A literature of their own : British women novelists from Brontë to Lessing /

A LITERATURE OF THEIR OWN quickly set the stage for the creative explosion of feminist literary studies that transformed the field in the 1980s. Launching a major new area for literary investigation, the book uncovered the long but neglected tradition of women writers and the development of their fi...

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Kaituhi matua: Showalter, Elaine
Hōputu: Licensed eBooks
Reo:Ingarihi
I whakaputaina: Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press ©1977.
Urunga tuihono:https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctv173f0v7
Rārangi ihirangi:
  • Ch. 1. The female tradition
  • ch. 2. The feminine novelists and the will to write
  • ch. 3. The double critical standard and the feminine novel
  • ch. 4. Feminine heroines: Charlotte Brontë and George Eliot
  • ch. 5. Femine heroes: the woman's man
  • ch. 6. Subverting the feminine novel: sensationalism and feminine protest
  • ch. 7. The feminine novelists
  • ch. 8. Women writers and the suffrage movement
  • ch. 9. The female aesthetic
  • ch. 10. Virginia Woolf and the flight into androgyny
  • ch. 11. Beyond the female aesthetic: contemporary women novelists.