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From Suffrage to Women's Liberation: Feminism in Twentieth Century America, Joreen (1995) [535] "From the Back Alleys to the Supreme Court and Beyond", Dorothy Fadiman (1995) Listen Up: Voices from the Next Feminist Generation, edited by Barbara Findlen (1995) Massacre of the Dreamers: Essays on Xicanisma, Ana Castillo (1995)
Pages in category "20th-century American women writers" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 7,373 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
A Celebration of Women Writers A major focus of this site is the development of on-line editions of older, often rare, out-of-copyright works. Emory Women Writers Resource Project A collection of texts by women writing from the seventeenth century through the early twentieth century.
Devika's early research was about the emergence of modern binary gender as a language of describing society and social change in the early twentieth century in Kerala. In her later writings, she has followed the gendering of development in Kerala through a history of public consent for contraception between the 1930s and 1970.
From Suffrage to Women's Liberation: Feminism in Twentieth Century America, Joreen (1995) [418] "From the Back Alleys to the Supreme Court and Beyond", Dorothy Fadiman (1995) Listen Up: Voices from the Next Feminist Generation, Barbara Findlen, ed. (1995) Massacre of the Dreamers: Essays on Xicanisma, Ana Castillo (1995)
Beatrice Campbell, "Writer's Room With a View," The Guardian, 21 February 1989, image 35 (assembly of women writers from the USSR, the United States, and France" The Persephone Book of Short Stories," Persephone Books Ltd. 2012, ISBN 978-1903-155-905 is a collection of short stories written by women 1909-1986.
Tuttle supported women's suffrage and wrote a number of articles encouraging women to attend college and enter the workforce. She also wrote about health and diet. [ 7 ] Her best-known work of fiction was probably the novel Feet of Clay , which was filmed by Cecil B. DeMille as Feet of Clay (1924) and published in several editions, including ...
Johnson was a well-known figure in the national black theatre movement and was an important "cultural sponsor" in the early twentieth century, assembling and inspiring the intellectuals and artists who generated the next group of black theatre and rising education (16). [1] Johnson wrote about 28 plays.