Women in literature
Label
Women in literature
Name
Women in literature
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Incoming Resources
- The art of loving, female subjectivity and male discursive traditions in Shakespeare's tragedies, Evelyn Gajowski
- L'amour discourtois, la "fin'amors" chez les premiers troubadours, Jean-Charles Huchet
- Woman's fiction, a guide to novels by and about women in America, 1820-1870, Nina Baym
- Women and the English Renaissance, literature and the nature of womankind, 1540-1620, Linda Woodbridge
- Seeing together, friendship between the sexes in English writing from Mill to Woolf, Victor Luftig
- Women's lives and the 18th-century English novel, Elizabeth Bergen Brophy
- A Question of identity, women, science, and literature, edited by Marina Benjamin
- The Orwell mystique, a study in male ideology, Daphne Patai
- Edith Wharton's women, friends & rivals, Susan Goodman
- The Perception of women in Spanish theater of the Golden Age, edited by Anita K. Stoll and Dawn L. Smith
- Sentimental modernism, women writers and the revolution of the word, Suzanne Clark
- Resisting bodies, the negotiation of female agency in twentieth-century women's fiction, Helga Druxes
- Mother Russia, the feminine myth in Russian culture, Joanna Hubbs
- The heroine in western literature, the archetype and her reemergence in modern prose, by Meredith A. Powers
- Gender and sexuality in twentieth-century Chinese literature and society, edited by Tonglin Lu
- Psyche as hero, female heroism and fictional form, Lee R. Edwards
- La cuestión feminista en los ensayos de Emilia Pardo Bazán, Adna Rosa Rodríguez
- The feminine and Faulkner, reading (beyond) sexual difference, Minrose C. Gwin
- The baroque narrative of Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora, a new world paradise, Kathleen Ross
- Abandoned women and poetic tradition, Lawrence Lipking
- Edith Wharton's letters from the underworld, fictions of women and writing, Candace Waid
- Un mito nuevo, la mujer como sujeto/objeto literario, Elena Gascón Vera
- Women's re-visions of Shakespeare, on the responses of Dickinson, Woolf, Rich, H.D., George Eliot, and others, edited by Marianne Novy
- The Great War and women's consciousness, images of militarism and womanhood in women's writings, 1914-64, by Claire M. Tylee
- Wanton eyes and chaste desires, female sexuality in the Faerie queene, Sheila T. Cavanagh
- El personaje femenino en la narrativa de escritoras hispanoamericanas, Willy O. Muñoz
- Constance Fenimore Woolson, homeward bound, Sharon L. Dean
- Framing Anna Karenina, Tolstoy, the woman question, and the Victorian novel, Amy Mandelker
- Following Djuna, women lovers and the erotics of loss, Carolyn Allen
- Women in Beckett, performance and critical perspectives, edited by Linda Ben-Zvi
- Arms and the woman, war, gender, and literary representation, edited by Helen M. Cooper, Adrienne Auslander Munich, and Susan Merrill Squier
- Sexuality and Victorian literature, edited by Don Richard Cox
- Terrible perfection, women and Russian literature, Barbara Heldt
- Communities of women, an idea in fiction, Nina Auerbach
- The feminine reclaimed, the idea of woman in Spenser, Shakespeare, and Milton, Stevie Davies
- Brett Ashley, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- Reading the romance, women, patriarchy, and popular literature, Janice A. Radway ; with a new introduction by the author
- Rape and representation, edited by Lynn A. Higgins and Brenda R. Silver
- Narrating mothers, theorizing maternal subjectivities, edited by Brenda O. Daly, Maureen T. Reddy
- Gender in African women's writing, identity, sexuality, and difference, Juliana Makuchi Nfah-Abbenyi
- New readings on women in Old English literature, edited by Helen Damico and Alexandra Hennessey Olsen
- The dialogic and difference, an/other woman in Virginia Woolf and Christa Wolf, Anne Herrmann
- The sign of Angellica, women, writing, and fiction, 1660-1800, Janet Todd
- Wykked wyves and the woes of marriage, misogamous literature from Juvenal to Chaucer, by Katharina M. Wilson, Elizabeth M. Makowski
- Wingless flights, Appalachian women in fiction, Danny L. Miller
- Feminist perspectives on Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, edited by Stephanie Merrim
- Feminine concerns in contemporary Spanish fiction by women, edited by Roberto C. Manteiga, Carolyn Galerstein, and Kathleen McNerney
- The semiotics of rape in Renaissance English literature, Lee A. Ritscher
- Gender and the writer's imagination, from Cooper to Wharton, Mary Suzanne Schriber
- Becoming a heroine, reading about women in novels, Rachel M. Brownstein
Outgoing Resources
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