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  2. Estate satire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estate_satire

    The traditional estates were specific to men (although the clergy also included nuns); women were considered a class in themselves, [1] the best-known example being Geoffrey Chaucer's Wife of Bath. Estate satire praised the glories and purity of each class in its ideal form, but was also used as a window to show how society had gotten out of hand.

  3. List of feminist literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_feminist_literature

    The following is a list of feminist literature, listed by year of first publication, then within the year alphabetically by title (using the English title rather than the foreign language title if available/applicable). Books and magazines are in italics, all other types of literature are not and are in quotation marks.

  4. Novel of manners - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Novel_of_manners

    The French novelist Honoré de Balzac was a founder of literary realism, of which the novel of manners is a subgenre.. To realise upward social mobility in their societies, men and women learned etiquette in order to know how to get along with the people from whom they sought favour; an example of such instructions is the book Letters to His Son on the Art of Becoming a Man of the World and a ...

  5. Women's writing (literary category) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women's_writing_(literary...

    The academic discipline of women's writing is a discrete area of literary studies which is based on the notion that the experience of women, historically, has been shaped by their sex, and so women writers by definition are a group worthy of separate study: "Their texts emerge from and intervene in conditions usually very different from those which produced most writing by men."

  6. The World's Wife - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_World's_Wife

    The World's Wife is a collection of poetry by Carol Ann Duffy, originally published in the UK in 1999 by both Picador [1] and Anvil Press Poetry [2] and later published in the United States by Faber and Faber in 2000. [3] Duffy's poems in The World's Wife focus on either well known female figures or fictional counterparts to well known male ...

  7. The Wife of Bath's Tale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wife_of_Bath's_Tale

    As Cooper notes, the Wife of Bath's "materials are part of the vast medieval stock of antifeminism", [11] giving St. Jerome's Adversus Jovinianum, which was "written to refute the proposition put forward by one Jovinianus that virginity and marriage were of equal worth,” as one of many examples. [11] As author Ruth Evans notes in her book ...

  8. Fantomina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fantomina

    Title page for the first publication of Fantomina in 1725. Fantomina; or, Love in a Maze is a novel [a] by Eliza Haywood published in 1725. In it, the protagonist disguises herself as four different women in her efforts to understand how a man may interact with each individual persona.

  9. The Names (novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Names_(novel)

    The Names (1982) is the seventh novel of American novelist Don DeLillo. The work, set mostly in Greece , is primarily a series of character studies, interwoven with a plot about a mysterious "language cult" that is behind a number of unexplained murders.

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