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Feminism Is for Everybody: Passionate Politics, bell hooks (2000) Feminist Theory (2000–present) Manifesta: Young women, Feminism and the Future, Jennifer Baumgardner and Amy Richards (2000) Scapegoat: The Jews, Israel, and Women's Liberation, Andrea Dworkin (2000) "Shakespeare's Sonnets and the Mystique of the Sheikh", Annie Laurie Gaylor ...
Feminist literature is fiction or nonfiction which supports the feminist goals of defining, establishing and defending equal civil, political, economic and social rights for women. It often identifies women's roles as unequal to those of men – particularly as regards status, privilege and power – and generally portrays the consequences to ...
Feminist scholar, author; women's movement, lesbian culture, and women's music historian: 1940–1999: Laura Mulvey: United Kingdom: 1941 – 1940–1999: Sally Rowena Munt: United Kingdom: 1960 – Feminist academic and lesbian theorist, author of Heroic Desire: Lesbian Identity and Cultural Space (1998) 1940–1999: Jenni Murray: United ...
Ecofeminist authors; Feminist art critics; Feminist economists; Feminist philosophers; Feminist poets; Feminist rhetoricians; Jewish feminists; Muslim feminists; Feminist parties; Suffragists and suffragettes; Women's rights activists; Women's studies journals; Women's suffrage organizations; Categories; Women's rights by country; Feminists by ...
Nancy K. Miller [1] (born 21 February 1941) is an American literary scholar, feminist theorist and memoirist.Currently a Distinguished Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the CUNY Graduate Center, Miller is the author of several books on feminist criticism, women’s writing, and most recently, family memoir, biography, and trauma.
Feminism: The Essential Historical Writings is an anthology edited with an introduction and commentaries by Miriam Schneir. [1] It was originally published in 1972 and re-published in 1994 by Vintage Books. [1] It comprises essays, fiction, memoirs, and letters by what Schneir labels the major feminist writers. [1]
This is a list of feminist poets. Historically, literature has been a male-dominated sphere, and any poetry written by a woman could be seen as feminist . Often, feminist poetry refers to that which was composed after the 1960s and the second wave of the feminist movement.
Mothers of the Novel is divided into three parts. Part I treats a series of seventeenth-century women writers, only some of whom would have been familiar to most readers in 1986: Aphra Behn (1640–1689), Margaret Cavendish (1623–1673), Anne Clifford (1590–1676), Anne Fanshawe (1625–1680), Eliza Haywood (1693–1756), [1] Lucy Hutchinson (1618–1681), Delarivière Manley (1663 –1724 ...