Literature and the Development of Feminist Theory
Herausgeber: Goodman, Robin
Literature and the Development of Feminist Theory
Herausgeber: Goodman, Robin
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This book offers an insightful look at the development of feminist theory through a literary lens.
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This book offers an insightful look at the development of feminist theory through a literary lens.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 302
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. Februar 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 591g
- ISBN-13: 9781107126084
- ISBN-10: 1107126088
- Artikelnr.: 42968517
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 302
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. Februar 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 591g
- ISBN-13: 9781107126084
- ISBN-10: 1107126088
- Artikelnr.: 42968517
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
1. Introduction Robin Truth Goodman; 2. 'Original spirit': literary
translations and transnational literature in the works of Mary
Wollstonecraft Laura Kirley; 3. Jane Eyre, Incidents in the Life of a Slave
Girl, and the varieties of nineteenth-century feminism Margaret Homans; 4.
Progressive portraits: literature in feminisms of Charlotte Perkins Gilman
and Olive Schreiner Judith A. Allen; 5. Feminist poetics: first-wave
feminism, theory, and modernist women poets Linda Kinnahan; 6. Woolf and
women's work: literary invention in an obscure hat factory Robin Truth
Goodman; 7. Walking in a man's world: myth, literature, and the
interpretation of Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex Ashley King Scheu; 8.
Decapitation impossible: the hundred heads of Julia Kristeva Maria
Margaroni; 9. Shattering the gender walls: Monique Wittig's contribution to
literature Dominique Bourque; 10. Hélène Cixous: writing for her life Peggy
Kamuf; 11. Subversive creatures from behind the Iron Curtain: Irmtraud
Morgner's The Life and Adventures of Trobodora Beatrice as Chronicled by
her Minstrel Laura Sonja E. Klocke; 12. Christa Wolf: literature as an
aesthetics of resistance Anna K. Kuhn; 13. Naked came the female
extraterrestrial stranger: applying Linda M. Scott's Fresh Lipstick to Sue
Lange's The Textile Planet Marleen S. Barr; 14. Captive maternal love:
Octavia Butler and science fiction family values Joy James; 15. More than
theatre: Cherrie Moraga's The Hungry Woman and the feminist phenomenology
of excess Lakey; 16. Nawal el Saadawi: writer and revolutionary Miriam
Cooke; 17. 'The woman who said 'no'': colonialism, Islam, and feminist
resistance in the works of Assia Djebar Jane Hiddleston.
translations and transnational literature in the works of Mary
Wollstonecraft Laura Kirley; 3. Jane Eyre, Incidents in the Life of a Slave
Girl, and the varieties of nineteenth-century feminism Margaret Homans; 4.
Progressive portraits: literature in feminisms of Charlotte Perkins Gilman
and Olive Schreiner Judith A. Allen; 5. Feminist poetics: first-wave
feminism, theory, and modernist women poets Linda Kinnahan; 6. Woolf and
women's work: literary invention in an obscure hat factory Robin Truth
Goodman; 7. Walking in a man's world: myth, literature, and the
interpretation of Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex Ashley King Scheu; 8.
Decapitation impossible: the hundred heads of Julia Kristeva Maria
Margaroni; 9. Shattering the gender walls: Monique Wittig's contribution to
literature Dominique Bourque; 10. Hélène Cixous: writing for her life Peggy
Kamuf; 11. Subversive creatures from behind the Iron Curtain: Irmtraud
Morgner's The Life and Adventures of Trobodora Beatrice as Chronicled by
her Minstrel Laura Sonja E. Klocke; 12. Christa Wolf: literature as an
aesthetics of resistance Anna K. Kuhn; 13. Naked came the female
extraterrestrial stranger: applying Linda M. Scott's Fresh Lipstick to Sue
Lange's The Textile Planet Marleen S. Barr; 14. Captive maternal love:
Octavia Butler and science fiction family values Joy James; 15. More than
theatre: Cherrie Moraga's The Hungry Woman and the feminist phenomenology
of excess Lakey; 16. Nawal el Saadawi: writer and revolutionary Miriam
Cooke; 17. 'The woman who said 'no'': colonialism, Islam, and feminist
resistance in the works of Assia Djebar Jane Hiddleston.
1. Introduction Robin Truth Goodman; 2. 'Original spirit': literary
translations and transnational literature in the works of Mary
Wollstonecraft Laura Kirley; 3. Jane Eyre, Incidents in the Life of a Slave
Girl, and the varieties of nineteenth-century feminism Margaret Homans; 4.
Progressive portraits: literature in feminisms of Charlotte Perkins Gilman
and Olive Schreiner Judith A. Allen; 5. Feminist poetics: first-wave
feminism, theory, and modernist women poets Linda Kinnahan; 6. Woolf and
women's work: literary invention in an obscure hat factory Robin Truth
Goodman; 7. Walking in a man's world: myth, literature, and the
interpretation of Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex Ashley King Scheu; 8.
Decapitation impossible: the hundred heads of Julia Kristeva Maria
Margaroni; 9. Shattering the gender walls: Monique Wittig's contribution to
literature Dominique Bourque; 10. Hélène Cixous: writing for her life Peggy
Kamuf; 11. Subversive creatures from behind the Iron Curtain: Irmtraud
Morgner's The Life and Adventures of Trobodora Beatrice as Chronicled by
her Minstrel Laura Sonja E. Klocke; 12. Christa Wolf: literature as an
aesthetics of resistance Anna K. Kuhn; 13. Naked came the female
extraterrestrial stranger: applying Linda M. Scott's Fresh Lipstick to Sue
Lange's The Textile Planet Marleen S. Barr; 14. Captive maternal love:
Octavia Butler and science fiction family values Joy James; 15. More than
theatre: Cherrie Moraga's The Hungry Woman and the feminist phenomenology
of excess Lakey; 16. Nawal el Saadawi: writer and revolutionary Miriam
Cooke; 17. 'The woman who said 'no'': colonialism, Islam, and feminist
resistance in the works of Assia Djebar Jane Hiddleston.
translations and transnational literature in the works of Mary
Wollstonecraft Laura Kirley; 3. Jane Eyre, Incidents in the Life of a Slave
Girl, and the varieties of nineteenth-century feminism Margaret Homans; 4.
Progressive portraits: literature in feminisms of Charlotte Perkins Gilman
and Olive Schreiner Judith A. Allen; 5. Feminist poetics: first-wave
feminism, theory, and modernist women poets Linda Kinnahan; 6. Woolf and
women's work: literary invention in an obscure hat factory Robin Truth
Goodman; 7. Walking in a man's world: myth, literature, and the
interpretation of Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex Ashley King Scheu; 8.
Decapitation impossible: the hundred heads of Julia Kristeva Maria
Margaroni; 9. Shattering the gender walls: Monique Wittig's contribution to
literature Dominique Bourque; 10. Hélène Cixous: writing for her life Peggy
Kamuf; 11. Subversive creatures from behind the Iron Curtain: Irmtraud
Morgner's The Life and Adventures of Trobodora Beatrice as Chronicled by
her Minstrel Laura Sonja E. Klocke; 12. Christa Wolf: literature as an
aesthetics of resistance Anna K. Kuhn; 13. Naked came the female
extraterrestrial stranger: applying Linda M. Scott's Fresh Lipstick to Sue
Lange's The Textile Planet Marleen S. Barr; 14. Captive maternal love:
Octavia Butler and science fiction family values Joy James; 15. More than
theatre: Cherrie Moraga's The Hungry Woman and the feminist phenomenology
of excess Lakey; 16. Nawal el Saadawi: writer and revolutionary Miriam
Cooke; 17. 'The woman who said 'no'': colonialism, Islam, and feminist
resistance in the works of Assia Djebar Jane Hiddleston.