Results 251 to 260 of about 478,525 (316)
Financial barriers and inequalities in healthcare access across East Africa: evidence from demographic and health surveys. [PDF]
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2005
Writing in 1979, Patricia Stubbs identified a problem encountered by feminist writers at the end of the nineteenth century as still having relevance for the current generation of women writers. ‘This’, she claims: is a difficulty peculiar to realist fiction — that of how to incorporate it into a form whose essential characteristic is the exploration ...
Avril Horner, Sue Zlosnik
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Writing in 1979, Patricia Stubbs identified a problem encountered by feminist writers at the end of the nineteenth century as still having relevance for the current generation of women writers. ‘This’, she claims: is a difficulty peculiar to realist fiction — that of how to incorporate it into a form whose essential characteristic is the exploration ...
Avril Horner, Sue Zlosnik
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2020
“Writing Modernist Women: Toward a Poetics of Insubstantiality” traces the development of a “poetics of insubstantiality” across the works of a range of early twentieth-century women writers, including May Sinclair, Dorothy Richardson, Virginia Woolf, Cicely Hamilton, and Edith Wharton, among others.
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“Writing Modernist Women: Toward a Poetics of Insubstantiality” traces the development of a “poetics of insubstantiality” across the works of a range of early twentieth-century women writers, including May Sinclair, Dorothy Richardson, Virginia Woolf, Cicely Hamilton, and Edith Wharton, among others.
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Women Writing and Writing about Women
2012The Difference of View Mary Jacobus 1. Towards a Feminist Poetics Elaine Showalter 2. The Buried Letter: Feminism and Romanticism in 'Villette' Mary Jacobus 3. The Indefinite Disclosed: Christina Rosetti and Emily Dickinson Cora Kaplan 4. Beyond Determinism: George Eliot and Virginia Woolf Gillian Beer 5.
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2018
This chapter deals with subversive literary techniques of stolen language, (auto)biographical genre and nomadic (travel) literature in the context of women’s writing, feminist theory and the history of women’s emancipation. Contesting the meaning of universal (phallocentric) narrations, women’s writing deconstructs gender and sex roles as well as their
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This chapter deals with subversive literary techniques of stolen language, (auto)biographical genre and nomadic (travel) literature in the context of women’s writing, feminist theory and the history of women’s emancipation. Contesting the meaning of universal (phallocentric) narrations, women’s writing deconstructs gender and sex roles as well as their
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Angelaki, 2017
The following piece is a summary of a talk given to address the subject of women writing about male protagonists and from a male point of view, arguing that in Gunn’s own work traditional male char...
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The following piece is a summary of a talk given to address the subject of women writing about male protagonists and from a male point of view, arguing that in Gunn’s own work traditional male char...
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2020
Katherine Cooper reveals how contemporary assessments of gender, war and writing are shaped by preconceptions concerning experience and authority. Storm Jameson’s key war novels are at odds with conventional appraisals of war writing, which has contributed to her undeserved critical neglect. Her challenge to such prescribed gender boundaries has led to
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Katherine Cooper reveals how contemporary assessments of gender, war and writing are shaped by preconceptions concerning experience and authority. Storm Jameson’s key war novels are at odds with conventional appraisals of war writing, which has contributed to her undeserved critical neglect. Her challenge to such prescribed gender boundaries has led to
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On the Horizontal: Women Writing on Writing Women
PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, 2007Writing in bed: I have always loved Edith Wharton's habit of doing just that, as well as Cynthia Ozick's discussion of it (look how neat the desk at which Wharton is photographed in her stays; imagine how much more comfortable she is in bed with her stays undone).
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2010
To grow up in the nineteenth century meant negotiating a culture that made gender the organizing principle of daily life, that divided work, education, clothes, colours, food, rooms, hobbies, even handwriting into male and female counterparts. Nineteenth-century women writers had a lifetime’s worth of work in engaging with the identity so insistently ...
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To grow up in the nineteenth century meant negotiating a culture that made gender the organizing principle of daily life, that divided work, education, clothes, colours, food, rooms, hobbies, even handwriting into male and female counterparts. Nineteenth-century women writers had a lifetime’s worth of work in engaging with the identity so insistently ...
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