Making a Difference

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Annette Kolodny
Category=DSA
Category=JBSF11
Chopin
Contemporary Black Women Writers
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Female Literary Tradition
feminist criticism methodologies
Feminist Literary Criticism
feminist literary critics
Freed Women
French feminist philosophy
fundamental organizing category
gender studies theory
human experience
intersectional analysis
Kate Chopin
language politics in literature
Le Corps Lesbien
Lesbian Critics
Lesbian Feminist
Lesbian Literature
Lesbian Text
Lesbian Writers
literary criticism
Make Up
Mary Wollstonecraft
Mother Daughter Bond
Parler Femme
psychoanalytic feminism
Radclyffe Hall
Sea Water
social constructionism
Social Reproduction
social sciences
Socialist Feminist Criticism
Space Confined
Vice Versa
Violated
Women Writers

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138151949
  • Weight: 690g
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Aug 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Feminist scholarship employs gender as a fundamental organizing category of human experience, holding two related premises: men and women have different perceptions or experiences in the same contexts, the male perspective having been dominant in fields of knowledge; and that gender is not a natural fact but a social construct, a subject to study in any humanistic discipline. This challenging collection of essays by prominent feminist literary critics offers a comprehensive introduction to modes of critical practice being used to trace the construction of gender in literature.
The collection provides an invaluable overview of current femionist critical thinking. Its essays address a wide range of topics: the rerlevance of gender scholarship in the social sciences to literary criticism; the tradition of women's literature and its relation to the canon; the politics of language; French theories of the feminine; psychoanalysis and feminism; feminist criticism of writing by lesbians and black women; the relationship between female subjectivity, class, and sexuality; feminist readings of the canon.

Gayle Greene is Associate Professor English at Scripps College, Claremont, Ca. Coppelia Kahn is Professor of English at Brown University, Providence, RI. The other contributors are Nelly Furman, Judith Kegan Gardiner, Ann Rosalind Jones, Cora Kaplan, Sydney Janet Kaplan, Adrienne Munich, Susan Willis and Bonnie Zimmerman.