Feminist Fiction: Feminist Uses of Generic Fiction

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Polity Press, 1990 - American fiction - 228 pages
An examination of the ways in which feminists have made use of a number of fictional forms, including science fiction, fantasy, detective fiction and romance. The author's analysis ranges from the works of Charlotte and Emily Bronte to the contemporary fiction of Fay Weldon and Ursula le Guin.

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About the author (1990)

In 2011 I'm finishing my Australian Research Council (ARC) funded project on Touch and New Technologies by completing several pieces of work: a monograph, provisionally titled Touching Technologies; a special issue of the journal Social Semiotics on Touch; a photo-essay based on my exhibition, The Sense of Touch; an essay on Touch and the Archive; and an extended essay on Ron Mueck's sculpture. The Social Semiotics issue features work from researchers in a range of fields including education, museology, sound art, experimental psychology, marketing, and cultural studies - and will be an exciting synergistic read! I'm also working on a new ARC-funded project about Australian writer and socialist, Jack Lindsay - and have made some extraordinary archival discoveries! I hope to write about these very soon too!

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