Female Imagination

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A01=Patricia Meyer Spacks
adolescent girls
Author_Patricia Meyer Spacks
Beauvoir
Bell Jar
Category=DSB
Category=DSK
Charlotte Bronte
Chopin
Daniel Deronda
Dora Carrington
Doris Lessing
Edna Pontellier
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eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
female literary imagination
female subjectivity studies
feminist literary criticism
Free Women
gender identity in literature
Golden Notebook
Gwendolen Harleth
Henry Thrale
Isadora Duncan
Isak Dinesen
Jane Austen
Jane Eyre
John Stuart Mill
Kate Brown
Kate Millet
Lady Delacour
Mabel Luhan
Maggie Tulliver
Marie Bashkirtseff
Martha Quest
Mary MacLane
Mary McCarthy
Montagu
Nelly Dean
Optimist's Daughter
Optimist’s Daughter
psychic power
psychological analysis
psychological analysis of authorship
Simone De Beauvoir
social passivity
The Bell Jar
twentieth century women's literary analysis
Virginia Woolf
women's autobiographical writing
women's narrative forms
women's writing
Wuthering Heights
Younger Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032263663
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Sep 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Is there such a thing as a female literary imagination – a special brand of insight and intuition that characterises women’s writing? Is there something about a novel, whether by Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontë or Doris Lessing, that tells us that it could only have been written by a woman? Do the subject matter, form and style that women choose throw light on the way they think and feel?

In this brilliant and highly readable book, originally published in 1976, Patricia Spacks analyses the female view of the world. Juxtaposing – sometimes in startlingly original combination some eighty books written between the seventeenth century and the present day she uses both literary and psychological analysis to explore patterns that recur again and again in the stories women tell – whether about their own lives or the lives of their fictional characters. She dissects female experience in the twentieth century as viewed by an array of writers ranging from Kate Millet to Virginia Woolf; examines the interplay of social passivity and psychic power that dominates characters such as Maggie Tulliver and Jane Eyre, the altruism that impels Jane Austen’s and Mrs Gaskell’s heroines, the ‘acceptance’ of Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Ramsey, the personal and social conflicts that beset so many of the adolescent girls that figure in both nineteenth-century and contemporary literature; reveals the complex motives that can be bound up in a women’s deliberate choice of the artist’s role, as appears in the writings of Isadora Duncan’s and Dora Carrington, Marie Bashkirtseff and Mary McCartney – and the surprising forms ‘freedom’ can take, as for Beatrice Webb in the East End of London or Isak Dinerson in the wilds of Africa…

The voices echo and re-echo across the years in fascinating counter-point. Their range is enormous – rebels and reformers, actresses and painters, Society ladies and unknown girls in small towns, novels, poems, memoirs, diaries and letters, both English and American, and alongside classics such as Wuthering Heights and well-known modern works such as The Bell Jar, Patricia Spacks introduces an intriguing selection of relatively unknown writers, such as Napoleon’s psychoanalyst great-niece Marie Bonaparte, the Victorian arch-fantasist Mary MacLane and the autobiography of a seventeenth-century Duchess.

The Female Imagination is much more than a study of women’s writing. It is an inquiry into the nature of female thought, self-expression and experience. As such it should appeal to every educated woman – and to many men too.

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