Results for 'women's writing'

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  1.  7
    Women's Writing on the First World War.Agnès Cardinal, Dorothy Goldman & Judith Hattaway (eds.) - 2002 - Oxford University Press UK.
    'ground-breaking anthology... wide array of perspectives on WW1, from both sides of the fighting' -B. Adler, Choice 'a very fine anthology' -Times Literary SupplementThe First World War inspired a huge outpouring of writing that, until recently, was thought to be almost the exclusive preserve of men. Yet the war also acted as a catalyst which enabled women writers to find a literary and political voice. This anthology bears witness to the great variety and scope of women's writing (...)
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  2.  27
    Mothers of Invention: Women's Writing in Philosophy of Education.Mary S. Leach - 1991 - Educational Theory 41 (3):287-300.
  3. Diverse Voices: Czech Women’s Writing in the Post-Communist Era.Elena Sokol - 2012 - Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal 2 (1):37-58.
    This essay offers an overview of the diversity of women’s prose writing that emerged on the Czech cultural scene in the post-communist era. To that end it briefly characterizes the work of eight Czech women authors who were born within the first two decades after World War II and began to create during the post-1968 era of ‘normalization’. In this broad sense they belong to a single generation. With rare exception their work was not officially published in their homeland (...)
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  4.  7
    Women’s Writing: New Scholarship in Italy.Marina Caffiero - 2012 - Clio 35:163-176.
    L’Italie a récemment assisté, dans le domaine de l’histoire des femmes et du genre, à une multiplication des recherches sur les écrits féminins personnels. L’article se propose d’illustrer l’ampleur et la richesse de l’éventail d’écrits retrouvés dans le cadre du projet Per una storia della memoria e delle scritture delle donne a Roma dal xvi al xx secolo : censimento delle fonti e elaborazione di repertori. Cette recherche vise à recenser et à cataloguer les écrits inédits de femmes de l’époque (...)
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  5.  52
    Women's Writing and the Early Modern Genre Wars.Karen Green - 2013 - Hypatia 28 (3):499-515.
    This paper explores two phases of the early modern genre wars. The first was fought by Marie de Gournay, in her “Preface” to Montaigne's Essays, on behalf of her adoptive father and in defense of his naked and masculine prose. The second was fought half a century later by Nicholas Boileau in opposition to Gournay's feminizing successor, Madeleine de Scudéry. In this debate Gournay's position is egalitarian, whereas Scudéry's approximates to a feminism of difference. It is claimed that both female (...)
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  6. Conceptualizing Generation and Transformation in Women’s Writing.Urszula Chowaniec & Marzenna Jakubczak - 2012 - Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal 2 (1):5-16.
    The main objective of this collection of papers is to explore ideas of generation and transformation in the context of postdependency discourse as it may be traced in women’s writing published in Bengali, Polish, Czech, Russian and English. As we believe, literature does not have merely a descriptive function or a purely visionary quality but serves also as a discursive medium, which is rhetorically sophisticated, imaginatively influential and stimulates cultural dynamics. It is an essential carrier of collective memory and (...)
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  7.  2
    Women’s writing, Englishness and national and cultural identity: The mobile woman and the migrant voice, 1938–1962 Maroula Joannou. [REVIEW]Mary Eagleton - 2015 - Feminist Theory 16 (1):111-113.
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  8. Memorable Fiction. Evoking Emotions and Family Bonds in Post-Soviet Russian Women’s Writing.Marja Rytkӧnen - 2012 - Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal 2 (1):59-74.
    This article deals with women-centred prose texts of the 1990s and 2000s in Russia written by women, and focuses especially on generation narratives. By this term the author means fictional texts that explore generational relations within families, from the perspective of repressed experiences, feelings and attitudes in the Soviet period. The selected texts are interpreted as narrating and conceptualizing the consequences of patriarchal ideology for relations between mothers and daughters and for reconstructing connections between Soviet and post-Soviet by revisiting and (...)
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  9.  8
    Feminist theory, women's writing.Laurie Finke - 1992 - Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.
    In this rewarding book, Laurie A. Finke challenges assumptions about gender, the self, and the text which underlie fundamental constructs of contemporary feminist theory. She maintains that some of the key concepts structuring feminist literary criticism need to be reexamined within both their historical context and the larger framework of current theory concerning language, representation, subjectivity, and value.
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  10.  21
    Imagination in Confinement: Women's Writings from French Prisons.Michele H. Richman & Elissa Gelfand - 1986 - Substance 15 (2):119.
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  11. A History of Women's Writing in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. Edited by Jo Catling.E. Mornin - 2002 - The European Legacy 7 (6):813-813.
     
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  12.  12
    Women's liberation!: Feminist writings that inspired a revolution & still can.Alix Kates Shulman & Honor Moore (eds.) - 2021 - New York: A Library of America.
    When Betty Friedan published The Feminine Mystique in 1963, the book exploded into women's consciousness. Before the decade was out, what had begun as a campaign for women's civil rights transformed into a diverse and revolutionary movement for freedom and social justice that challenged many aspects of everyday life long accepted as fixed: work, birth control and abortion, childcare and housework, gender, class, and race, art and literature, sexuality and identity, rape and domestic violence, sexual harassment, pornography, and (...)
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  13.  5
    Of Suffocated Hearts and Tortured Souls: Seeking Subjecthood Through Madness in Francophone Women's Writing of Africa and the Caribbean.Valérie Orlando - 2002 - Lexington Books.
    A striking number of hysterical or insane female characters populate Francophone women's writing. To discover why, Orlando reads novels from a variety of cultures, teasing out key elements of Francophone identity struggles.
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  14.  2
    Of Suffocated Hearts and Tortured Souls: Seeking Subjecthood Through Madness in Francophone Women's Writing of Africa and the Caribbean.Valérie Orlando - 2002 - Lexington Books.
    A striking number of hysterical or insane female characters populate Francophone women's writing. To discover why, Orlando reads novels from a variety of cultures, teasing out key elements of Francophone identity struggles.
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  15.  4
    Queer Theory, Sexuality, and Women’s Writing from Latin America: The Example of Cristina Peri Rossi.Rosemary Geisdorfer Feal - 1997 - Intertexts 1 (1):51-61.
  16.  6
    Blowing the Love-breath: Healing men in Caribbean Women's Writing.Elina Valovirta - 2013 - Feminist Review 104 (1):100-118.
    Caribbean women writers (such as Erna Brodber and Opal Palmer Adisa, who are discussed in this article) often include men in women's liberatory quests as participants: helpers, healers or caregivers. The close connection between sexuality and emotions in this body of writing can be read through a new model of affective feminist reader theory, which embraces and redefines from a feminist perspective the affective fallacy (over-interpreting a text based on one's feelings) so dreaded by the New Critics. This (...)
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  17.  16
    The Utopian Imaginary, Gender Equality, and Women’s Writings.Rita Monticelli - 2016 - Governare la Paura. Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 9 (1).
    The essay analyses the utopian imaginary in women’s writings with specific reference to the 1970s. Since the late 19 th century, utopia as a genre becomes a space to deconstruct and re-elaborate women’s identity and subjectivity. The appropriation of the utopian paradigm enriches the classical critique of the existing social systems with the deconstruction of gender roles and female stereotypes as a means to fight gender discrimination as well as other forms of oppression which lie at the foundation of the (...)
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  18. Writing Double: Women's Literary Partnerships. By Bette London.J. S. Pedersen - 2002 - The European Legacy 7 (2):255-256.
  19.  8
    Kierkegaard's Writings, I: Early Polemical Writings.Søren Kierkegaard - 2009 - Princeton University Press.
    Early Polemical Writings covers the young Kierkegaard's works from 1834 through 1838. His authorship begins, as it was destined to end, with polemic. Kierkegaard's first published article touches on the theme of women's emancipation, and the other articles from his student years deal with freedom of the press. Modern readers can see the seeds of Kierkegaard's future career these early pieces. In "From the Papers of One Still Living," his review of Hans Christian Andersen's novel Only a Fiddler, Kierkegaard (...)
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  20. Similarities and Differences in Postcolonial Bengali Women’s Writings: The Case of Mahasweta Debi and Mallika Sengupta.Blanka Knotková-Čapková - 2012 - Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal 2 (1):97-116.
    The emancipation of women has become a strong critical discourse in Bengali literature since the 19th century. Only since the second half of the 20th century, however, have female writers markedly stepped out of the shadow of their male colleagues, and the writings on women become more and more often articulated by women themselves. In this article, I focus on particular concepts of femininity in selected texts of two outstanding writers of different generations, a prose writer, and a woman poet: (...)
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  21.  9
    ‘In defence of chick-lit’: refashioning feminine subjectivities in Ugandan and South African contemporary women’s writing.Lynda Gichanda Spencer - 2019 - Feminist Theory 20 (2):155-169.
    Ugandan and South African contemporary women’s narratives reflect on the rapid pace of change in the social lives of women in two countries that are contending with the aftermath of conflict and violence. This article will interrogate how contemporary women writers such as Goretti Kyomuhendo (Whispers from Vera), Zukiswa Wanner (The Madams and Behind Every Successful Man) and Cynthia Jele (Happiness is a Four-Letter Word) are embracing chick-lit as a form of writing, while simultaneously short-circuiting this genre to create (...)
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  22.  3
    Book Review: Women's Writing, 1945–1960 after the Deluge. [REVIEW]Mary McAuliffe - 2007 - Feminist Review 87 (1):160-161.
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  23.  13
    Undoing the Double Tress: Scotland, Early Modern Women's Writing, and the Location of Critical Desires.Sararh Dunnigan - 2003 - Feminist Studies 29:299-319.
  24.  35
    Religion, meaning, and identity in women's writing.Elizabeth Fox-Genovese - 2008 - Common Knowledge 14 (1):16-28.
    This text of Elizabeth Fox-Genovese's is published posthumously in the context of pieces dedicated to her memory. It is unclear whether she intended it for eventual publication or whether she had intended it as a lecture; nor is there decisive evidence for a date of composition. In it, she reviews the stance of feminist literary criticism toward religion and finds it to be generally negative. She regrets that feminist critics see in religion mostly a means of subordinating women to men, (...)
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  25.  18
    When Caged Birds Sing: The Many-folded Subject in the Baroque World of Heian Japanese Women's Writing.Christina Houen - 2011 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 5 (1):97-117.
    In this article, the world of Heian women's literature is interpreted through Deleuzian concepts of desire and becoming and figures of the rhizome, the Baroque fold and origami, supported by Elizabeth Grosz's concept of art as originating in the impulse to seduction. Within the constraints of movement, dress and behaviour imposed by a polygamous hierarchical court society, Heian women created a rich body of literature that celebrated and subtly critiqued their world. Through aesthetic intensification of form and imagination within (...)
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  26.  16
    The Writing Or the Sex?, Or, Why You Don't Have to Read Women's Writing to Know It's No Good.Dale Spender - 1989 - Pergamon Press.
    This text questions the differences between female and male literature. Taking the view that the difference lies not within the writing itself, but in the response to the writing, the author writes that men have been in charge of according value to literature, and that they have found the contributions of their own sex immeasurably superior. The author presents evidence for a form of literary criticism which takes account of the exploitative practices of men.
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  27.  5
    Re-vision and Revelation: Forms of Spiritual Power in Women's Writing.Heather Walton - 2003 - Feminist Theology 12 (1):89-102.
    This article explores contrasting strategies in feminist critical theory in order to interrogate divergent fictional representations of women's spiri tual power. The first critical strategy uses the resources of gynocriticism to present a positive view of women's authorship, agency and ability to revi sion religious forms. The second demonstrates poststructuralist concerns with the repressed other/ s of dominant cultural forms and the power these possess to provoke political change and new visions of the divine. It is argued that (...)
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  28.  5
    Book Review: Women's Writing, 1945–1960 after the Deluge. [REVIEW]Mary McAuliffe - 2007 - Feminist Review 87 (1):160-161.
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  29.  18
    A History of the Precedent: Rhetorics of Legitimation in Women's Writing.Catherine Gallagher - 2000 - Critical Inquiry 26 (2):309-327.
  30.  6
    Cultural Sites of Critical Insight: Philosophy, Aesthetics, and African American and Native American Women’s Writings.Angela L. Cotten & Christa Davis Acampora (eds.) - 2012 - SUNY Press.
    Explores the interplay between artistic values and social, political, and moral concerns in writings by African American and Native American women.
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  31.  2
    Report: ‘Motherlands’: Symposium on African, Caribbean, and Asian Women's Writing, 18–20 September 1991.Dorothea Smart - 1992 - Feminist Review 41 (1):114-117.
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  32. Concrete universality and the end of revolutionary politics : a Žižekian approach to postcolonial women's writings.Jamil Khader - 2017 - In Russell Sbriglia (ed.), Everything you always wanted to know about literature but were afraid to ask Žižek. Duke University Press.
     
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  33.  16
    The 'Improper' Feminine: The Women's Sensation Novel and the New Woman Writing.Lyn Pykett - 2013 - Routledge.
    The women's sensation novel of the 1860s and the New Woman fiction of the 1890s were two major examples of a perceived feminine invasion of fiction which caused a critical furore in their day. Both genres, with their shocking, `fast' heroines, fired the popular imagination by putting female sexuality on the literary agenda and undermining the `proper feminine' ideal to which nineteenth-century women and fictional heroines were supposed to aspire. By exploring in impressive depth and breadth the material and (...)
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  34.  8
    Female physical illness and disability in Arab women’s writing.Abir Hamdar - 2010 - Feminist Theory 11 (2):189-204.
    This article focuses on the representation of female physical illness and disability in the works of two Arab women writers: Iraqi Alia Mamdouh’s Habbat al Naftalin [Mothballs] (1986) and Egyptian Salwa Bakr’s al ‘Arabah al Dhahabiyah la Tas‘ad ila al Sama’ [The Golden Chariot] (1991). It argues that the representation of female illness in these works centres upon the figure of the sick mother. Despite the limitations of this trope of illness, both novels offer a more complex illness narrative than (...)
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  35.  3
    The Becoming of the Body: Contemporary Women's Writing in French.Amaleena Damle - 2014 - Edinburgh University Press.
    Following a long tradition of objectification, 20th-century French feminism often sought to liberate the female body from the confines of patriarchal logos and to inscribe its rhythms in writing. Amaleena Damle addresses questions of bodies, boundaries and philosophical discourses by exploring the intersections between a range of contemporary philosophers and authors on the subject of contemporary female corporeality and transformation.
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  36.  16
    H.D. and A.C. Swinburne: Decadence and Modernist Women's Writing.Cassandra Laity - 1989 - Feminist Studies 15 (3):461.
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  37.  7
    Ovid's Presence in Contemporary Women's Writing: Strange Monsters by Fiona Cox.Rebecca Shaw - 2020 - American Journal of Philology 141 (1):139-142.
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  38.  4
    BARBARA T. GATES , In Nature's Name: An Anthology of Women's Writing and Illustration, 1780–1930. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 2002. Pp. xxvi+673. ISBN 0-226-28446-8. £17.50, $27.50. [REVIEW]Claire Brock - 2005 - British Journal for the History of Science 38 (1):110-111.
  39. Women’s Enlightenment: Early Feminist Critiques of Kant's Gendered Ideal of Human Progress in 18th-Century Germany and Poland.Olga Lenczewska - manuscript
    This book project reshapes the way we think about Enlightenment: rather than viewing it primarily as the era of the emancipation of human reason, it emphasizes the gendered nature of the Enlightenment ideal of human progress and investigates how this ideal oppressed women. I take a critical look at this ideal from within intellectual debates of the time, examining how the restrictive view of women’s socio-political and educational opportunities was challenged by progressive female German and Polish thinkers of the late (...)
     
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  40.  2
    Kierkegaard's Writings, I: Early Polemical Writings.Julia Watkin (ed.) - 2009 - Princeton University Press.
    Early Polemical Writings covers the young Kierkegaard's works from 1834 through 1838. His authorship begins, as it was destined to end, with polemic. Kierkegaard's first published article touches on the theme of women's emancipation, and the other articles from his student years deal with freedom of the press. Modern readers can see the seeds of Kierkegaard's future career these early pieces. In "From the Papers of One Still Living," his review of Hans Christian Andersen's novel Only a Fiddler, Kierkegaard (...)
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  41.  17
    From Genocide to Justice: Women's Bodies as a Legal Writing Pad.Debra B. Bergoffen - 2006 - Feminist Studies 32 (1):11.
  42. Review of: Gates, Barbara T., ed., In Nature's Name: An Anthology of Women's Writing and Illustration. [REVIEW]Julie Cook Lucas - 2004 - Environmental Values 13 (3):412-414.
     
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  43.  37
    "Beyond Miranda's Meanings": Contemporary Critical Perspectives on Caribbean Women's LiteraturesOut of the Kumbla: Caribbean Women and LiteratureGreen Cane and Juicy Flotsam: Short Stories by Caribbean WomenCaribbean Women Writers: Essays from the First International ConferenceMotherlands: Black Women's Writing from Africa, the Caribbean, and South Asia. [REVIEW]Maria Helena Lima, Carole Boyce Davies, Elaine Savory Fido, Carmen C. Esteves, Lizabeth Paravisini-Gebert, Selwyn R. Cudjoe & Susheila Nasta - 1995 - Feminist Studies 21 (1):115.
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  44. Colonial Memory: Contemporary Women’s Travel Writing in Britain and the Netherlands.[author unknown] - 2011
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  45.  9
    Women's Resolutions of Lawes Reconsidered: Epistemic Shifts and the Emergence of the Feminist Legal Discourse.Maria Drakopoulou - 2000 - Law and Critique 11 (1):47-71.
    This paper has arisen from my interest in questions ofsubjectivity of primary concern to contemporaryfeminist jurisprudence. Rather than side with anyparticular view represented in the debates surroundingthese questions, I have used Foucault's concept ofepisteme to explore the tradition of feministlegal thought. By focusing upon seventeenth-centurywomen's writings in which the earliest statementslinking law to women's oppression are to be found, thepaper argues that knowledge claims about law'sassociation with women's oppression are predicated notupon the positing of a sovereign feministconsciousness, but (...)
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  46. Selfhood and Self-government in Women’s Religious Writings of the Early Modern Period.Jacqueline Broad - 2019 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 27 (5):713-730.
    Some scholars have identified a puzzle in the writings of Mary Astell (1666–1731), a deeply religious feminist thinker of the early modern period. On the one hand, Astell strongly urges her fellow women to preserve their independence of judgement from men; yet, on the other, she insists upon those same women maintaining a submissive deference to the Anglican church. These two positions appear to be incompatible. In this paper, I propose a historical-contextualist solution to the puzzle: I argue that the (...)
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  47. Spaces of the urban. Gendered urban spaces: cultural mediations on the city in eighteenth-century German women's writing / Diana Spokiene ; The roots of German theater's "spatial turn": Gerhart Hauptmann's social-spatial dramas / Amy Strahler Holzapfel ; Urban mediations: the theoretical space of Siegfried Kracauer's Ginster / Eric Jarosinski ; Protesting the globalized metropolis: the local as counterspace in recent Berlin literature / Bastian Heinsohn ; Transnational cinema and the ruins of Berlin and Havana: Die neue Kunst, Ruinen zu bauen [The new art of making ruins, 2007] and Suite Habana (2003). [REVIEW]Jennifer Ruth Hosek - 2010 - In Jaimey Fisher & Barbara Caroline Mennel (eds.), Spatial Turns: Space, Place, and Mobility in German Literary and Visual Culture. Rodopi.
  48.  2
    Book Review: In Nature's Name: An Anthology of Women's Writing and Illustration, 1780–1930. [REVIEW]Julie Cook Lucas - 2004 - Environmental Values 13 (3):412-414.
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  49.  4
    Feminist Writing: Working with Women's Experience.Frigga Haug - 1992 - Feminist Review 42 (1):16-32.
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  50.  20
    VIRGIL'S PRESENCE - Cox Sibylline Sisters. Virgil's Presence in Contemporary Women's Writing. Pp. xii + 284. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011. Cased, £58, US$99. ISBN: 978-0-19-958296-9. [REVIEW]George Kalogeris - 2014 - The Classical Review 64 (2):614-616.
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