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A Literature of Their Own

British Women Novelists from Bronte to Lessing

Elaine Showalter

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Belletristik / Essays, Feuilleton, Literaturkritik, Interviews

Beschreibung

When first published in 1977, A Literature of Their Own quickly set the stage for the creative explosion of feminist literary studies that transformed the field in the 1980s. Launching a major new area for literary investigation, the book uncovered the long but neglected tradition of women writers in England. A classic of feminist criticism, its impact continues to be felt today.


This revised and expanded edition contains a new introductory chapter surveying the book's reception and a new postscript chapter celebrating the legacy of feminism and feminist criticism in the efflorescence of contemporary British fiction by women.

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Schlagwörter

Narrative, Katherine Mansfield, Mrs Dalloway, Oppression, Bertha Mason, Margaret Oliphant, Dinah Craik, Woolf, Mary Wollstonecraft, Virginia Woolf, Mrs., Parody, Feminist literary criticism, Suffering, Aestheticism, Narcissism, The Other Hand, Feminism, Margaret Drabble, A Room of One's Own, Harriet Martineau, Criticism, Florence Nightingale, Governess, Elizabeth Robins, Career, Satire, Novelist, Poetry, Rose Macaulay, Rhoda Broughton, Jane Eyre, George Egerton, Femininity, Literary criticism, Mother, Suffrage, Innuendo, Literature, Victorian literature, Mona Caird, Ideology, Austen, English novel, May Sinclair, Writing, Fiction, Sensibility, Olive Schreiner, Elizabeth Gaskell, Women's writing (literary category), George Sand, Jane Austen, Biography, The Subjection of Women, Sarah Grand, Feminism (international relations), Frances Hodgson Burnett, Suffragette, Writer, Doris Lessing, Pseudonym, Novel, Geraldine Jewsbury, Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot, G. (novel), Symptom, Superiority (short story), Dorothy Richardson