Women in literature
Label
Women in literature
Name
Women in literature
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Incoming Resources
- Shakespeare, feminism and gender, edited by Kate Chedgzoy
- Pride and prejudice, an authoritative text, backgrounds and sources, criticism, Jane Austen ; edited by Donald Gray
- Well-behaved women seldom make history, Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
- Flirting With Pride And Prejudice, Fresh Perspectives On The Original Chick Lit Masterpiece
- An uncommon heroine, Scarlett, Edna, Sula--and more than 20 other of the most remarkable women in literature, Jamie Cox Robertson
- The fallen woman in the nineteenth-century English novel, George Watt
- The heroine's bookshelf, life lessons from Jane Austen to Laura Ingalls Wilder, Erin Blakemore
- Elizabethan women, edited by Harold Odgen White
- Bibliotherapy, the girl's guide to books for every phase of our lives, Nancy Peske and Beverly West
- Women's issues in Margaret Atwood's The handmaid's tale, David E. Nelson, book editor
- Labyrinth of desire, women, passion and romantic obsession, Rosemary Sullivan
- Heroines, Kate Zambreno
- Jane Eyre's sisters, how women live and write the heroine's story, Jody Gentian Bower
- Scourge of Henry VIII, the life of Marie de Guise, Melanie Clegg
- Creating Rosie the Riveter, class, gender, and propaganda during World War II, Maureen Honey
- At home in the world, women writers and public life, from Austen to the present, Maria DiBattista and Deborah Epstein Nord
- Novel craft, Victorian domestic handicraft and nineteenth-century fiction, Talia Schaffer
- Intimate commerce, exchange, gender, and subjectivity in Greek tragedy, by Victoria Wohl
- Minding the body, women and literature in the Middle Ages, 800-1500, Monica Brzezinski Potkay and Regula Meyer Evitt
- Edith Wharton's letters from the underworld, fictions of women and writing, Candace Waid
- Sexuality and Victorian literature, edited by Don Richard Cox
- Women of will, following the feminine in Shakespeare's plays, Tina Packer
- Jane Eyre's sisters, how women live and write the heroine's story, Jody Gentian Bower
- The honey month, Amal El-Mohtar
- The female hero in American and British literature, Carol Pearson, Katherine Pope
- Mother without child, contemporary fiction and the crisis of motherhood, Elaine Tuttle Hansen
- The nightingale's burden, women poets and American culture before 1900, Cheryl Walker
- Star wars, women of the galaxy, by Amy Ratcliffe ; foreword by Kathleen Kennedy
- Seduction and betrayal, women and literature, Elizabeth Hardwick
- Nathaniel Hawthorne's The scarlet letter, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- Women, the longest revolution, Juliet Mitchell
- Private woman, public stage, literary domesticity in nineteenth-century America, Mary Kelley
- The sexual education of Edith Wharton, Gloria C. Erlich
- Women's matters, politics, gender, and nation in Shakespeare's early history plays, Nina S. Levine
- Writing beyond the ending, narrative strategies of twentieth-century women writers, by Rachel Blau DuPlessis
- Gender, fantasy, and realism in American literature, Alfred Habegger
- March sisters, on life, death, and Little Women, Kate Bolick, Jenny Zhang, Carmen Maria Machado, and Jane Smiley
- Women and fiction 2, short stories by and about women, edited by Susan Cahill
- Investigating Lois Lane, the turbulent history of the Daily Planet's ace reporter, Tim Hanley
- Heroines of comic books and literature, portrayals in popular culture, edited by Maja Bajac-Carter, Norma Jones, Bob Batchelor
- Arab women novelists, the formative years and beyond, Joseph T. Zeidan
- Imagining the worst, Stephen King and the representation of women, edited by Kathleen Margaret Lant and Theresa Thompson
- The resisting reader, a feminist approach to American fiction, Judith Fetterley
- Inseparable, desire between women in literature, Emma Donoghue
- Tragic ways of killing a woman, Nicole Loraux ; translated by Anthony Forster
- Seven faces of love, André Maurois ; translated from the French by Haakon M. Chevalier
- Great women of the Bible in art and literature, preface Herbert Haag ; commentary Dorothée Sölle ... ; English translation Joe H. Kirchberger ; project editor Emil Bührer
- How to Be a Heroine : Or, What I've Learned from Reading Too Much
- George Eliot, Jennifer Uglow
- A room of one's own, Virginia Woolf
Outgoing Resources
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