Women in literature
Label
Women in literature
Name
Women in literature
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Incoming Resources
- Subject of48
- The critical response to Nathaniel Hawthorne's The scarlet letter, edited by Gary Scharnhorst
- Women in ancient Greece, a sourcebook, Bonnie MacLachlan
- Reading women's worlds from Christine de Pizan to Doris Lessing, a guide to six centuries of women writers imagining rooms of their own, Sharon L. Jansen
- Faulkner and love, the women who shaped his art, Judith L. Sensibar
- Twentieth century interpretations of The scarlet letter ;, a collection of critical essays, edited by John C. Gerber
- Reader, I married him, a study of the women characters of Jane Austen, Charlotte Bronte, Elizabeth Gaskell and George Eliot, Patricia Beer
- Inseparable, desire between women in literature, Emma Donoghue
- Stieg Larsson's millennium, as viewed by Eva Gabrielsson, his partner
- Jane Eyre, portrait of a life, Maggie Berg
- A jury of her peers, American women writers from Anne Bradstreet to Annie Proulx, by Elaine Showalter
- The scarlet letter, a reading, Nina Baym
- Happily ever after, the romance story in popular culture, Catherine M. Roach
- Abortion, choice, and contemporary fiction, the armageddon of the maternal instinct, Judith Wilt
- Woman as image in medieval literature, from the twelfth century to Dante, Joan M. Ferrante
- Images of women in fiction;, feminist perspectives
- Heroines of comic books and literature, portrayals in popular culture, edited by Maja Bajac-Carter, Norma Jones, and Bob Batchelor
- Well-behaved women seldom make history, by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
- New essays on The scarlet letter, edited by Michael J. Colacurcio
- At home in the world, women writers and public life, from Austen to the present, Maria DiBattista and Deborah Epstein Nord
- A Scarlet letter handbook
- Relative creatures, Victorian women in society and the novel, Françoise Basch ; [translated by Anthony Rudolf]
- Saints, sinners, saviors, strong Black women in African American literature, Trudier Harris
- The Bloomsbury guide to women's literature, edited by Clare Buck
- Staging violence against women and girls, plays and interviews, edited by Daniela Cavallaro, Luciana d'Arcangeli and Claire Kennedy
- Five for freedom;, a study of feminism in fiction, [by] Geoffrey Wagner
- Barron's simplified approach to The scarlet letter: Nathaniel Hawthorne
- The madwoman in the attic, the woman writer and the nineteenth-century literary imagination, Sandra M. Gilbert and Susan Gubar
- Women of will, following the feminine in Shakespeare's plays, Tina Packer
- Nathaniel Hawthorne's The scarlet letter, by Sara Sheldon
- Communities of women, an idea in fiction, Nina Auerbach
- American women writing fiction, memory, identity, family, space, Mickey Pearlman, editor
- Seduction and betrayal;, women and literature
- Stieg Larsson's millennium, as viewed by Eva Gabrielsson, his partner
- The land before her, fantasy and experience of the American frontiers, 1630-1860, Annette Kolodny
- Understanding the Scarlet letter, a student casebook to issues, sources, and historical documents, Claudia Durst Johnson
- Sacred groves and ravaged gardens, the fiction of Eudora Welty, Carson McCullers, and Flannery O'Connor, Louise Westling
- Woman's fiction, a guide to novels by and about women in America, 1820-1870, Nina Baym
- Interrogating lesbian modernism, histories, forms, genres, edited by Elizabeth English, Jana Funke, and Sarah Parker
- The glass slipper, women and love stories, Susan Ostrov Weisser
- Toys and tools in pink, cultural narratives of gender, science, and technology, Carol Colatrella
- Unlikeable female characters, the women pop culture wants you to hate, Anna Bogutskaya
- Faulkner's women: characterization and meaning, [by] Sally R. Page
- The discourse of enclosure, representing women in Old English literature, by Shari Horner
- The faces of Eve, women in the nineteenth century American novel, Judith Fryer
- The necessary blankness, women in major American fiction of the sixties, Mary Allen
- English women in life & letters,, by M. Phillips and W.S. Tomkinson
- The figure of Beatrice;, a study in Dante
- Women, around the world and through the ages, Sabrina Mervin, Carol Prunhuber
Outgoing Resources
- Focus1