Results 201 to 210 of about 602,203 (259)
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2007
Abstract The anti-suffrage cause was very fortunate in its women writers. Opponents of votes for women included many of the best-selling female novelists of the day and a number of prominent women writers on social issues. This chapter considers the relationship between women writers and women readers, and the role of the New Woman as a ...
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Abstract The anti-suffrage cause was very fortunate in its women writers. Opponents of votes for women included many of the best-selling female novelists of the day and a number of prominent women writers on social issues. This chapter considers the relationship between women writers and women readers, and the role of the New Woman as a ...
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2023
Translation plays a significant role in Chapter Ten, which maps out women writers’ contributions to a transnational European culture, focussing on British and French fiction. Although not exclusive to the Romantic period, connections between literary women were particularly productive.
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Translation plays a significant role in Chapter Ten, which maps out women writers’ contributions to a transnational European culture, focussing on British and French fiction. Although not exclusive to the Romantic period, connections between literary women were particularly productive.
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2002
In chapter 9 of Shirley , Charlotte Bronte gives us a brief, vivid description of the Yorke family's domestic life. Among the six children, the twelve-year-old Rose stands out for her strength of character. Although her strong-minded, dour mother would like to turn Rose into a copy of herself, 'a woman of dark and dreary duties', the girl is of a ...
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In chapter 9 of Shirley , Charlotte Bronte gives us a brief, vivid description of the Yorke family's domestic life. Among the six children, the twelve-year-old Rose stands out for her strength of character. Although her strong-minded, dour mother would like to turn Rose into a copy of herself, 'a woman of dark and dreary duties', the girl is of a ...
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1993
““Well, Miss Elliot . . . we shall never agree I suppose upon this point. No man and woman would, probably. But let me observe that all histories are against you, all stories, prose and verse . . . I do not think I ever opened a book in my life which had not something to say upon woman's inconstancy.
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““Well, Miss Elliot . . . we shall never agree I suppose upon this point. No man and woman would, probably. But let me observe that all histories are against you, all stories, prose and verse . . . I do not think I ever opened a book in my life which had not something to say upon woman's inconstancy.
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Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature, 1988
Mary O'Toole, Eva Figes, Adele King
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Mary O'Toole, Eva Figes, Adele King
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2014
Italy’s late nineteenth century saw the emergence of women writers as novelists and journalists writing for a growing readership. Their rise in popularity was facilitated by rapid industrialization and the expansion of the press, and contemporary male writers held them in high regard.
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Italy’s late nineteenth century saw the emergence of women writers as novelists and journalists writing for a growing readership. Their rise in popularity was facilitated by rapid industrialization and the expansion of the press, and contemporary male writers held them in high regard.
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Women, Women Writers, and the West
The Western Historical Quarterly, 1980Patricia Nelson +2 more
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Identifying as (Women) Writers
2011Did early modern women writers see themselves as having a particular identity? In this chapter I trace some of the possible identities available to early modern women who wrote. It might make more sense, in this context, to talk of ‘identifications’ rather than identities. In general it is true to say that the category ‘early modern women writers’ is a
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2009
“Women writers and the war” is a misleadingly straightforward title for a subject of enormous proportions, a subject that potentially embraces not only the geographical extent of a world war, but also a series of theoretical questions about writing and subjectivity, conflict and creativity. Although, as earlier chapters show, women of all nationalities
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“Women writers and the war” is a misleadingly straightforward title for a subject of enormous proportions, a subject that potentially embraces not only the geographical extent of a world war, but also a series of theoretical questions about writing and subjectivity, conflict and creativity. Although, as earlier chapters show, women of all nationalities
openaire +1 more source

