Making a difference : feminist literary criticism
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Bibliographic Information
Making a difference : feminist literary criticism
(New accents)
Routledge, 2003
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Note
Originally published: Methuen, 1985
Includes bibliographical references index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
First published in 2002. 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.
Table of Contents
- Chapter 1 Feminist scholarship and the social construction of woman, Gayle Greene, Coppelia Kahn
- Chapter 2 Varieties of feminist criticism, Sydney Janet Kaplan
- Chapter 3 The politics of language: beyond the gender principle?, Nelly Furman
- Chapter 4 Inscribing femininity: French theories of the feminine, Ann Rosalind Jones
- Chapter 5 Mind mother: psychoanalysis and feminism, Judith Kegan Gardiner
- Chapter 6 Pandora's box: subjectivity, class and sexuality in socialist feminist criticism, Cora Kaplan
- Chapter 7 What has never been: an overview of lesbian feminist criticism, Bonnie Zimmerman
- Chapter 8 Black women writers: taking a critical perspective, Susan Willis
- Chapter 9 Notorious signs, feminist criticism and literary tradition, Adrienne Munich
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