravages of war and substance abuse. This textual analysis looks at the 94 songs that Loretta wrote and co-wrote between the years 1960 to 1972 (the year which she stopped writing), as well as the music of Van Leer Rose. By looking at Lynn's writing, we begin to understand the viewpoints of this trailblazing artist and how she reflected her life and the social times in her music. It is a testament to her that these works remain as timely and as politically charged today as they did 40 years ago

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