a bibliography of the work of feminist literary critics, 1975-1981
TRANSCRIPT
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LA THESE A ETE MICROFILMEE TELLE QUE
NOUS L'AVONS RECUE
JCE BREAKERS AND WINDOW SMASHERS; A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF W O ~ OF FEMINIST
LITERARY CRITICS, 1975- 1981 L - -
.. ' - by
1
+ 0
Wendy Frost and Michele Valiquette I
,. - - B.A., Simon ~ r a s e r University, 1975 I
--/
B.A. Hons.. Simon Fraser University, 1978
THESIS S U B M ~ IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF U
THE REQUIREMENT3 FOR THE DEGREE O F r II
8 e = -
MASTER O F ARTS
in the Department
English
" Wendy Frost and Michele Valiquene 1986
SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
August 198k
All rights reserved. This work may not be reproduced in whole or in
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- - - ISBN 0 - 3 1 5 - 3 6 2 7 9 - 0
1
d APPROVAL
Name: Wendy Frost and Michele Valiquette - Degree: ~ss t&-of Arts
+ Title of thesis: Ice ~ r ~ e r s and Window Smashers: A Bibliography of the Work oi. Feminist Literary
Critics. 1975-1981
1 %
I
--< Examinin@mmi ttee:
Chairman: Professor Qin Banerjee.
, ,-,,
hofessor ~ a n n ~ Senior Supervisor Department of English. SEU
- v - . -- - - - - - -
Professor Andrea ~ebowlfz ' Department of English, S N
,, ' % o f 6 1 S- - -
dkll' . External Exaniiner . . - Department of ~ ~ i l o s o p ' h ~ ~ , S N
Date Approved: August 19th. 1986
/- a i l PART I AL COPYR I GI+$& L I CENSE a
- I hereby g ran t t o S lmon Fraser Un l vers l t y the 'r l ght t o I end
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4. '
T i t l e o f Thesic,/Project/Extended - 5
Essay
Author :
' &
f
2 c
Mary Ellrnan's Thinking Abact Women, published in 196g, and' Kate Millet's sew& ~ d i t i c s , which .
followed in 1970, set off a feminist-irspired reexahination of literary perceptions and values which ' $
diversified and gained momentum through the seyentia and into the eighties. Working within the wntQlt 1:
of the contemporary women's movement feminist literary critics have developed a practice which is
engaged, self-co~x@ously political, ,imbued with an understanding of the particular oppression of women,
attentive to the links behvekliteriture and life, and dedicated to social uansfomkti~n. The primary i
purpose of this joint thesis is to make the wealth of scholarship produced-by literary feminists in recent c
years a ~ i l a b l e to s&dents. teachers. researchers and readers. The thesis consists of ,three parts: a preface
and inuoductory essay, a comprehensive bibliography of journal articles, and a set of indices.
The preface outlines o w terms of bibliographic selection and our r&ch methods. In it we fix&
on two questions: what makes a literaiy critique feminist? and, what are the specific characteristics and
probAems of feminist research? The introductory essay goes on to provide an overview and discpion of
the major issues raised by feminist liierary critics during the period covered by the bibliography.
The cenual pdnion of the thesis. the bibliography itself. recbhsevsn highly productive years in
feminist critical activity: 1975 through 1981. It is based on a search of approximately 450 English language
periodicals ranging from mainstream aademic journals and women's studies publications to feminisr, left
and literary "little" magazines. The 1700 enmes are organized into six major sections: Textual/Contextual
Studies, Theory, Language and Gender, Pedagogy and Research, Interviews, Folklore and Oral Tradition.
The Textual/Contextual section is further divided by time period and within that by genre. Each enrry in \
the bibliography has a two-part annotation comprised of a set of keywords which desaibes the content of
the article and a list of specific authors and workS discussed.
iii
Users can gain access to the article IS collected in the bibliography thrauph the inter& argatbum
or one of three indices: an index of author; of articles. an ingex of authors and works covered. or a subject 5-
index. The latter catalogues material according to several%undred of the tppin: themes and concepts rnw
- - frequently touched on by feminist literary critics.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Many pedple assisted us with this project We want to thank: a :
/-- Our committee members. &&a Q w a and Andrea Lebowin, for their advice, assislance, and padence;
The members of A.U.C.E. I k d 2: Arlene Richards. Lily Spence, Hilary Anderson. Yasrnin Jarnal. John . .
Shayler, Shannon Yuen, and Sophie Larsen, who made the Periodicals Reading Room of the S.F.U.
Libfary such a convivial place to do reseafch, and the workers in interlibrary loan: Vivian Blackwell. Joan
Schuppert, Margo Dyksta, Janny Swint, and Sylvia Bell for dealing with the volume of our requests. and a
\
for their perseverance in locating the material we required; a
Wolfgang Richter. for his computer ingenuity, and for the time and effort spent designing a program for
our purposes;
f
Celia Con-ea, for helping us to become computer literate; ,
Patricia Maika, our offic&rnate in the early days and close friend throughout the gestation period of h i s
project, for her wit and insight;
And finally, particular thanks to Sherry and Melanie Preston. John Shayler. and Gene McGuckin, fbr their --
active support and encouragement tliroughout this project especially as it drew to a close.
TABLE OF CONTENTS- -- -
f - . Approval ..................; .... ; ..................................................................................................................................................... - ~ ii
............................................................ ............................................................................................................. Abstract iii .. - . 0
, . . Fdication .................................................................................................................. ............................................... v
Acknowledgements ........................................................................................................................................................ vi fl*. * ,
Preface .................................................................... ................................ ................................................................. x . .
. . A. Introduction ................................................................................................................................ ................. 1 -
List of Journals Searched ............................................................................................................................................. 39
.............................................................................................................................. Users' Guide ta the Bibliography 48 . ,
...................................... B. BIBLIOGRAPHY .......................................................... ; .................................. 51
. I. Antiquity ........................................................................................... ............................................... 52
11. Pre-Sixteenth Century ...................... ; .................................................................................................. 58 ,
.... 111. Sixteenth Century Prose ..................................................................................... : ..................... 68
IV. Sixteenth Century Poetry ........................................ ............................................................................ 69
V. . Sixteenth Centllry Drama .......................................................................................................... . 71
- VI. . Sixteenth Century Cross-Genre .; .................................................................................................. 77
VII. Seventeenth Century Prose ................................................................................................................. 78
# v w v e n t e e n t h Century Poeny ............................................................................................ ............ 81 .* . +
AX. Seventeenth Century hama ............ , ............................................. ............................................... 84
...................................................................... / X. Seventeenth Century Cross-Genre ........................ : 87 --
.................................................................. .................................... XI. Eighteenth Century Prose ....... : 90 -
XII. Eighteenth Century Poeuy ............................................................................................................ 100
XIII. Eighteenth Century Drama .................................................... ...................................................... 103
XIV. Eighteenth Century Miscellaneous .............................................................................................. 104
............................................. ..................................................... XV. Eighteenth Cehtury Cross-Genre 105 =-
................................................................................................................. . XVI. Nineteenth Century Prose 106
vii
XVIII.Nineteenth Century Drama ................................................................ ....................................... 1 6 1 , .. *
.......... 'XIX. Nineteenth Century Miscellaneous ...................................................................................... 1 M , . . -
............ XX. Nineteenth Century Cross-Genre ........................................................................... , ............ 165 "
-- ........ .................................................................... XXI. Twentieth Century Prose ................................... 168
XXII. Twentieth Century Poetry ................................................................................ ....................... 261
XXIII.Twentieth Century Drama .............................................................................................................. 279 --
XXIV.Twentieth Century Miscellaneous ..................................................... : ......... ................ . . . . 293 '! a, D
XXV. Tweitieth Century Cross-Genre ......................... i .......................................................................... 306
XXVII. ," Cross-Time Prose ................................................ ............................................................................ 329 -.
x x w . -Cr&-Time Poetry ............................................................................................................................ 343
XXIX. Cross-Time Drama ........................................................... .......................................................... ,345
.................................................................................. XXX. Cross-Time Miscellaneous ............................. : 346 -- -
XXXP - Cross-Time Cross-Genre .................................................................................................................. 347
XXXII. -7 T Folklore and Oral Tradition ............................. :, ..................................................... ...................... 352
. . .,
XXXIII. Language and Gender ........................................................................................................................ 360
x m v . ............. Pedagogy and Research ............................................................. ........................................ 370 -
xxxv. Theoretical .................................................................................................................. ................... 390
Users' Guide to the Subject Index .................................................................................................................... 427 9
s U ~ E C ~ INDEX .......................................................................... ........................................................................ 425,
Users' Guide to the Authornitle Index ............................................................................................................ 460
- viii
- ~ - - - - -
IM)EX OF AUTHORS OF ARlXLES .....! ................................................................................................. . 589
L-
PREFACE -
She is of the race of the pioneers: She is among the icebreakers. the window-sma~hers, thr . ' - indomitable and irresistable m o w e d tanks who climbed the rough ground; -went ti&; drew thc "
enemy's fire and left a pathway for those who came after her. . . - Virginia Woolf, of Dame Ethel .
'r w -
s m m
The Pargrt e r ~ X
e? .
In our field the ice breakers and window smashers have been Tillie Olsen. Adrienne Rich.
Florence Howe. Ellen Moers, Carolyn Heilbrun.
*
Jane Marcus. of feminlsr literan
critics " 0
"Storming the Toolshed" Y
b
? "
P
TO. Jane Marcus' list of ice breakers and window smashers, we would like to add some names, nor
least her own. The articles gathered here bea; witness to a collective endeavour on the pan of liierar).
- feminists which is unprecedented in the history of literature and literary s g y . Mary Ellman's Thlnbng 1. ,
Abwr Women, published in 1968. and Kate Millet's S e d P o k t ~ s . which followed in 1970. set off a 7
reexamination of literary per<eptions'and values that diversified and gained momentum through ihc
sevenues and into the eighties. Working within the context of the contemporary women's movement, r- -
- feminist l i t e m critics have turned rnost received ideas about literary ttadition and critical practice on 4
;and chi tradittml Thc tdbliogmph) itxhd.es mdes by and about bth inale and f~s28af c writers
Inf~rml~opl mhtmng thc Wu~furr7. of t h ~ bibllograph~ is provided by t he tiser'5 guides. while ~ & Y % s lo .
+ 4 - c - - 8, ~hancrrn~tlcs of the work wc ~ & U ~ G Q rn tRc bibliqraphy. the methods we w d to gather i t and our
nMst dunmrd arunul in & Wuvcnc"w: Thc conlcmponqi fcMn.iw researcher is likely m be well rWaR
of thc v&tmumus a m n r of mtcml gmeimd annwlly a b u t m e n and writing. In what might be
o&sq.$?rnxd abw: fmruun. txyh ryrnpathctx md M%tilc to its gcels, hay: W e d on m n e H
owselves the fask of gleaiung from all of"rhe% words by and about women in l~terature, spe~~fmtL! - -
feminist Miuqbes.
*
Whar Makes a Literary Critrque F e m i n ~ ~
What makes a literary ai t iqye feminist? h y ferninist criurx have addressed'thls question. Our
conviaon. after surveying a wide range of anides focussing on women's wnung and wriung about women c--
is that the answer ii& nor so much in dcfinlnp a methodology or a unifying theory ah in cstabllshinp and
dmaiblng a set of conntxtlons. As the authors of the recent work K~ndlrng tn the Grove3 of Academe, put
. . . it may t>e futile to by patrolling its borden or specifying i b ctnter. Rather what relation of the pans to the wholc and its link 6 the more general feminist movement that brought it Into being. '
One of the m n crireria we have used in selecting anicles for inclusion in this bibliography ,is that
tbe critic situates her (or his) work witbir: &e broader feminist enrerprise. Among feminist critia. as
among feminists in general. there are debates and d i f ferenk. The varier? of approaches in k e work
garhcred hcrc reflects this diversity. Alrhough their understandings of women's oppression and their
liberation ma): differ, however. feminist literan. critics are guided in their inqulr) by several
shafed premises. Like other ferninist scholars and acuvisa, the fcminlsr cnuc assumes that gender 1s '
0
neither namfal nbr given b u ~ -ally created: in h e well-krio&t'&xds of Simone dc Fkauvoir. "One la
not born, bur rarher becomes a woman." Feminist reading analyse the implications of this assumption as , -
they are inscribed in texts and in the production of texts. The feminist critic views literature as pan of a
network of social and cultural institutions that work in conjunction, both to define "maleness" and . "femaleness" and toperpetuate gender inequiues. B) describing and exposing the mechanisms of these .
- - ,: \
* u s - 'Ellen Carol Dubis. Gail Paradise Kelly. ~l&beth, t":povsk! edj . Carolyn W. Komey r, and Lillian S. Robinson. Kmdling rn -r$e< &roves 9 cademe, quoted in Ehabcth 9 Kamarck, Mlnnich. "Changing Minds." Wmen's -&hey of B&, 111.4. 19116, p. 8.
~nstitutions, she seeks to lsrnantle them. At the same time. the feminist critic is aware of the potential of
1itkm.m and literary practices for building resistance to oppression, for ima 'ning and develdping m 'i
liberating alterptives. Pan of her project is to draw these out The work we have gathered here, then,
could be characterized as engaged. imbued with an understanding of the particular oppression of women,
attentive to the links between literature and life. and dedicated to social change. 1
By taking gendkr as the st&ng point for her analysis of literature, the feminist critic performs an
act analagous to the twist of a kaleidoscope. She generates radically new visions of authors and texts, ef
literary conventions, of the literary canon. of literary tradition and of literary analysis itself. Her readings
bring intb view aspects of women's experience - childbirth, domestic labour, friendships with other d
w&en. relationships between mothers and daughters, among many others - which have been distorted.
denied, or rendered invisible by traditional literary practices. Her work involves not only restoring women,
in alT UmnmEiplexity, to accouny of human experience. but in exploring the effects of and reasons for
their absence. The feminist literary critic poses a direct challenge to the literary institutions that denigrate
or &nor; women's experiehce while claiming to speak neutrally. objectively and universally. Together with
feminist scholars in other fields, she assens the androcentric and culturally specific values such claims
mask. Feminist literary criticism can be recognized, then. not only by its subject - gender - but by the
context in which it views that subject
-In contrast to the critical work which presents itself as neutral. feminist literary criticism is
characterized by a clear sense of involvement in a radical collecthe undertaking. The feminist critic
rypiml&srprrafs this commitment to her reader by an open declaration of allegiance or purpose; by
explicitly putting herself into her text - often through description of her own feminist "awakening" - or; r
b! building on the work of other feminist crifks, extending and developing the critical premises and 0
conceprs that constitute our common ground "Addictive foomoting," says Ruth A. Solie, "has become a
standing joke in feminist scholarship:" The practice may be the result, she adds, of "our desire to share
xiii
with one another the floods of new writing.p Solie's choice of a flmd metaphor to describe the r o p e of'
the feminist qiuc's project is cot uncommon. In surveying feminist writing. we found that natural \ cataclysms - floods, torrents, outpourings, volcanoes. explosions - are among the favouritc tropes of thc
femipst critic seeking to convey the volume and force of our collective work. The implicaoons of the
language choice are dear: those of us involved in feminist schotarship. and through that q e larger feminist .
enterprise. are convinced of its power for personal and political transformation.
Although the pronouns throughout this Qshs ion of the identifying characteristics of feminist C
literary critibsrn have b e p female, we did leave open the possibility of including in the bibliography work
by men. Of the 1700 articles collected, approximately 90 are male-authored; we considcr these to bc a * conmbution to the general feminist project By and large. however. male critics have not tended LO bring
feminist insights to their analyses of literature. While. for women. feminist criticism remains "an act of
survival"' few male critics seem able or willing to approach "feminism and sexual politics in terms of a
new understanding of themselves nr.menn' Much remains to be done. for example. in analyzing the sa-ial*
construction of masculinity and the implications of this process for literature and literary study. /
Notwithstanding cautions against defining feminist scholarship by patrolling its borders. a
bibliography by necessity involves selection and exclusion.*lt may be helpful to users if we describe the
work that we did not include because we &d not consider it fern in is^ In most cases our decisions were nor
difficult: work which spoke either approvingly or noncritically of gender inequities, or which ignored them .
J- altogether, clearly did not fa;ll within our terms of reference, whether or noi the authors of such aticles
i were women. or the subjects women's writing. But over the last ten years. much oflthc vocabular~, i f not
'Ruth A. Solie, "Music to Our Ears," Women's Revlent of Books, 111.9, 1986. p. 7
'Adrienne Rich. "When We Dead Awaken: 'Writing as Re-vision," in On Les. Secrets, ard Silence (New York: W.W. Norton 1979). p. 35.
5Michelene Wandor. "Masks and Options." in On' Gender and Wntu~g , ed."Michelene Wandor (London: Pandora. 198). p. 9.
Y the spirisuof the women's movement h'as permeated both popular and critical discourses. And, some work
is not so easily classified at first glance. We did not include articles which employed the terminology or
treated the subjects of femi@st literary criticism without making some effort to link them to the particular
$pression of women or to the wcial construction of gender. Examples include work which describes
t sterecitypes in literature without suggesting the problems of stereotyping itself; articles which deal with
" ,
themes such as marriage or female chastity without exploring their particular implications forwomen or
the wrual politics involved; remevals of lost women writers which do not address the specific conditions
women writers face or the reasons for their "loss" in the f i r swce . Although such work might sometimes .
be of use to the feminist critic, we chose to gather alrticles which attempt to further our understanding of. 4
and work against. women's oppression. In this, we were guided by our desire to provide a substantial body I
of explicitly feminist scholarship. ,
-
Changing Definitions of the "Literary" and "Criticism" -- --
t
h Thc pnctice of feminist critiafecasts not only the subjects approp&te f f l i t e r q study but the e
scope and definition of literature itself. For the purposes of bibliograp&on, aur understanding of
what constitutes "literature" has been broad. Feminist critics have uncovered the range and variety of
women's verbal expression. much of which has been excluded from official definitions of And. they
have considered the many fqrms of discourse in which woman's i h g e has been inscribed, Their inquiry.
then, has led them to both "highn and popular an. to creative and journalistic writing, to public and d
private, oral and written speech. This work has not only opened new areas of study but throwh into 1
question the basis on which some words are designated literature while others are not We have reshicted
our selection to analysei of fdrms that are primarily verbal, rather than visual. such as television or film 4
Within these limits. however, we have hied to contribute to the expanding definition of literature by
actively seeking out analyses of "extra-literaryw forins. In addition to a large body of work on poetry,
prose and drama. then, the user will find here discussions of letters, advice columns, journals and diaries,
- - -- - --
* - -. 4
magazines, folk songs and tales, daily speech, sermons. pwsip. text-books. of ballads and the blues.
conduct manuals. and comic books. *
A further issue raised by feminist critics'has to do with the nature of the practices whichr'all under a
the rubric of literary mititisin. This. too, results from the focus and gaals of their inquiry. We found t h a ~
changing how the questions are put to literature has, for feminist critics, involved a quite literal shift in a
terrain We have included in the bibliography, then, work from the diverse forums in which women's
relationship to words has been explored in recent years: from classrooms and reading and writing groups.
to interviews and panel discussions, to editorial, publishing and theatre collectives. In analyzing the many i dimensions of an idea as complex as gender, and in attempting to disentangle practices as entrenched as
gender inequities, feminist literary critics also require the insights of many disciplines - history. ">-
psychology, anthropology, linguistics among them As Gayle G r e h e observes, the feminist literary critic
"enlists whatever tool is necessary in the elucidation of the text" We have omitted smctly empirical
studies from this bibliography
disciplinary boundaries.
but beyond that we have encompas~ed analyses whose methods stTetch
"> ?L'--
- Periodical Literature
1
Our decision to limit the material listed here.,to articles published in journals was based ?n kc.
central role these have played in the development of feminist literary criticism. Susan Searing voices the
view of many in the field when she writes that: "Periodical literature is the cutting edge of women's
scholarship, feminist theory and much of womeq's culture."' Over the last two decades, journals - both
femipist and nonferninist in their focus - have provided the initial forums for the chscussion of many of the
key issues and ideas in the study of women and literature; in their pages feminist criticism has taken shape
'Gayle Greene, "Feminist and Marxist Criticism: An Argument for Alliances," Women's Studies, IX.1. 1981, p. 31.
'Susan sear in^, lmraiuction to Library Research in Women's Studies (Boulder: Westview Press. 1985). p. 215.
xvi . -
and been defined as an area of knowledge. They are particularly suite4 & the rapid pace of recent feminist
inquij; a relatively short period of time lapses between work leaving a writer's pen and its appearance in - print. Moreover, journals are a form of publication available TQ a greater number of feminist writes, not
least in many cases, because they have established iheir own. The development of an independent feminist c,
press has been a major strategy of the domen's movement for maintaining and b u i l d g networks of
feminist knowledge: The 1986 edition of the IndexlDirectary of Women's Medid lists h7 current
I ' women's publications in North America alone. .a%'
-
But the potential of periodicals for the exchange of information is often less fdly realizkd that it
might be. Individual articles are dispersed through numerous sources, many of which have regional or
limited circulations. Without references specifying their location, these articles can virtually slip out of
existence. Our purpose in focussing on journal articles has been to draw together the information
published in them. to provide systematic and specific direction to its whereabouts.
-L
While our desire was to be as comprehensive as possible, time and space imposed some restrictions.
We have omihed newspapers because 9 e i r offerings q e generally short and fairly difficult to obtain Nor
have we included reviews. unless they exceed the standard two to three pages in length and contain
subsmtial discussion of the issues. 'We limited the journals searched to thhe published in English because
of both space considerations and our own language limitations. Our efforts to include journals from .--
outside korth America were determined by their availablility in the libraries to which we had access and
beyhd that by postage costs. Relevant material which comes our way after this leaves our hands, will be
included in a supplement to the next volume of the bibliography.
'Martha Leslie Allen, ed. IndexIDirectwy of Women's Media (Women's Institute for Freedom of the Press: Washington, D.C., !Q%). A total of 490 publications are listed
xvii
The Time Span, _ - .
We chose to begin our search for feminist literary criticism in journals published in 1975 and to end " q- jt in journals published in 1981 for several reasoh. Overall, t6ese were espehally fruitful years for liteiar!
0 feminists. Major areas of critical activity were explored and developed, core theoretical issues were
- 8
articulated. fn the early seventies, - considerable energy had been devoted to assembling primary malerial.
to framing the outlines for a feminist analysis and establishing the right to employ i t p By the -'
rnid-seventies, with this basis fairly firmly in place, and a critical practice several years in €he making, the
work began to accelerate. In 1975 the first issues of Signs, Atlantis, Frontiers, Room of One's Own, Hecare.
Women and Literature all appeared, attesting to the growth of feminist cultural scholarship and of a
community of readers and writers who shared basic assumptions and goals. In the years that followed,
feminist publications with a focus on literature continued to.multiply while the irncact of feminist criticism
outside this circle was reveak: uoth by the more regular appearance of feminist critiques in non-feminist
journals and by a sharp increase in the number of special issues devoted entirely to women and literature
or to the work of a particular woman writer. -
Clearly, records of this activity are essential if researchers are to eo-ordinag their efforts and
develop a historical understanding of the field. In order to construct such records, they require detailed ,A
access to feminist analyses published in periodicals. However, for reasons th be more fully explored V
below. this kind of access was largely unavailable th~ough the standard indexes until after 1981. This was a 1
major factor in our decision t'o take ow search &rough to the end of that year; we stopped i t there a[ leasr
partly in response to the sheer quantity of material discovered and our desire to keep the final product a
'manageable volume.
9Some of the work on individual writers is gathered in Carol Fairbanks Meyers' bibliography Women in Literature: Criticism of the Seventies (Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow. 1976).
xviii .
-- - - - --
Practial considerations aside, there is a ic to concluding in 1981, for theoretical works
were published and work was taken up in the early years of the new decade that have moved feminist
literary &tin onto somewhat different ground: Annette Kolodny. Myra Jehlen, and Elaine Showalter ". f
made attempts to synthesize the work of preceding years; implicit and explicit responses toGtheir
propositions have directed a consideiable portion of the work since. In addition, the translation of French i
\
feminist critical theory made available perspectives which have had a Wjor impact on Anglo-American A
feminist criticism, while the challenges of women of colour. working class women, and les
increasingly foxed re-evaluation of feminist critical practices a d extended the range of the analysis.
II. Research Methods
We did not come to this project as bibliographers. Rather we came to it as women whose feminist
,consciousness and whose literary practice had developed in close connection. In our efforts to unite the
two, one of the most pressing needs we have felt is for access to information: the thoughts, ideas,
discoveries of other women engaged in similar work. This bibliography bows directly out of our own w
experience as students, teachers. and readers of women's writing and writing about women. In @is sense, 4
the project and our transformation into bibliographers are a familiar story in feminist scholarship.
- Feminist writers and researchers frequently find that the existkg tools or scholarship are inadequate for
our purposes; we have no choice but to train ourselves in the skills we need to fashion new ones.
''Annette Kolodny, "Dancing through the Minefield: Some observations on the Theory, Practice and Po'litics of a Feminist Literary Criticism," Feminist Studies, VI.1, 1980. pp. 1-25; Myra Jehlen. "Archimedes and the Paradox of Feminist Criticism," Signs, VI.4, 1981, pp. 575-601; Elaine Showalter, "Feminist Criticism in the Wilderness." Critical Inquiry, VIII.2, 1981, pp. 179-205. 9
xix
- The Journal Search
Our prinflpal method for gathering material consisted of a manual, issue by' issue search, through
the designated time period, of each of several hundred j o d s . All articles were read twice: the first time
when they were selected for inclusion, the second when they were indextid and annotated. For consistencj.
we each wwked with half of the alphabet for one of these tasks, then exchanged for the other.
Our initial list of journalf, to search was compiled from several sources. The Mcdern Longuuges
Association Annual Bibliography, The Annual Bibliography of English Language and Lterature. The
Year's Work in English Studies. English Studies Abstracts, and other ongoing indexes usually shelved in
the humanities referenc sectibn of libraries. were most useful for titles of aydemic journals and some oF- 7 - 'l P
the more established "little" magazines. Froq the thousands listed there, we chose several hundred which '
might reasonably be expected to publish some feminist criticism. The list of journals searched fgr the
annual Women and Literature bibliographies'l was helpful in this streamlining process, as was Women: A
Bibliography of Special Issues 1974- 78." I
Because the standard literary indexes do not include many "littlen pgazines, new publications or
alternative ones, we consulted a number of recently developed sources in order to add them to our list
Over the mid to late seventies, a number of excellent directories to women's periodicals were compiled:
Polly Joan and Andrea Chesman'i Guide to Women's Publishing ' i , the Resources for Fernmist Research B
llBibliographies of criticism about women and literature were published by the jour)A--of the same name ,annualk from 1973 to 1978. This bibliography is a useful reference to work about worn& writers and women in literature;. it does not distinguish between feminist and non-feminist critiques.
l 2 Women. A Bibliography of Special Issues Vdume 11, Canadian Newsletter of Research on Women, Special Publication No. 4 (Toronto: OISE, 1978).
(. - - 13~olly Joan and Andrea Chamah Guide to Women's Publishrng (Paradise. Ca: Dustbooks. 197 8)
L _ A
I
11 Gliide to Women's Periodicals,"14 and the Index/Directory ofWomenYs Media1' While
these guides do'not index the contents of periodicals, they do provide brief descriptions and addresses for a
wide range of women's publications and are invaluable aids to anyone enibarking on feminist research or
interested in feminist reading. htles of other journals which might prove helpful in our search were dram a
from those cited in the Alternative Press Index, l6 which catalogues publications with a focus on left
Pgktics, gay rights, and environmental igues, as well as feminist mnceqs; and from the Women's Studies
Absrraers," whose scope. a< its title irhciltes: is the entire field of w o m d s studies, including literature.
Locating .Material -
Our ability to search the journals from the list o?p6tentialfy usefulmqs depended on their physical
availability. We quickly learned that knowing a journal exists can be one thing. tracking it down quite -<L
another. Here the difference between mainstream academic periodicals and women's studiea or feminist - -, -
f -. publications is particularly marked. While college and university libraries generally carry a wide range of rd,
, - the iormer. the latter tend to be vastly underrepresented. Most academic libraries tailor their holdings ,+
according to the needs of specific departments or disciplines, while the majority of women's studies
"The most recent guide was published in Reswces fw Feminist ~esea&h. X.4, ,1981. Its coverage is international; each entry has a brief description - including the scope of coverage, information on availability, costs and frequency. Compilers have listed "everything judged to be a useful resource for women doing research." We recommend this guide highly.
f
"Martha Leslie Allen, ed, Index/Directwy of Women's Media (Washington, D.C.: Women's Institute for Freedom of the Press) Published annually since 1975. The most recent edition of the Index can be ordered for $10US from WIFP, 3306 Ross Place W , Washington DC 20008.
''Compiled and- published by the. Alternative Press Index Center, P.O. Box 7229, Baltimore, . MD 21218. In 1984. it indexed approxiqately 215 newspapers and journals, of which about ' 30 were specifically feminist
1
"Until 1983 when the Studies on Women abstracts were introduced, Women's Studies Abstracts was the only index to focus entirely on women's studies. It indexes approximately 400 journals and is designed to provide an overview of the field of women's studies rather than comprehensive coverage of any particular area
xxi
publications are multi or interdisciplinary, a factor which-may work against their acquisition.'' f~ addition.
1 the growth of women's studies a d the development of the independent feminist press have taken place , . at
a time when right-wing economic policies -never friendly to feminism- are having an increasing impact on - the funding priorities of educational institutions. Library spendmg, in most cases, has been drasticall!
reduced and women's publications are simply not being added to university, college and public. library
P collections. The researcher's route to feminist periodicals, then, may be circuitous and usually requires , .-
persistence and some lbck. We relied heavily on buying our own copies when we could afford them. on
friends' collections, on the few research trips our less-than-a-shoestring budget would allow. Ultimatelj.
we resorted to writing letters to the more elusive journals, many of whom responded with free back copies.
Of course, problems of availability are not confined solely to feminist periodicals; the MLA
bibli&raphy lists between two and three thousand journals in some way concerned with language and
literature. No library could be expected to house them all. In addition. others besides women's
publications have been affected by chopped library budgets. But when journals are not physically present
in a library's holdings, as is indreasingiy the case, interlibrary loan systems become particularly imponant
And, in order to make use of such systems, researchers require more than the title of a journal; they need
the citations or references to specific articles that are usually provided by indexes. In turning to the \
iridexes, the researcher in women's studies is likely twdbunte r Further problems.
The Problem with Indexes
We havezdready noted that women's publications are often among those missing from the sundard - indexes. This in itself is a serious drawback for those interested in feminist criticism: when a journal 1s
neither on the library shelves, nor in the indexes, access to its contents becomes doubly difficult But what
about analyses of women and literature in the many journals the indexes do survey? How useful are the
laSusan Searing, Intraduction to L i w y Research in Women's Studies (Boulder: Westview. 1985). p. 7. Searing notes that while the practice is not an inr reasonable onebit bodes ill for new and interdisciplinary fields of study.
7
xxii
indexes in directing researchers to these? Our survey suggested that most of the established periodid
indexes were designed on the basis of pre-feminist scholarship and that, overall, they reflect its'needs and
a~sumptions.~~ An index does more than simply list or catalogue information; it plays an important r&in
defining knowledge and in making new areas of knowledge legitimate or visible. Often, however, the - \ ,@
concepts and categories used in indexes, the arrangement of information, can bury, or obscure women's
concerns. One thinks again of Virginia Woolf, searching through the indexes in the British Museum for
information on the poverty of women writers, only to be deflected by headings such as "women - small
size of brain of," "vanity of." "mental, moral and physical inferiority of."i0 More-recently. Karen"
Vierneisel reports that "Before 1972, the Library of Congress did not recognize lesbians. We wergthen
filed under 'sexual perversion^'."^ A common problim we encountered, was the tendency for indexes to
subsume the many concerns addressed by feminist critics under a single heading such as "women and
literature." an approach which is of little use to the researcher seeking either specific information or some
suggestion of the wide range of possible topics. Similarly, indexes arranged by author or "major authors",
as a number are, may make it difficult to draw out references to the many little known writers feminist
critics have "rediscovered" in recent years. Over the seventies, the only indexes to refer to feminist A
concerns in any detail were the Women's Studies Abstracts and the Alternative Press Index Both are
useful starting points. - -3 --
Over the course of the seven year period we surveyed, some changes which have proved t
advantageous for feminist critics did take place in the indexes. Most notable is the new format of the MLA
bibliography. Prior to 1981Ais index, the most comprehensive in the field of literature..had been I - -
''Janet Todd "The Need for Bibliographies of Women's Studies in Literature," Women and Literature, IV.1. 1976. p. 4, makes a similar observation based on her experience with the Women and literature bibliographiq. -- -
''Virginia Woolf. A Room of One's Own (London: Penguin, 1972, 1928) pp.3Ck31.
" "Karen Vierneisel, "An Annotated Checkhst of Lesbian Feminist Resources," Margins, 23. 1975. p. 11.
organized by geographical area, period, and individual writer. In 1981. a sub~ect index. wfrrch mctuded a
. variety of feminist terms and concepts was added. Users can now locate Gterial under quite a number bf - -- fairly detailed headings such as "feminist theater". "feminist press", " fernalc persona". " female
protagonist", although arricIes employing a fernin$ approach are not available in a smglq hr . CXLXPI t *
through an on-line computer search. because they are "tm lhese new subl&-- .
categories may mean, however, that bibliographies like point. focuss~ng
perhaps on fuller annotations or on the many women's publications no1 lisled in the MLA Bibliograph?.
b
Periodicity
Clearly, the organization of knowledge is a central issue in feminist scholarship . and for
bibliographers, one with implications that reach beyond procedure for gathering feminist analyses rcl
5
principks for arranging them once they are compiled. Feminist historians, such as Joan Kelly-([;a0oI h a w
raised serious objections to standard_historical categories. for example. In "Did Women Haw a )
C1
Renaissance?" l 2 Godid argues that women's experience over time often divers subsranually from rncn's.
and can be misrepresented by the divisions traditionally employed in the study of hlstor!. Fcmmsr Iltcrm
critics are beginning to make a similar re-&&kpt?6 of the terms of literary history. :' Wc x c our D
bibliography as a preliminary step in this process. The organization by century 1s mended r 6 s~r$c a A -
- . - -
balance between the manner in which literature is currently taught anc! the way I r mqhr bc rcarran& wc
decided ce~turies were somewhat more neutral than the divisions gvnerally used - Rena~ssancc,
"Joan Kelly-Godal. "Did Women Have a ~enaissan~e?." in Bccmung' Vwbk: W a m m )iimpean Hiawy, eds. Renate Bridenthal and Claudia Koom (Honon: Houghton MiiXtn.
+ 1977). pp. 137-64.
''See, for example, Paul Lauter. "Race and Gender in the Shaping of the American I ~ t t ' r m Chon," Feminist Studies, IX.3, 1983, p. 456. Lauter says: "Dividing experience chronulopd l i
- tends to accentuate the discontinuities rather than continuities of life . . . women's I r k . in patriarchal society have been more fully identified with .continuities - birthing. m n g . civiIizing children; maintaining family and cultural stability . . . emphasiLing distinct chronological or literary periods may be one-dimensional, obscuring what is ongotng, cononued " . . .
xxiv
, Thc Subjecr I n c h I
7bc w m tndcr d thr bibltognph) organws the articles collmed according to aw&xirnately 300 *
of thc rh- topics and concepts most frequently discttssEd by feminist critics. 11 can be sten as a
dcwilcd breakdown of rhc m y ideas which standard indexn mlhprc under the huding 'women and 7 Imnsat.. The index a mmdcd m suggcn to urn h c spmmm of mncerns taken up bi feminist critia.
to p m d c d ~ m t l o n to specific topia, and to allow amss LO a variety of approaches to any given h e .
Thr h c P & n p ~ ~ rn the t x k x were chosen fiknvhhg dose readings of several hundred anides from a - I/
wdc m g t of sourm and refined arid km"plificd through amcation to the reit Each amde in the - 3
Bibltogmphy 1s rndcxed under as many subject headings as arc ncccsaq LO describe the contents of the -
ca
. arudc Wc haw ulcd to fdbw as doscly as m b i e thc phrases emplofed by the critics rhcinselves.
Ofkn. howcvtr. ~n order to avoid a proliferation of very similar urms. we !ad to &- one fmm a set of , .
pqsibil~tic~ In t h a ~nslrmnccs, thc altcpiatives have bten --referenced. --
Collcctivc Work
N o d&ustcm of our rcrurch methods would bc complete without a note about collective work .
Our abrl~tj to undc-mkc a projccr of his scope. and'much of the energy and enthusiasm for the work itself
arc Lhc rcsult of our edlilborative p&. Woven between b e cnma of the bibliugraphy are the many
k i t c h a r ublc mv~mtrm lhar led ~ncviubly from women's writing to o w own lives and back again
Scucral years qgo. whch proposing a pin1 thesis to the English dtpanment graduate commitiee. we argued
&at mlhbonuon is anml m the feminist mo& of inquiry. We pointed to the models providq by the
-4 man! wauthurd amda tn fernlnts pun&. and by scholarly teams such Gilben and Gubar. Diamond
and Fdwrdr and Ymlopc and Robbinl We &soovered thar the wursct of collaboration is not always
smooth: cwrmnating workpatterns. periods of employment and unemploymen; life crises. funding 7
designed for individual scholars, is not alwavs eas!.. But our original belief in the process itself has bee11
confirmed and our understandng of scholarshidhas been radically transformed. We have come lo expccl
that our daily lives and our scholarly work should be closely l iked; we have learned that individual skills u
t arid-propensities. when combine$ become more than thesurn of the p
I
--
most highly the ideas that are born out of dialogue and exchange. We
isolation of the lone schdar.
1 .
IIL Go*
0 -
Our primary p q m & in compiling this bibliography has been to make available the wealth of
feminist literary scholarship produced in recent years. and to provide access to a h i d body of explicitly - feminist literary scholarship in a form useful to both new and experienced researchers in the field. The*
prdject rose directly from our own needs in reading. teaching and researching women's writing and writing
abaut ivomen. working for change both in the academy and in the community. d
On one level, our goals have been entirely pragmatic: to acquaint those unfarnil~ar with fermnist
criticism with the range of the issues feminist critics have addressed and the scope of their work; to help
m f&nist critics with resources they require to combat the under-representation of wom'en in
anthologies and on cowy lists, and to contest the devaluation of feminist scholarship; to indicate areas
which have been heavily researched and thosg which require attention; to provide the specifieinformauon %
-
necesary for feminist researchers ro lobby public and university libraries for acquisition of journals useful 8.
for their purposes; to promote exchange, debate, ana communication of ideas between all of those working
in the field; to extend the sense of our community. and to allow us to draw and build more effect~vely on -
one another's id=; apd to chart the development of our collective undertaking. ,
xxvi
In the'longer term, like other contemporary feminists, we are acutely aware of the role that access to
information on the work of feminists past and pr,esent plays in our ongoing struggle. Writers of the past
two decades have demonstrated most cleaily that throughout history, succeeding generations of women
have striven for control over their lives..often with thmpm limited sense Bf the work and ideas of the
women who have comebefore them. Each new wave of feminists, deprived of this knowledge has had to L -
reinhnt th; feminist wheel. Much of the work of contemporary literary feminists is dedicated to -- -
C" resurrecting, preservin~. . d supporting women'svoices. Together with them, we are committed not only
UI "the special caretaking of what has gone before", 24 but to firmly establishing women's place in culture a 1 - %-
and in history,
."Jane Bowers and Judith Tick, quoted in Ruth A. Solie, "Music to Our Ears," Wmen's e
Review of Books, 111.9, 1986, p. 7:
xxvii
6
c- - - -- - ---
To summarize tfie m a y contributions to a feminist understanding of women an%d literame made in
thc ~ s r k cornpiled in this bibliography would be a truly Amazonian task. It is not one we intend to
undertake here. Rather, in the course of gatherin the work of feminiit literary critics, we have become % J = - j . .
particularly awned to panems of influence and m o ~ them, to the relationship between -
the-forums in which feminist critics practice ci~a the way in which they approach their subjects. Working
from this perspective, we want to explore two strands of feminist literary criticism that'emerged most
clearly in our search of the journals - that which has developed within alternative feminist culture, and that . which has developed within academia Our discussion will be guided by several questioni: How are the
e 9
goals of critics working in earh of these areas linked to the contextk which issues are raised? What are
the specific goals and strategies of the two strands? Are they in conflict or can they work in co-operation?
How can feminist literary criticism as a whole be most effective?
Broadly speaking. most feminist literary critics work from the premise that women's participation in
culture has bmn suppressed and marginalized, that greater participation in culture and reevaluation of the
ways in which women have contributed to culture-making, in spite of their suppression, are mmssary
of any political movement that seeks their liberafi5nT Our survey of the range of feminist . -
revealed two principal strategies for addressing this state of affairs: The first consists 0:' 1
creating an alternative feminist literary culture and the second, working for change in cultural vglles
through the universities and other institutions where these are officially codified and tzansmitted. The
exchange of information and ideas for the former takes place largely in alternative women's publications.
the latter in women's studies publications and various contributions to academic journals. Although the
concerns expressed in b0t.h forums are intertwined and overlapping, during the last fifteen years their
practices have diverged considerably and, to a certain extent, devel4ed in isolation fiom one another.26
"See Chyle Greene and Coppelia Kahn. eds., Making a Difference: Feminist Literary Criticism (London and New York: Methuen. 1985). The essays in this collection useful overviews of some of--the major trends in feminist literary criticism.
l b This is highlighted by the organization of Polly Joan and Andrea Chesman's
provide
well-known
One of the major issues in the work if both groups of critics, however. is the evaluaion of literature from a 1
\ g feminist perspective, that is, the construction of a female or feminist aesthetic. In the following dmusslon. I
- we will focus on developments in the theory and practice of this %spect of feminist literary criticism.
Alternative Feminist Literary Culture
Feminist literary'culture must be seen in the context of that wing of the women's movement which -
has focussed on developing alternative feminist communities based on shared values and political goals.
Such community building is rooted in rejection of mainstream culture's misrepresentation of women and it4
denial of their voices; it is centrally concerned with overcoming women's isolation from each other and
with creating the space in which women can express, and collectively interpret, their own experience. Since
the earliest days of second wave feminism, women's creative writing has played an integral part in this '
process. Contemporary feminist readers and writers have drawn inspiration from Muriel Rukevser's .. frequently quoted lines - "@hat would happen if one woman - told the truth about her life?/The world -
would split open." In poetry, especially. but in prose and drama as well, they have found a means of
exploring together the woman-centred "truths" &at the dominant culture has forbidden or refused to hear.
Their work in unearthing and inventing a specifically feminist literary culture has gfown out of and extends
the principles of consciousness-raising.
The primary strategy for developing this alternative feminist literary culture has been the
establishment of independent feminist presses and periodicals. According to Jm and Chesrnan, femmsm
"more than any other movement in history . . . has been identified with publishing."" Over the last decade
and a half, hundreds of feminist periodicals with a firm cornmiunent to providing a voice for women and to
exploring the interdependence of feminist politics and creative writing have been born. A key tenet in such
26(cont'd) Guide to Women's fublishing (Paradise. California: Dushooks. 1978). where women's studies periodicals are grouped separately from small press publications under the subheadmg. -
"A Well-Kept Secretn ?
"Joan and Chesrnan. 1978. p. 3.
publishing since its incepuon has been the need for autonmous suuctllres. Followirq in the wake of the k
women's collective which seized control of Rat magazine in 1970, 2 8 those involved in small press feminist
publications have continued to assert that only by controlling all aspects of the publishing process, will
women have power over their own words and images. The more marginal or forbidden the topic in
relation to the mainstream, the more essential this control becomes. 9
Lesbian critics, for example, frequently refer to the "conspiracy of silence" 2 9 on lesbian issues that
prevailed prior to the advent of feminist "little" magazines. In the groundbreaking 1975 issue of Margins
devoted to lesbian feminist h t i n g and publishing, Beth Hodges noted that "criticism of lesbian literature
is almost non-existent", while Judith Niemi pointed out that "lesbians are assumed not to exist, at least
not in significant numbers or places, until they make their presence impossible to ignore." 3 1 For lesbians, '
then. small press publishing has been as a matter of political ,survival and the lesbian presence in
alternative feminist periodicals has been a strong one. Although the specific concerns of women of
colour as writers were not widely addressed through the feminist press until later in the decade, similar
imperatives apply. Throughout the alternative feminist culture, women share the
publishing is integral to self-determination.
view that independent
or a description of this event- ~ o b & Morgan, "Goodbye to All Far: The Personal Chronicle of a Feminist (New York: Vintage, 1978).
That," in Gdng pp. 121-30.
IqKaren Viemeisel. "An Annotated Checklist of Lesbian Feminist Resources," Margins, 23. 1975, p. 11.
4 'OBeth Hodges. "Lesbian Feminist Writing and Publishing," Margins, 23, 1975, p. 3.
"Judith Niemi, "Jane Rule and the Reviewers," Margins, 23. 1975. p. 34.
"While there is generally not a great deal of cross-over between those who publish in women's studies journals and those who publish in small press publications, lesbian academics writing about lesbian subjects are among the exceptions. See Judith McDaniel. "Is There Room for Me in the Closet or My Life as the Only Lesbian Professor," Heresies. 7, 1979, pp. 3639 for a discussion of the partinrlar problems of the lesbian in academia.
- Small press feminist publications, then, set themselves in direct oppusition to what they perceive ancI
frequently label the ?malesueam". And, in a sense, by their very existence, they defy dominant cultural
h values, 3 3 Beyond that, these magazines are generally more interested in creating new images than in
examining the old ones.34 Many are careful to point out that their purpose is not reaction but creation.
Their subjects are woman-oriented and their intended readership is female. For the most part male
- writers are nos discussed, nor is work by male writers solicited or included. As the editorial statement of
13th Moon puts it: "[We an] concerned exclusively with the work and viewpoint of ~o inen . " '~ The twin
concerns of providing a voice for women through access to publication, and autonomy from the
mainsue& form the basisofor the theories of women's writing that emerge in tho alternative feminist
literary community.
The most fundamental of these have to do with the specific structures which will ensure, not only
that women have access to the written word, but that such access is as broadly available as possible. To this
end, femipists involved in alternativ publishing have put considerable energy into building new models & for the process of publication itself and for the relationships between the participants. Proceeding from a
strong indictment of the hierarchical structure of mainstream publishing, feminist lirtle magazines are
usually organized col!ectively. In part, this has been a pragmatic move. The majority of feminist 0
publications rely on small groups of women to accomplish a great deal and most often on a volunteer basis:
the work must be pooled and the skills shared. But it is also t!x result of a :econceptualization of anistic
production, a view of creative activity as work which is open to explanation and which can be performed
"In an address to the Feminist Periodicals, Conference held in Monueai June 14-16. 1985, ,
for example, Eleanor Wachtel told the group: "publishing feminist magazines is an act of defiance against the dismissal of the women's movement" Quoted in Resources for Femlrusr Research. XIV.2, 1985, p. 77.
34The most notable exception to this is the debate on pornography. This focusses largely on visual imagery. however.
35Anonymous, "Editorial", I3th Moon. IV.1, 1978, p. 3.
\ by more than a privileged few.36 The intent has been to undercut; for example, notions of the reader as a
passive consumer, the critic as one with mysteriously superior insight, and the writer as one with divine
inspiration.
While these ideals may have been put into practice with varying degrees of success,their existence Q#
has meant that attention is consistently paid to processes that are invisible or taken for granted in other ;'% r
publications. Feminist little magazines are characterized by letters, editorial statements, interviews, panel t
discussions, responses to all of these, as well as aitides which address the goals and intent of feminist
publishing from the varying perspectives of readers, writers and editors. Questions which have occupied a
prominent place in 6 c h debates include: the purpose and function of feminist literary criticism in the
women's movement; whether feminists should attempt to publish in the mainstreafi or f T their efforts on supporting alternative feminist institutim; " and representation of women who have been
historically denied any voice - women of colour, older women, working-class women In connection with
the latter, race has been particularly contentious - women nf colour have had to press insistently for "
inclusion. even in these publications, - and have repeatedly challenged white feminists to incorporate
analyses of racism into their feminism. The ongoing discussion of the politics and structure of publishing
so central to alternative journals has been at least pphally responsible for such challenges being taken up,
and applied to literature, sooner in alternative feminist periodicals than in women's studies or academic
journals. Overall, what has taken place in alternative feminist publishing, then, is an attempt to develop
means of producing and interpreting literature which are grounded in responsibility to a feminist
'See, for example, Alexa Freeman and Jackie Macmillan, "Prime Time: Art and Politics," . Quest. 11.1. 1975, pp. 27-39, especially pp. 27-28.
''See, fbr example. Sinister Wisdom, 1.2, 1976 - a special issue on publishing.
]'See, for example, June Arnold, "Feminist Presses and Feminist Politics," Quest, III.1, 1976, pp. 18-26 or Marge Piercy, "Fame. Fortune, and Other Tawdry Illusions," in Parti-Cdwed Blocks fi a Quilt (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1982) pp. 227-28 and Jan Clausen, "The Politics of Publishing and the Lesbian Community," Sinister Wisdom, 1.2, 1976. pp. 95-115 for a range of views on this issue.
community and in the explicitly. stated needs and goals of that comniunity - in ofher words. a feminrst
aesthetic.
Just as feminists involved in alternative feminist culture have ejected the structures of inainstream . 5 publishing, so they have rejected .&e values for judging lherature which are embedded in such structuxs.
Traditional assumptions about standards and quality, it is argu&, are male-oriente~ and actively suppress
women's voices; the purpose of a feminist aesthetic should be to encourage and celebrate them. The
aesthetic that emerges from this act of simultaneous rejection and delebration takes several different, and at
times contradictory. approaches. One widely-held position, particularly in the earlier writing, is that
standards and considerations of quality have no place at all in feminist considerations of literary value. In Y.
1974, when Audre Lorde, Adrienne Rich and Alice Walker refused to allow the National Book Award to
be given to any one of them and accepted it irstead "in the name of all women." they encouraged feminist ' I
writers and critics to move beyond "ranking and comparison. . . the terms of pamarchal competition." lP
Other writers have linked coqcern for standards directly with the power structures that restrain women 2nd
thwart their attempts to speak for themselves. As Cathy Cruikshank puts it: d ' . . . questions of quality can best be answered by the hierarchical institution of your choice
and are really questions of tasre imposed to control expression rather than to enhance its appreciation. ' O
c While this refusal to engage in th establphment exercise of competition and setting normative $ '. k.
standards has its strengths, h e reluctance to judge women's writing has at times led to a tmdency in the , <
alternate feminist press to be totally uncritical of women's writing, to substitute an ideal of universal
sisterhood for an;. aesthetic criteria. This position is most often expressed in responses to negattve reviews. . in which ttle reviewers are often accused of unfeminist behaviour for find& fault with their sisters. ' I
3'Audre Lqde, Adrienne Rich and Alice Walker, "In the Name of All Women," M u r g m . 23, 1975, p. 23.
.. 'OCathy Cruikshank,
''See, for example,
8 "Lesbiar Literature: Random Thoughts," Murginr. 23, 1975. p. 41.
Joanna Russ, "Listen, There's a .Story for You . . .." Sinister Wisdom,
Other critics have argued that the n~ed'for collective support and the rejection of elitist, male-dominated t
values need not and should not m'ean that feminists cannot criticke each others' work, or develop literary
standards to fit their own needs. Indeed, they argue that such standards are vital if feminist liter-ture = -
is to fulfill its potential. Peg Cruikshank, from the journal So's Your Old Lady, describes the dilemma in .
which members of that editorial collective often found themselves: - -
Since our present literary standards derive from a patriarchal culture, pre-occupation with quality can rightly be challenged as sexist On the other hand, if our critical sense is insufficiently exercised, we may fail to get the very best work women are capable of producing.
Responding to a nmber of criticisms of Joanna Russ for contributing a negative review,of a woman's book
to Sinister Wisdom, Marge Piercy puts the case for feminist literary skda rds even more forcefully:
If we are not honest in the evaluatioil of each other's woik, where shall a feminist aesthetic arise? If we abandon the effort to set our own criteria, we have left standing the old values
'
and failed to create our own to replace them
This tension between supporting women's writing and offering positive criticism has not been fully
resolved. buvthe debate has generated a sharper sense ofathe need to explore the question of feminist - literary standards. The central concept to emerge from critical practice in the feminist little magazines in
0
relation to such standards is the notion of authenticity, that is, the idea that a truly feminist literamre would 'I
express women's authentic experience, in forms and languzge drawn from the realities of women's lives.
The development of an aesthetic based on this goal has focussed on both style and content
'l(contld) 12. 1980. pp. 89-92; responses by Marion Zirnrner Bradley and Susanna J. Sturgis in Sinister Wisdom. 14. 1980, pp. 101-02, and by Marge Piercy in Sinister Wisdom, 17, 1981. pp. 104-06. See also a letter from Joanna Russ in Sinister Wisdom, 11, 1979, pp. 54-55.
'
'Taula Estey. "Na All That Is Written Is Fit to Print," So,iwcrner, VI.2, 1980, p. 5, argues that criticism must "redefine" the feminist voice.
"Peg Cruikshank. "The Sensitive Blue Pencil: One J o d ' s Approach to Feminist Criticism." Margins, 23, 1975, p. 38.
"Marge Piercy, letter in Sinister Wisdom. 17, 1981; p. 106. d
Work on feminist style d c d ~ e s from the broader feminist analysis of language. Patriarchal languagc
is considered inadequate for, even inimical to, expressing women's experience. Seen as deeplv imbued
with the values of linearity, rationality and objectivity, "man-made" language is, in this view, complicit in
the western mind-body split the dualism which characterizes western patriarchal philosophy and which
relegates women to' the realm of the irratiohal and the inaudible. Such language. it is argued. cannot be
effectively used by women either to describe themselves or to envision and work toward a changed future.
Women must invent new language, naming their own experience, redefining words which have had *
pejorative meanings, and inventing new styles of writing which eschew linearity and dualism. '' These
ideas have had especial importance for lesbiag writers, who are determined to "break the silence"
surrounding them, as the frequently used metaphor puts it. Adrienne Rich, among others. maintains that a
women's language is vital to this process: 4 I
, For us, the process of naming and reclaiming is not an intellectual game, but a grasping of our experience and a key to aceion. The word lesbianmust be affirmed because to discard it is to collaborate with silence and lying about our very existence; with the closet-game. the creation of the unspeakable. 46
The concept of reclaiming language !s linked to the revaluing of denigrated historical or mythical
female figures, and pervades fgminist c4ture. A glance at the U e s of feminist journals and names of 6
women's groups confirms this: Heresies, Hecate. Gossip, Amazon Quarterly, "Drastic Dykes", "The
Furies". "W.I.T.C.H." However, these ideas have often figured more importantly as metaphor or
inspiration for defiance of patriarchal definitions of women than in stylistic analysis of women's writing.
Stanley and Wolfe (Robbins) are probably the best-known critics to take such an approach to literary sryic
In their influential , "Toward a Feminist Aesthetic", " they draw together many of the ideas that haw v- 45See Mary Daly, Gyn/Ecdogy (Boston: Beacon Press. 1978) and Adrienne Rich, On Les . Secrets, and Silence: Selected Prose 1966- 1-978 (New Y ork: W. W. ! Norton, 1979).
46Adrienne Rich, "It Is the 'Lesbian in Us . .. . ," in Rich, 1978, p. 202. Emphasis Rich's.
"Julia Penelope Stanley and Susan J. Wolfe (Robbins), "Toyard a Feminist Aesthetic." Chrysaiis. 6. 1978, pp. 57-71.
evolved about women's language and apply them to specific texts. They discover in A women's writing uses - ! of particular forms such as the confessional mode, the journal or diary. and of particular stylistic devices,
\
such as circularity, a refusal to adopt linear forms, the presence of a subjective voice. They argue that such
features emerge in women's'writing as a result of the inadequacy of patriarchal language and style to
convey the complex& and specificity of women's experience. They call for a feminist aesthetic based on 9
conscious adoption of such female style. While ambitious and provocative, their analysis raises some of the
problems involved in the feminist call for a women's language. Much of the criticism betrays a certain -/
confusion over whether a women's language lies in the conscious use of techniques such as naming,
reclaiming, or syntactical experimentation, or whether women inherently use language in particular ways,
and that those ways are to be validated and emulated. The opposition between patriarchal lineari and i female circularity is a particularly clear example of this confusion; suggestions that women write in)
8 i
dr&lar, non-linear fashion. often attributed to their different relationship to time andfhe ey&&'of their
bodies. come perilously close to an essentialist account of female style.
Nevertheless, the frequency with which the need for a women's language is stated makes it clear '
that contemporary feminist writers consider themselves straitjacketed by received literary styles, and feel a
suong need both to invent new forms and styles in which to express themselves, and to take back modes
which have been devalued by the mainstream. For women of colour, the second issue is particularly
pressing. Black American women have a rich oral tradition to draw on, but the use of black idiom in
literature has been,denigrated by mainstream aesthetic standards. relegated to mere "dialect", a minor
regional or ethnic subset of literature. Many black femimst critics are exploring black women's use of oral.
tradition, storytelling and the blues as sources for their language and style. 4 s Through a poetic exploration
of the particular forms of black women writers' "revelations, confrontations, and resolutions of
"See. for example. Valerie Gray Lee. "The Use of Folktalk 'in Novels by Black Women Writers," ChA Jwnal , XXIII.3, 1980, pp. 266-72; Gloria T. Hull, "Black Women Poets from Wheatley to Walker." .Yegro American fiterufure F&, IX.3, 1975, pp. 91-96; and Michele Russell. "Black-Eyed B l u , ~ Connections: Teaching Black Women," ~er&ies . 8. 1979, pp. 99-105.
experience", ' 9 Ntozake Shange's 1975 essay, "Black Women Writing/Where Truth kcmb H m CU: 'L
It's Real". both describes and demons&{es this process. r
--
-
While the role of language in the construction of an authentic t'eminisr literawe has bccn an \
important issue, more of the criticism has focussed on questions of content The assumpuon In most of thl. - -
work is that, because of the prelsalence of false depictions of women in literature, i t is imperauvc for '
feminists to write directiy of their experience. This writing centres on illurninadnp subjjec~ that have rwr
been written about by men or, when explored by women, nor accorded the s ~ t u s of "literature", for
example, childbirth, mothering, friendship between women. The goal is to restore female *pcrspccrivc\ ru
accounts of human experience. Women's writing is seen in a cenain sense as the volcc of truth,
cwlenging the patriarchal lies, and as the suppressed pan of the story that will change our undcnlandm~
of the whgle.
The difficulty here arises in determining exactly what the nature of authentic cxperiencc mph t bc
and how we recognize this inliterature. In the early days of alternative feminist culture. critics cxprc?;wii ,
the view that womeh writing with an explicit consciousness.of themselves as womcn,would in icself d ~ a ~
this out The first editorial statement of 13th Moon captures the optimism:
We hope that by making conscious the special relationship women have to thernrelvn and to the world we will discover literature that is unique. that is female. that is ours. '"
Though the idea persists that writing which simply makes women's experience public 1s In ~wlf a
contribution to the development of a feminist voice, work quic.kly came to be judged by how well 11
0 embodies feminist convictions. The most common yardsuck for measuring this has been the conmausnek%
and behaviour'of the female characters. If an work evinces enoligh feminisr awt .cness LO servc as a pajittvt.
role-model, and to help women see their way out of the pamarchal trap, il could be acclaimed as Icmin~s:.
49Ntozake Shange, "Black Yomen Writing/Where Truth Becomes Hope/Cu It's Real." Margins, 17, 1975. p. 52.
-/
'Oquoted in Angela Peckenpaugh. Review of . l3 th M w q in Mo~grns. 16. 1975. p. 14
1:. on tfrr ahcr hand. i t portrayed women as suck in &e internalized inferiotiry of the traditional female
roit, t t c d d tK judprcd lachng. '' By this a m 4 since feminists reject the victi&tion imposed on
vancn b) puiarcfiai culture. ieminm literature has a rrspaidbility to dcpitt w o m e ~ not as victims, but
a s urwd and =If-isvrnp sumvor~ Gfona Dye recalk how this worked in practi6 for the editorial '
. . . wc wcrc mbcr firm about thc conmbutiops which were unacceptable for us. We un&nwd wherc Pfath's mutilation imagery was coming from. but were not interested in pub!idring pocts who smncd faxioared by mpnbidity. . . . We groaned through poets who mcd to tmiule the wile stknce. In shon we knew the voices that had proyed acceptable to rhc damnant (rrale) culwrd. and m i n t d ourselves to those that had yet to find C X P l ~ C m . *:
Thc impuirc khind t h i s rtanrc is an understandable one: mainstrean literature is riddled with pomaits of
w m c n as hh~ipfcs ~ i ~ m ~ . FcmiWs a~ impatient with su& imagery and hunger for images of power' .
and rc53ZUIbcX. They arc caught in Ihc dilemma of ncufing simultaneously to dtscribe women's amdition
1 - Mowcvc~, &e assumpurn that an furhentic female voice must always express women's positive
-G=' quidturn. ncvcr wlf-htrrd or even ambwalencc, has sometimes led to a i t iasm which auld be described
a5 a i c m n l ~ vcrricm of %malist Reaiim. Qc ramifications of the paition have yet to be fully discussed
fi fhc mtmsm. a arcwrmw which has led lo some pitfalls, such as idengfying evep chziacter in a novel /
as the ltuth mxithpicct. condemning writers who choose to expose women'; complicity in their own
crpprmias.. mcasurirq titcrary work a&m a r b i w - notions of -politid c u r r e ~ ~ ~ e s s ~ . as well as suspicion
of nzm-r;taltst form. umx rhc? are more BiEicull to judge by these standards. Again, this tendency could
k atuibutcd ro a ktnd of ~ n w l i s m . an assumption that. onct women suip off the layers of false
- - ''!ikx. fez cxamplc, faamern Bndy and Jud~lh McDamel. 'Lesbians in the Mainstream: imtr d i-CStttilns In Recent Commcrnal Eicuon.' Corsdt~ianr, n.3. 1980, pp. 82-105. Pamela CI hbmon. 'Hm ixsbws Read Literature: A CDnstructive Crib-" Struder Wiadom, 15. IW. pp. pJ-9K aab the ctchmgc of Imm berwtm Harriet E Lcmer and Marge Piercj.. Chr~#otu, 6. 1975. p.' :, on Picrq's depiatm of duracters in her novel The Htgh Cad of t r r t g .
-- - -- - : \
-
consciousness, they win get in touch with a core of imer strength, a true femdeness which has survived s
untouched by the patriarchy. and the process of consciousness-raising to bring it to the light -
of day. This view can oversimplify the complex workings of ideology, and prevent writers from exploring
fhe contradictory relationship of women to the dorninanr culture. More recently, writers have
demonstrated a greater willingness to examine the ways in w h i g they may be both drawn to and critical of
~non-feminist, even sexist image - in popular cdnue. for example. Perhaps the period of focussing on
' images of strength has helped make this move possible. '?
.-
While there are problems inherent, then, in an aesthetic of authenticity, at its best, it has encouraged
women writers to value themselves. to bring into the open facets of women's lives that have rarely been
* present in literature. Some of the most interesting and successful criticism to flow out of the rolemodel
approach has focussed on lesbian &ting. The central metaphor of lesbian oppression in the alternate
literarylsulture has been invisibility, and the pri- gesture of non-compliance. the act of com~ng out-
Lesbian literary work reverses the negative connotations of lesbian as outsider or outlaw, and clams them.
making "the woman who refoses to obey, who has said 'no' to the fathers" " central to the consuucbon of B
a lesbian aesthetic. An editorial statement in Smsrer Wwiom describes the consciousness of the journal as
that of "the lesbian or lunatic who embraces her bounda~/crirninal stat~s,~with the aim of creaung a new
species in time/space,", and states that its goal is."the creation of a revolutionary lesbian imagination in I.
politics and an" 's R-eclaiming lesbian writers of the past, bringing them out, has been a crucial aspect of
this project; as Deborah Core puts it, "all the knowledge we can g h e r of our sisters three or fifty or a
hundred and fifty years ago helps us to create our own lives." '* The construction sf a lesbian literary -
-\
, ''See. for example. Howes. Noreen. "Women in Counuj Music: Babies. Burdens and Broken H e m . " Kinesis. July/August. 1986. pp. 18-19 and Bev Crossman. "True Confessions of a Romance Junkie." Cayenne, 5. 1985. pp. 22-24.
*
"Adrienne Rich. "It Is the Lesbian in Us . . .," in Kich. 7978, p. 202.
"Quoted in Joan and Chesrnan. 1978, p. 48.
''Deborah Core. "woman-ldeniified." Margins. 23, 1975. p. 28.
-7 - \ - --
- --A- -
tradition has led to new methodologies and theories - of biography, of deciphering "encoded" lesbianism
. in literary texts, of historical research to discover woman-identified c&munities sd cultural movements. I " Theories of what constitutes lesbianism, iiistorically. have also been important to this work. 5' A related . - - - -
matter is what lesbian literature actual!y consists of - all writing by lesbians, whether out or not? Writing '-
with lesbian content? Writing by out lesbians, whether or not it has lesbian content? 5 9 In exploring all of
these issues, lesbian critics have revealed the heterosexist assumptions which pervade literature and P
aiticism. But beyond that, rhSfhave moved literary analyses into a wholly woman-identified realm. In a
sense, tbe history of invisibility has been turned to advantage; in naming the unnamed they have found a
greater freedom to imagine possibilities.
Growing awareness of $ohen, who have been doubly marginalized has been an especially important 4% *:k
consequence of attempty* &&re lit&ature true to women's exfierience. What has emerged most clearly E . . *
from the search for an authsntic voice is a sense of the variety and multiplicity of women's voices. Women
of colour have addressed their absence, not only from the mainstream literary tradition, but from the
developing feminist tradition. The impetus of much of this work is, again, combatting invisibility, both by
constructing a historical tradition and by creating space for contemporary writing. For feminists of colour,
this involves not only double oppression but double loyalties, that 'is, allegiance both to specific racial and
T3ee. for example. Frances D&ghty. "Lesbian Biography, Biography of Lesbians." Lillian Faderman, "Who Hid Lesbian History?," and Patricia McClelland Miller, "The Individual Life." collected under the title "Three Perspectives on Method," in Frontiers, IV.3, 1979. pp. 70-79; Bertha Harris, "The More Profound Nationality of Their Lesbianism: Lesbian Society in Pais in the 19Ws." in Amazon Expedition, ed. Phyllis Birkby, et al. (Albion, CA: Times Change Press. 1973). pp. 77-88. . ,
- -- --
"See,' for example. Lillian Faderman. Surpassing the Love of Men. R m n t i c Friendship and Love between Women j o m the Renaissance to the Present (New York: William Morrow and .&'- Co.. 1981). and Nancy Sahli. "Smashing: Women's Relationships before the Fall."Chrysalis, 8, 1979. pp. 17-27.
j9For discussion of these i~sues,-~see Elly Bulkin. "Introduction: A Look at Lesbian Short Fiction." in Lesbian Fiction. An Anthdogy, ed. Elly Bulkin (Watertown, Mass.: Persephone Press. 1981L pp. Xi-xxxviii "and June Arnold and Bertha Harris. "Lesbian Fiction: A Dialogue." S i e F 1.2. 1976, pp. 42-51. *,
culnual communities and to feminism. Feminists of colour
. . - -
have the dual usk of demanding space lor thw
concerns both within the anti-racist movement and within the predominantly white women's movemem
*
In the period we surveyed, there was only one feminist journal. Azalea produced b! and fot women
of colour. The establishment of Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press in 1981 has been an Important step 0 -
toward autonomous publishing for these women. The extraordinary success of Conditiom five, The Black /'
Women's Issue, which sold 10,&00 copies within months of its first printing, and the impact of This Bridge
Called My Back Radical Writings by Women ofCdw, '%h of which contain literary criticism and a
great deal of primary literary work, attest to the need of women of colour for writing which speaks ro the11
own reality.
-
Both of these publications. which include work by and a b u t lesbiam of colour, have been I -c
,influential in the development of. for e q p l e . a black feminist literary aesthetic. in wh~ch black
community, the connections between women. the history of slaven, and black oral tradition are impormr
elements. Writers such as Alice Walker. in "In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens" " and Barbara Smith. In
"Toward.a Black ~ e r n i k s t Criticism". 6 2 explore the situation of the black wo?nanritiwriter in search of
models. Like the feminist politics of women of colour. the aesdetic criteria which emerge in such analyses
are grounded in their specific racial and cultural herirage and in their history of struggle. As 4 t h
contemporary lesbian writing, contemporary writing by women of colour draws on and extends these
traditions as an act of p~litiml survival. In the words of the editon of This Bridg~ Called My ~ a c k :
T h e m e Moraga and Gloria Anzaldua, eds., This Bridge Called My 'Back Radical Wrtting3 by Women of C d m (Watertown. Massachusetts: Persephone Press. 1981). Condiuons: five. 1979 has since been reprinted in H m e Girls, ed. Barbara Smith- (New York: Kitchen Tablc: Women of Color Press. 1983). half of which is original material commissioned especiallj for the book, half the reprinted journal issue.
''Alice Walker. "In Search of Our Mother's Gardens," Southern Expure , IV.4. 1977, pp. 60-64.
6%.rbara Smith. "Toward a BlacF Feminist Criticism. Condrtions. 1.2. 1977. pp. 25-44.
/
We are Third World Women writers, so similar yet so different similar in the issues we tonfront, different in approach and style. What we have in common is our love of writing -
and a love of literature of women of color. In our common struggle and in our writing we reclaim our tongues. We wield a pen as a tool, a weapon, a means of survival, a magic wand that will attract power, that will draw self-love into our bodies. . . . A woman who writes has '
power. . . 63
The impact of this work has been to render'alternative feminist culture a whole more sensitive to A
questions of race andcultural diversity. 1
As even this brief summary inlbtes , the development of a feminist aesthetic within alternative
feminist fiterary culture has raised many key questions. Debates revolve around the need for analyses of
women's victirnhtion and for images of women's potential strength; me need to build autonomous
cultqd qmmunities and to reach a mass audience; the need for a safe, supportive space for women to
explore and develop their own voices and for new standards based on feminist values by which to judge
this new work; the need for representation of yomen who have been doubly margsnalized, and virtually - dismissed by the literary mainstream. Althopgh, as we have suggested. these questions are nowhere near
resolved. the level of debat- h e small feminist periodids indicates a firm cornmifrqent to a radical
cultural practice which gfows out of, and indeed is inseparable from, the activist wing of the woqen's
movement External presiures of a growing right-wing mobilization and economic recession have had -
adverse effects on the possibilities of maintaining alternative cultural structures, especially in relation to the 0
perennial problem gf funding. Despite these problems, however, those working within alternative feminist
culture have generated literary theories, methodologies and practices that have been and continue to be
major coni?ibutions to feminist literary criticism.
Feminist Criticism in the Academy
r
The other major goal of literary feminists has been the transformation of literary study within the
academy. The academy's related functions of research and teaching make it one of the primary institutions
P 63Moraga and Anzaldua. 1981. pp. 163-64.
of cultural production and reproduction. Because of this, feminists have seen it as an imponant venur. for
combatting women's exclusion from and invisibility in culture. Feminists working within the academy
have sought to use its resources for the purposes of feminist research .and scholarship. and to change both
methods and content of teaching to reGd pass on the results of this scholarship. For femi$st literan
critics, the two main st~ategies of this approach have been attempts to alter the canon to include better
representation of women writers, and attempti to establish feminist criticism as a legitimate academic 0
enterprise.
The first strategy originates e feminist critique of the maledominated canon's
mi~re~resentatibn of women: Dra on the groundbreaking work of Mary Ellrnann in Thrnhng nbdi
Women6' am! Kate Millett in Sexual PditicP the mliest feminist criticism aimed at the university
classroom examined stereotypes of women in literature by men, and concluded that they conuibuted to
women's internalization of sexist prescriptions for their behaviou~, and therefore to women's sense of I
themselves as inferior. From a small step to the assumption that a radical shift in literary *'-
curricula to include more women writers would improve the situatibn, by allowing women access to "true"
portraits of themselves by women writers which would combat the "false" images they had received from
male writers. 66 Like the proponents of alternative feminist culture, feminist critics in the academy used the
insights and techniques of consciousness-raising to expose the political implications of mainstream culrural
representations of women, and were led from this to a search for authentic representation. ,
Simultaneously, feminist critics were developing an analysis of literary criticism and literary
tradition. specifically the ways in which mainstream criticism and ?ad&nic practices enshrine thc valuer of
6' Mary fllrnann, Thinking abcut Women (New York: Harcourt, Brace and World. 1968).
6'Kate Millett, Sexual P@cs (Garden City. NY: Doubleday, 1970)
66See, for example, Susan Koppelman Cornillon, Images of Women in Fiction. Femzusf *
, Perspectives (Bowling Green, Ohio: University ~ ~ u l a r Press, 1973) and Elaine Showalter. Women and the Literary Curriculum," Cdlege English, XXXII.8, 1971. pp. 85462.
a male elite, thereby excluding women writers from the canon, and devaluing the work of those few writers
acknowledged by the mainmeam. The feminist response to this denial and distortion has included
resurrecting "lostn womenwriters, and reviewing their work and the work of known women writers in light
of the fact of their being women. Such analyses lay the groundwork for a potentially radically different
literary criticism The two main strategies at these early stages of feminist l i terw criticism were
intertwined and mutually interdependent: altering the canon to include more women writers entailed an t
exposure of the male bias inherent in the existing & o n . This critique provided the basis for an entirely .
new way of looking at women's writing, which was intended both to establish the value of women's writing
and therefore its proper place in the canon, and to establish feminist criticism as a valid critical practice.
Developments in feminist criticism must be seen in the context of the establishment of women's
studies programs in the universities in the early seventies, which in turn had its roots not only in the
women's movement, but also in the radical 2tudent movements of the late sixties. and their critique of the
academy as a site of oppressive political power. The feminist critique extended these insights to include an
analysis of the ways in which educational institutions perpetuate hierarchy, elitism, and privilege. and S-
. maintain pahiarchal divisions of power." The women's studies movement has from its inception smggled
;:.ith these contradictions: how to create space for women and for feminist scholarship within the academy,.
and still maintain connection with the broader women's movement Should women's studies be accredited
departments or open adrnissigns? If accredited, is it more important to create separate departments for
women's studies, or to transform cumcula within existing disciplines? Will the inclusion of feminist
content in itself be sufficient to work change in academic practices, or will the very structures of the
academy co-opt and neutralize such changes? Will the need to establish feminist scholarship as legitimate
'and respectable, able to compete with maledominated approaches, actually weaken feminism and divide
women working in the academy from those active outside it? ~ h & questions are by no means resolved;
debates on the viability and the priorities of women's studies are ongging, particularly in these days of
6'See Adrienne Rich, "Toward a Woman-Centered Universityn, in Rich, 1979, pp. 125-55.
recession, with its. accompanying political conservatism and funding cuts to edu~ation.~' -
As early as 1970, some feminist critics operating within the academy wer~warning of the possible
dhgers of feminist criticism being co-opted. In her essay, "Dwelling in Decencies: Radxal Criticism and -
?4
the Feminist Perspective", Lillian Robinson addresses this question quite bluntly:
Some people are trying to make an honest woman out of the feminist critic. to claim that every "worthwhile" department should stock one. I am not tembly interested in whether feminism becomes a respectable part of academic criticism; I am very much concerned that feminist critics become a useful part of the'women's movement6v
Robinson also raises some important implications of the feminist critique of the canon, by touchington the A
whole question of evaluation. She argues that feminist critics cannot limit themselves to analyses of sexism
in men's literawe, but must take on the task of exploring the political implications of mainstream
aesthetics, and of developing aesthetic criteria of their own. What Robinson is calling for here is not quite
the feminist cultural project of a developing a feminist aesthetic. but rather, a feminist politics of aesthetics.
That is, for academic feminists, the issue has been not so much developing standards by which to judge ,/'-
it is developing an entirely new set of aesthetic principles which could be applied L O , ~ 4 !
a revised canon could be based. Robinson's essay is important to note, since it \$
\\ phpoints very early on two potential problems of feminist criticism within the academy. problems which
have in fact plagued feminist criticism throughout the last decade and a half. These arc the *&$itfalls '
of shaping the theory and practice of feminist literary criticism more in response to the pressuresof
survival within the academy than to the needs of the women's movement. and of drawing back from the
most radical implications of the feminist critique of the canon.
Y3ee Linda Gordon, "A Socialist Views of Women's Studies: A Reply to. the Editorial. Volume 1, Number 1," Signs, 1.2, 1975, pp. 559-66, ~arih Lowe and Margaret Lowe Benston, "The Uneasy Alliance of Feminism and Academia," Women's Studies lntermlond Forztrn, W.3, 1984, pp. 177-83, and Frontiers, VIII.3, 1986, a special issue on "The Women's Studies Movement: A Decade Inside the Academy".
6 9 Lillian Robinson, "Dwelling in Decencjes: Radical Criticism and the Feminist Perspective." Cdlege English. XXXII.8. 1971, pp. 879-89. This was first presented as a paper at the 1970 MLA.
- -
. By 1975, the whole vexed question of the need for theory in feminist criticism had surfaced. In her
Signs reweAof feminist criticism in that year, Elaine Showalter remarks that, "On the whole, fenhist
literary criticism and scholarship have been stubbornly empirical; they have generatedP$)atively little 0
theory and abstractionn. The field, she goes on, is characterized by "the absence of a solid system of
critical the~ry." '~ In the same year, Annette Kolodny declares that "As yet, no one has formulated any
exacting definition of the term 'feminist criticism:"7i Her Signs review the following year assesses the
field, rather glumly, as caught in "a kind of critical stasis", and reiterates the complaint of lack of
theoretical coherence: " . . . the status of feminist literary criticism, as either theory or practice, remains
itself unchanged, appearing in various guises, unevenly practiced, more like a set of interchangeable
strategies than any coherent school or sh&ed goal ~rientation."~~
# ~ h h e both ShoTter and Kolodny are careful to acknowledge that the diversity of feminist
"
criticism could be one of its sQengths, both dwell more on its potential as a weakness - most seriously, the
problem that lack of a coherent theory results in feminist criticism not being taken seriously by the
academy. This refrain runs through the criticism throughout the time period we surveyed and beyond:
feminist critics are not having a serious impact on the larger critical or academic community, and will not, 4
until they come up with, in Showalter's words, a "solid system" of the01-y.'~ While some critics have
pointed out, reasonably enough, that their lack of impact on the academy may have far more to do with
their male colleagues' disinterest in and even hostility toward the feminist project thag any fault in the
"Elaine Showalter. "Literary Criticism," Signs, 1.2, 1975, p. 436.
"Annette Kolodny. "Some Notes on Defining a 'Feminist Literary Criticism'," Critical Inquiry, 11.1, 1975, p. 75.
''Annette Kolodny, "Literary Criticism," Signs, 11.2, 1976, p. 420.
-- " See Cheri Register, "Literary Criticism," Signs, VI.1. 1980, pp. 268-82; Myra Jehlen, . "Archimedes and the Paradox of Feminist Criticism," Signs, VI.4, 1981, pp. 575-601; Sandra. Gilbert, "What Do Feminist Critics Want? or, A Postcard from the Volcano," ADE Bulletin, 66. 1980. pp. 16-24; and Susan H. Leger. "The Lure of Symmetry: Or, The Strange impossibility of Feminist Criticism," Mussachusetts Review, XXIV.2, 1983, pp. 330-36.
project itself,14 the uneasy sense that the work is not theoretically up to snuff prevails.
\
h quest of a "mistress-theory" which could resolve these problems, some critics turned to the work
of French feminist theorists such as Helene Cixous, Luce Irigaray. and Julia Kristeva. The publication of
New French Feminisrns, 7 5 an anthoiogy of French feminist w&g, and the Signs special issue on French
feminism l6 which translated work by Cixous, Irigaray and Kristeva, made this widely available In
Nonh America for the first time." Focussing on language and its role in t@e construction of the femirune.
Cixous and Irigaray, particularly, propose a model of difference in women's writing, known variously as
parlerfimme, l'ecriturefeminine, and "writing the body". which maintains that women can escape from
their position in pamarchal ideology as symbolic Other through writing which, in both form and content,
celebrates and emulates the difference of the female body.' As feminist revisions of Demdean
deconstruction and Lacanian semiotics, these theories appeared at first to offer a critical model of women's
writing which wodd give feminist critical theory the weightiness necessary to compete on the academic
terrain. After the first flush of enthusiakn. however. some commentators began to caution against \
accepting them uncritically. Ann Rosalind Jones, for instance, points out the considerable drawbacks in the
French women's writing - particularly the problematic emphasis on the body, which seems to lead back to I
an essentialist account of female subjectivity, the identificatiot of women with their biology. While.
suggesting that there are nevertheless possibilities in this work, particularly in its analysis of the
interconnection of language and ideology, Jones counsels "productive doubtn in Anglo-American re&%on . .
of French feminist %&y: "Every belief about 'what w~men are' raises political as weH as aesthetic
problems, and Franco-feminist theory . . . is no exception." l7 Feminist critics need to ask, among other
"See Jane Marcus, "Storming the Toolshed," SigG, VII.3, 1982. pp. 622-40.
'Waine Marks and Isabelle de Courtrivron, eds.," New French Femirusms: An Anthdogy (Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1980).
''Ann Rosalind Jones, "Inscribing Femininity: French Theories of the Feminine," in Greene and Kahn, 1985, p. 106. In her recent work Sexual/Textual Pditics (London and New York:
things, how it can be applied to analysis of texts, whether it is useful for considering work from earlier
periods or non-Western cultures, how or if it can be m e d to practical political action.
The turn to French feminist concepts has been a fairly recent tactic in some academic feminists' B 2
search for theoretid validity; earlier critics, faced with the charge that feminist criticism lacked theoretical
coherence. gave their attention to creating what might be termed "a criticism of our owan Even if'the
theory question remained unresolved, they could at least mark out critical territory for themselves, some
area &at would be the indisputable business of feminist criticism. Ir! practice, this territory turned'oul not
surprisingly, to be women's writing, and, on the theoretical level, the question of difference in women's
writing. By 1981, this was offered, again by Elaine Showalter, solution to the theory question, in her '-f by now weli-known division of feminist literary criticism into the feminist critique - that is, criticism of
maleauthored texts - and gynocritics - that is, criticism of femaleauthored texts. She &es that \
feminist criticism should concern itself only with the latter; that no new methodologies or theories
could arise from critiquing male literature, that only by making women's writing the subject would minist /-
- P criticism be able to formulate its own theoretical m~dels. '~
Whiie Showalter's position is more pronounced than most - the majority of feminist critics do not .-
take the position that analyses of men's writing are to be completely avoided - she does articulate a
growing tendency in the field since 1975 to see women's writing as the primary source of feminist critical
theory. Work on men's writing came to be characterized as "merely" analysis of images of women, a
"(cont'd) Methuen. 1985), Tori1 Moi maintains that Anglo-American feminist criticism is theoretically and politically impoverished, and asserts that French feminist theory can lead to a more politically radical critical practice. However, since her analyses of Cixous, Irigaray, and Kristeva point to almost identical problems to those raised by Jones, it is hard to see how the French work can fill the AngleAmerican theoretical void she posits.
"Elaine Showalter, "Feminist Criticism in the Wilderness." Critical Inquiry, W1.2, 1981, pp. 179-205. Showalter made this distinction earlier, in her 1979 essay "Towards a Feminist Poeticsnjn W m e n ' Writing and Writing about Wmen . e d Mary ~acbbus (London: Croom Helm, 1979) pp. 22-41. but she does not fully develop her contention that gynocritics and- feminist literary criticism ought to be synonomous until the 1981 article
/ jejune, more primitive form of feminist criticism which had been outgrown. Our survey of the field dwl\
demonsnates that this characterization is inaccurate: many discussions of men's writing have developed in
more sophisticated directions, exploring the ways in which male writers grapple with the question of
gender. In addition, there has been a considerable knount of criticism examining the history of c n t u l
reaction to male Wters. Often, these discus&ons argue that the misogyny is inherent in the critical
tradition, and that critical practice itself skews interpretation of female characters and gender relations. In
"rescuingw such works from male-biased criticism, feminists have suggested the ways in which the writing
of, for example. ~haucer. Shakespeare. or the Greek dramatists. oeats women and questions of gender
more positively than has been supposed. Despite its potential value, however. those developing cnucal
theory largely ignored such work. This position can probably be5a&buted to the anxiety about femmst
critidsm's.acadernic viability we noted earlier, the perceived need Tor a critical terrain that would be solid)
identified as the property of feminist criticism. . -
In addition to these pressures from the academy, however, the. study of women's wnting came to
' seem the most fruitful project for feminist criticism for a number of more positive reasons. The impetus
behind the academic p restoring and reevaluating women's writing can be seen as oripinaung
from similar motivations to the feminist culture's project of creating a space for contemporary women's
writing. Many critics speak of their own personal engagement with this work, the inspirational value \
women's writing holds for them. and its potential 16 revitalize the classroom and the study of literature as a
While a focus on women's writing had mu 6 , . o recommend it, the retreat from develcping feminist
critical theory based on work on the dominant culture can be seen, in retrospect, as having left certain gaps
Valuable work has been done, for instance, on popular forms of prescriptive literature such as conduct
manuals and courtesy books, and on contemporary popular culture and the role of the female reader.
19See Carolyn Heilbrun, "Feminist Criticism: Bringing the Spirit Back to English Studies." ADE Bulletin, 62, 1979. pp. 35-38.
Theoreucal developments based on this work could draw on other feminist cultural analysis, such as film
criticism. and incorporate, as feminist film critics have done, insights from the fast-growing field of 0
Marxist Qscussions of ideology. to provide a fuller understanding of the cultural c o n s e o f g e n d e r .
The relative lack of critical theory drawn frorn,analyses of men's writing unfortunately left intact ihe
assumption that dl a feminist reading of such :exts can do is demonstrate their inauthentic treatment of
women. We must emphasize that numerous feminist critics have gone much further in their discussions of
men's writing ,md of popular culture, demonstrating the complex interactions between text apd reader that
produce normative gender relations. This implications of this work, however, have not been drawn out on
the theoretical level. The perceived need for a distinct theory able to compete in the academic mainstream
moved feminist critical theory away from analysis af the construction of gender to consideration of a
female aesthetic. . Simultaneously with the appearance of the theory question, came the professionalization of feminist
literary critiasm. l o Over the period we surveyed, prestigious academic women's studies journals were
established, includmg Signs, Women's Studies International Quarterly, International J w n a l of Women's '
Strdres. Women and kterature . mainstream English journals published more feminist criucism, panels on 0
feminist approaches to literature appeared regularly at MLA conventions, numerous books on the subject L
were published, and reviewed in both the women's studies publications and in a significant number of - A--
non-feminist periodmls. The women's studies journals, especially, were important locations for the .5
development of feminist criticism. Many of these journals took the route of competing with mainstream
academic periodicals on the same terms. Catharine Stimpson, editor of Signs, for instance, states frankly
that Signs is an academic journal, and suggests that some of the pitfalls of this approach might be a failure
to publish experimental or interdisciplimy work, and too heavy a reliance on "current scholarship
'Osee Ellen Cantarow. "Academic Gore," Radical Teacher. 11: 1979, pp. 15-16. 20 for a history of this proces3.
1
%L
methods."" She amibutes this to the desire to be taken seriousl~. presumably by thc academic
establishment She also remarks that feminist scholars who publish in interdisapltnary wonlcn's s t t~dm
journals "risk the loss of institutional rewards."" Her remarks are pertinent to women's studre5 jcxmal~ a.
a whole, and the uneasy balancing act they are forced to perform between academic acceptitbil~r> and 4
feminist usefulness. Clearly. these journals provide an invaluable fo feminist scholarship. Llnlrke
the little magazines, however. which have severed themselves compl m existing instiluuom, L ~ C
- women's studies journals, by keeping a foot in both camps. run the risk of compromising the very fcrnmis~
principles they espouse, and failing to satisfy either side.
The turn to wornen's writing, then, as the potential source of feminist critical theory, developed
among feminist 4tics in the academy for a number of reasons. The project of allering h e canon came to
depend more on the construction of a female literary tradition than on critiques bf the existing canon. That
is, feminist critics began to make a case for including women writers in the canon on the basis of the sheer +
breadth and volume of women's writing that was being recovered, and. in many eases, on historical or ' r
sociological grounds. some women writers were to be considered "worth" studying or teaching because
their writing was claimed to be up to the established standards; others were deemed worthy of attenurn.
not because of the quality of their writing. but because their work revealed something abour the hisrond I
condition of women, or the particular circumstances facing women writers. R+visionar) aesthetic cntcna r
are implicit in much of this work, but frequently not stated oumght Thar is. the assumption that a titcran
work is worth studying because of what it tells us about women is in itself a cnailenge to received notiohs
of literary value. not least because it has the power to expose the ideological premises on which standarc!
aethetic criterime based, and which mainstream criticism has masked. Work on women's writing has - been . . guided by these premises: that traditional aesthetic criteria are not value-free. that the values
''Catharine R Stimpson, "The Making of S~gns."Radical Teacher, 6. 1977. p. 23. L e - \ r
k a t h a r i n e R. Stimpson. "Editing Signs," Midwest MLA BLllleun. XII.1. 1979. p. 38.
* . .as, c~rrkddcrl In arc a n u - w m n . and rhat feminists bring a contcsiing set of values to the reading of
lrtrraturt. to h c dcfimom of lrtcrar~ history, and ~o the cvaluatiw of writing. '
/ T h e &mscs have bcsn applied to the rtlalcd questions of a female l&m.ry rradilion md the
qxmkts af women's wnunp. Thc ma)or works uadng a f t d c literary uaditiw arc Ellen Motrs'
Mcxn reexnmnn *The Great Writers' zss her subtitle indicates - mosdy ffritisb and Frznch novelists of
rhr 18th and 1% wntuna - seeing In theis work evid~ncc of thc authors "at work upm the fact of &
[band fem~lc.''' Skc uom recurring Lhma in the wort sf thcsc writers. and unearths mnsidemble -
tvduurm of a f m l c subculture. ~ i l t x k and Gubr. alw warking mainl<&hin the 19th century English
tsabum (tkcy irmrfudc chapter on Emily Bclunscm). put forward a theor): of female authorship based
(#: a rr-v4smar?; rcrldmg of Harold R i m ' s theor). of "anxiety of influence". Women writers, they argue,
ruffs from 'anxicry of authorship" - lack sf a tradition of literary formothes, combined with anxiety
ck.ntcn thcj cxamrnc of chu anxicry in their we of uupcs of m c f w e , confipcmcnt, ilincss and madness,
which thcy rtad as an immckd rubtest the buried son. of womeil's confinement under patriarchy.
"Sandra M. Gitkn and Susan Gubar. ~ k e Mdw- ~n A m : The W- W t f w OIPd r h ~ Ntre~icanf)l Ctmwy t t r ~ a t y Imogimtm (New Ham: Yale University Press, 1979)-
- All three of these works have been highly influential: much of the material wc have gathered draw '.
on or extends the theoretical models. zddressing the specificity of women's writing as well as a fcmalc
- literary tradition. While their approaches differ, the theoretical assumptions that emerge from these works
and from the numerous articles taking similar approaches can be briefly summarized as follows. Womcn
who write do so under genderspecific conditions, both material and psychological. These may mcludc
poverty, the pressure of work both inside and outside the home. lack of acces to education and
publishing. a reading public and a critical and academic establishment that does nor take them seriouslj. /
social piohibitions against women writing. inttfmlizrd fears of risking their feminmity in the ac! of Itteran P
crcation. lack of sl~cccssful rokmodels. lack of positive reinforcement for thetr work. All of thew factors
vtilI mark a diff'rence in women'switing. a difference that may be more or less discernible to the reader.
but is ncverrheless present As to what degree womeq writers can be said u, be aware of themselves as
women writing, and self-tonsdouslg participating in a female literary tradition or literary subculture. critm
Some address themselves to women writers* links with and influgnce upon each other. othen arc
more concerned with the recurrences of themes, pauerns of imager). and narrative structures that they see - -
as exemplirying the sm@e of the woman writer for legitimacy. The fiss! approach has some problems,
, . the rnk serious being that women writers. denied a m to the mainstream. have not had a consistend!
available tradition draw on. Despite thc evidence garnered b!. feminist critics of previously unknown or
ignored amnections knveen women writers, it remains true that the female tradition has been fragmentaq
and buried; even as the piesen: generation of feminist critla have had their work cut out for them to s
unearth literar) foremot!ers. so previous generations of women writers haue; In man) cases, workcd In
isolation. deprived of their own hlston. Thus the nodon of a female ltteran- subculture that depends upon . explicit links between women writers has some built-in limitations as a model of the history of women's
-
+tin& More fruitful approaches have seen a.womcn7,s literary tradition as formed by the conditions in
which women write. and their relauomhip to ~e dominant tramtion. These issue have shaped much of '
the discussion of the specificity of women's writing.
Some of the earliest work on this question, such as Patricia Meyer Spacks' The Female
lmgimfion," attempted to identify a universal female style or female mode. This perspective was
somewhat unproductive, partly because its assumptions were ahistorical and essentialist, partly because it - akmpted to prove that women's writing was in some way diffeient from men's. Later criticism takes this
4 difference as given. devotes'its attention to how difference is shaped by historical circumstances and
manifested in texts, @ from this constructs a female aesthetic.
Theories of a female Besthetic depend upon t??e notion of subtext, seen as the textual sign of the
woman writer's conflict between the prescribed female role and her role as artist Gilbert and Gubar's
"anxiety of authorship" is; of course, an expression of this theory, as is Suzanne Juhasz's notion of the
"doublebind" of the female whter." while m r e s of other critics have employed this general mcept. By 0 -
decoding the encoded texts of writing women, feminist critics exploring a female aesthetic have begun the -
4 monumental task of reconstructing women's literary history - not simply by retrieving the work of lost
women writers, although this is an important foundation, but by retelling the story of the writing wo,man
with gender at the centre. Such readings have an enormous potential for alter& the nature of the cultural
values embodied in mainstream literary study. In an explicit departure from the Anglo-American critical
tradition, they challenge the formalism of New Criticism by insisting on the links between the text and the . author and her historical conditions, and between the text and the reader; but more broadly, they also
r-
constitute a critical practice at the service of political aims. Reconstructing the muted story of the writing
woman is, for these cntics, more than an academic exercise (in every sense); it is a contribution to the
fenhist enterprise of drawing a complbte picture of the history of women's oppression and of our
resisrance, the better to further that resistance.
i
I' Patricia Meyer Spacks, The Female /magimion (New York: Knopf, 1975).
" Suzanne J F - a n d Fiery F m : Modern American Puetry by W m n - a New Tradition (New York: Harper & Row. 1976).
Nonetheless. the question of the canon still Iodms larg6. The con;radictian of feminist criticism iu , .
the academy is that its impact has been both vast and limited. On the one hind. feminist criticism is
published in mainstream academic journals. panels are held at the MLA, many journals publish special
issues on women writers, graduate students are more likely to gain approval for thesis topics on women
writers,Plegfe4eRee of ferninismiticism is impowble to ignore, and its effect goes beyond I& own '-.
boundaries, to the proliferation of work on women's writing which is not feminist. but would'not e m werv i
it not for feminist scholarship. On the other hand, the effect of feminist criticism on the canon as i t 1s
taught has been minor. A glance at any university English Department syllabus would confirm this. A f c ~ .
more women writers may have been added to standard course lists, the occasional course may be given
specifically on women writers. but by and large the Great Tradition is still being taught, virtually intact '"
This makes the development of an explicit feminist politics of aesthetics all the more urgent The
basis for such theory is implicit in feminist critical practice, and feminist critics have raised a number of
questions crucial to bringing feminist politics to the task of evaluating literary merit: What should the
feminist response be to "sexist-but-great" literature, t h b e works whose ueatrnent of women is misogymst
or stereotypical but whose literary skill has been celebrated? How. and on what basis. can feminist c r i m
make a case for the value of women's writing? How does a feminist stance call the very notion of assignme
literary merit on a hierarchid basis into question? Should femiast critics construct an alte-le canon of
women's writing, or seek to replace the Great Tradition with the work of women?
I9See Paul Lauter, "A Small Survey of Introductory Courses in American hterature." Women's Studies Quarterly, IX.4. 1981, p. 12. "In order to get some sense of the extent to whlch changes in introductory American literature courses had begun to take place". Lauter collected syllabi from fifty courses in twenty-five representative colleges and universities. He found "among the first twenty writers one white woman, Emily Ddinson. Among the next ten writers, there are two addi t iod white women, Edith Whanon and Chopin, and onc Black man, Ralph Ellison. number thirty. The first fifty writers include six white and no Black women . . . and two Black men." See also the accompanying article by Carolyn Ruth SwifL "Once More into the Breach of Western Literature Courses," worn en'^. Studies Quarterly, IX.4, 1981. pp. 1&12. ,33.
-
- While these questions have certainly been addressed. those critics who pursue them on the
' thedretial level often display a curious ambivalence in their'answen. Apnette Kolodny, for instance, in . '
"Danang Through the Minefield", asks acutely, "What ends do [aesthetic] judgements serve.. . . and what
conceptions of the world or ideological stances do they (even if unwittingly) help to perpet~ate?"~~, a
question which surely must be cent& to any feminist discussion of aesthetic value. ~ o w e i e r , she insists
- that feminist readings of de-authored texts which analyze their sexism need not ia any way diminish our
6Z pleasure in such work^,^' and calls for a feminist critical strategy of "playful pluralism", in which "all the
feminist is asserting, then, is her o i w x q w a h t right to liberate new (and perhaps different) significances
from . . . texts"91. a position which leaves mainstream aesth'etic criteria firmly in place. Nina Baym
express= a similar ambivalence in articulating her view that the nineteenth century domestic and .
sen timental novels she rediscovered are worth study' despite their lack of "literary greatness " :
I cannot avoid the belief that 'purely' literary criteria, as they .have been employed to identify the best Arnerim works, have inevitably had a bias in favor of things male. . . . While not ,, claiming literary greatn-rn for any of the novels introduced in this study. 1 would like at least to begin to correct such a bias by taking their content seriously. And it is time, perhaps . . . to reexamine the grounds upon which certain hallowed American classics have been called greatq?
Here Baym both questions the aesthetic bases for election into the canon. and accepts' terms such as
"literary greatness." Yet the overwhelming effect of her work, despite this ambivalence, is to suggest that 5
value need not be narrowly "literary" in the traditional sense, and that valuing women's writing on a
different basis pay provide a foundation for a critique of dominant standards.
Myra Jehlen, in her widely debated article "Archimedes and the Paradox of Feminist Cfiticism".
tries to break the smgehold of the conflict between mditional aesthetic criteria and feminist evaluation
q•‹Kolodny. 1980. p. 15.
vlKolodny. 1980. p. 16.
vlKolodny. 1980. p. 18.
PJNina Baym. Womm's NY: Cornell University
Fic t i o~ A Guide to Novels by and abart Women, 1 8 s 1870 (Ithaca, Press. 1978). pp. 14-15.
by suggesting a methodolcigy of radical comparativkm, which would describe women's lke-racure in r&tion b '.
to the male tradition. However, at times she appears to fall back into the traditional opposition between
politics and aesthetics, as when she suggests that feminist critics have avoided the question of aesthetic
judgement bemuse "the problem, if we as feminists want to address our: whale culture. is to \ dea whal
we do not like but recognize as nonetheless valuable. serious, good."q4 She further states that "Bad ideas.
a even ideas so bad that most of humanity rejects them, have been known to make very good literature.""
By separathg completely a feminist stance on "bad.ideasn from literary judgement, these statements leavc
the category of "good litkature" inviolate.
Jehlen's statements here are extreme; the hesitation and ambivalence shown by Kolodny and Baym
is a much more common stance. A number of feminist critics express this as an internal split in
consciousness, a struggle in themselves between the feminist and the scholar.q6 As Showalter aptly puts it,
the scholar is a daughter of the male tradition. while the feminist is a 5mer in the new women's movement
One senses, in these statements of internal conflict, an unarticulated fear that an insistence on feminist
evaluative criteria will lay the critic open to accusations of bad scholarship. To be pol i t id is to be
partisari, and, according to the old myth of critical objectivitjl, partisanship is seen as a stain on true 11
scholarship. Feminist critics, of course. are fully aware of the ideological basis a,nd pernicious effecb of >. .-
this position. & ~ d have continually and vehement!~ challenged i t That it should still have power LO hold "
them back from the most radical implications of their practice is a strong indication?? the severe pressures
facing feminists in the academy.
Some academic feminist critics, however, have tackled the question cfirectly. Josephine Donovan's
'5ee for instance Showalter, 1979, p. 39; Jehlen, 1981, p. 580; Kolodny, 1975, p. 91; and Marilyn Frye, quoted in Joan and Chesrnan, 1978, p. -62.
was an early voice calling for prescriptive criticism, or criticism "in the prophetic that is, criticism
which would analyze literature of the past in terms of the moral values expressed in it, and promote
contemporary literature that embodies feminist values. Donovan resblves the political/aesthetic split by
imbuing aesthetics with an ethical dimension. Her brief reading of Faulkner's Light in August by way of
illustration cbncludes with a clear statement of her position:
... while as a trainedascholar and informed reader I may appreciate the technique and aesthetic sophistication of the work, as a woman and a feminist 1 cannot accept its moral premises nor therefore ultimately its aesthetic re~olution.~'
While Donovan too expresses an internal division between the scholar and the feminist, her rejection of
the cfirection her scholarly mining would lead her is unequivocal. - Donovan's call for a prescriptive feminist criticism, which is "actively engaged in encouraging the
d a l and cultural realization of those structural changes that promote human l iberat i~n".~~ is echoed by
Cheri Register in her article in the same collection. Register sees the task of feminist literary criticism as
primarily encouraging the g~owth of feminist literature, and sets this out in terms very similar to those
developed in the feminist little magazines.
To earnBfeminist approval, literature must perform one or more of the following functions: (1) serve as a forum for women; (2) help to achieve cultural androgyny; (3) provide - role-models; (4) promote sisterhood; and (5) augment consciousness-raising. l o o
While her explication of prescriptive criticism raises some similar contradictions as well, notably the
conflict benvecn the need for authenticity and for role-models. her stance on the question of aesthetic ' F
criteria is clear:
''Josephine Donovan. "Afterword: Critical Re-Vision," in Feminist Literary Criticism . Explwations rn Theory, ed. Josephine Donovan ('Lexington: Kentucky University Press, 1975). pp. 74-81.
B -4
"Josephine Donovan, "Feminism and Aesthetics," Critical Inquiry, III.4, 1977, p. 608.
" Donovan. 1975, p. 75.
'O0Cheri Register, "American Feminist Literary Criticism: A Bibliographid Introduction," in ' Donovan. 1975. p. 19
Because of its origins in the women's liberation movement feminist criticism values literatae that is of some use to the movement Fmmiptive Criticism, then, is best defined in terms of the ways in which literature can serve thecause ofIibtratign. lo'
, Both ~ o n o v a n and Register see assigning value to literature as a primary task of the feminist critic.
However, this was not explicitly developed by other feminist critics, and until recently the i&ue has been
relatively submerged. Two important essays by Lillian Robinson raise the question once again.
Robinson argues that feminist critics must return. to the task of challenging the canon, and must openly
debate the question of developing feminist aesthetickiteria in order to do so. As Robinson suggests, the
potential of feminist criticism to radically alter our sense of literature in all its aspects - literary history.
periodicity, genre, aesthetic value - has yet to be fully realized. Feminist critics need now to develop v
theories which assert the value of women's writing in terms of what feminists require from literature and
literary study. This becomes especially clear when one considers the case of writing by women of colour.
lesbians, and working-class women The models of women's writing developed by academic feminists are + '
overwhelmingly based on the work of white, middle-class, Western. heterosexual women. Much of this
work has been severely criticized by lesbians and women of colour for its racism and hetermexism, and
rightly so.''' But the response to these critiques, as many critics have suggested, must go beyond mere
lo2Lillian S. Robinson. "Treason Our Text: Feminist. Challenges to the Literary Canon." Tulsa Studies in Women's- hterature, 11.1, 1983, pp. 83-98, and Lillian S. Robinson, "Feminist - Criticism: How Do We Know When We've Won?," Tulsa Studies In Women's hterature. III.1/2, 1984, pp. 143-52.
Io3See Elly Bulkin, "Heterosexism A d Women's Studies." Radrcal Teacher, 17, 1980, pp. 25-31; Elly Bulkin, "Racism and Writing: Some Implications for White Lesbian Critics." Sznister Wisdom, 13, 1980. pp. 3-22; Judith Kegan Gardiner, Hly Bulkin, Rena Grasso Patterson, and Annette Kolodnp. "An Interchange on Feminist Criticism: On 'Dancing through the Minefield'," Ferninis S td ie s , VIII.3, 1982, pp. 635-54, especially the contributions by Elly Bulkin and Rena Grasso Patterson; Gloria T. Hull, "Afro-American Women Poets: A Bio-Critical"Swey," in Shakespeare's Sisters: Fernrust Essays on Women Poets, ed. Sandra M . Gilbert and Susan Gubar (Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 1979); Barbara
B Smith, "Toward a Black Feminist Criticism." Condrtions. 1.2, 1977. pp. 25-44; Alice Walker, " Q p Child of One's Owii - An Essay on Creativity." Ms.. V111.2. 1979, 47-50, pp. 72-75. an&?Clichele RuSsell. "Rapunzel. Let Down Your Hair: An Open Letter to White the Academy." Cdlege English. XXXIX.l. 1977. pp. 45-52. -
P.
33
correction of omissions, must not simply consist of adding on lesbian, black, or wmklng-dass women
writers to the feminist canon. Just as a revised literary history which includes women's writing has the
power to change what we think of literature as a whole, so the incIusion of work by lesbians, women of "
colour and working-class women has even greater potential to change received ideas of "good" literature.
Factors of race, class, and sexual identity need to be considered in criticism of all writing, not just
writing by identifnble minorities. If feminist critics deal with race in the writing of white authors as well
as black, sexual identity in the writing of heterosexual authors aswell b gay and lesbian, class in the
writing of middle-class or aristocratic authors as well as working-class, the power of feminist criticism to
transform literary norms would be that much greater. Eerninist critics have been saying for almost two
decades that mainstream literary values are based on the values of a white, male, ruling-class elite; a
feminist politics of aesthetics could analyze how class, race, sexual identity and gender are expressed in - j these values. and develop new theories of aesthetics derived from these analyses.
Such insights could also be used to expand on work on men's writing which analyzes its construction
of gender. Readings informed by awareness of the intersection of race, class, sexual identity and gender
have the potential to lead to feminist thearies of cultural production which can expose the workings of = .
ideology in all writing, the often complex ways in which writers both male and female have both resisted
and been complicit in dominant social structures. The basis ?or s~lch theory already exists; the task now is
to-develop it mor,e fully. Such theory, of come, is a necessary but not sufficient condition for bringing
about change in lite~ary study in the academy. If there is anything the last fifteen y p ~ r s have shown, it is "
the recalcitrance of the academic mainstream, its elasticity in accommodating radical from within
while resisting structural change. The development of feminist critical theory, be attentive '
\
to the obstacles to practice if it is to be an effective vehicle for political intervention.
a
Conclusion
.. This brings us back to our original questions. We have seen that the two currents of feminist Iltcrar)
critidism, while dealing with some similar issues, have operated largely in isolation f~om each other, on the
----is of quite divergent goals and strategies. Critics involved in alternative feminist culture. iVith its
commitment to creating space for contemporary women's writing, have focussed on creating forums for the
exploration of a feminist aesthetic. Critics working within the academy have developed a feminist analysls
of the specificity of women's writing. and challenged the androcentrism of the literary canon and
established literary criticism. Both strands face practical obstacles, and both have left some areas untackled
in their theory. The most pressing question facing feminist critics is whether the broad goals of feminist
rcriticism as a whole can be more effectively achieved by co-operation between the main currents, and . if
so, how such co-operation is to be putinto practice. - ,
It seems clear that much could be gained by a cross-fertilization of the two currents. The academic
feminist analysis of the specificity of women's writing and the feminist cultural project of defining a 4
feminist aesthetic could enrich each other, and together form a more complete feminist .theory of
aesthetics. The greater sensitivity to race; class, and sexual identity in the small feminist publications would
be a welcome influence on the academic feminist work, while research into all the variations of women's
literary tradition and the smggles of women writers of the past could effectively inform analysis of
Contemporary feminist writing. Collaboration between these two currents could lead to the development of
feminist critical theory which would be adeqlate to all the tasks of feminist criticism: deconstructing
mainstream literary values, replacing the history OF women's writing in literary history. revising our
notions of literary merit and constructing a new set of values on .which a feminist literature could be based.
While it is easy to recommend such collaboration, there obviously have been and will continue to be
obstacles to putting it into practice. The relationship between those committed to building alternate
structures and those involved in working for change in existing institutions has not always been amicable.
either within feminist criticism, or in the women's movement as a whole. This conflict is not unique to
feminism; any radical political movement faces the strategic problem of how best to relate to existing social
structures, whether LO work within them or outside them, or some combination'of both. Different -
strategies may be appropriate at different times and in different circumstances. Our concern ii t h a ~ within
the field of feminist literary criticism, little dialogue has taken place among its practitionefs on these
strategic questions. d
We" feel that it is necessary both to establish and maintain alternative cultural networks and to work
for change within the academy. However, these strategies will not be fully effective unless there is wine
connection between them. The role of intellectual work in a political movement is a crucial point that must
be taken up for any coalition between the diverse currents of feminist criticism to be politically effective.
In other words. while the academy is a potential site of political struggle, those working there must be
responsive to the broader political movement if that struggle is to.have any meaning. As Linda Gordon
has put it, arguing that women's studies is not in itself a revolution: --
Revolutions are mass movements in which political power is taken from ofle social class by ,
another; revolutions do not happen in universities. Scholars can help in revolutionary struggles only through unity with much larger groups of people.lo4
Lillian Robinson makes the same case, specifically discussing radical criticism:
... one's ideas have to be part of a program of cu lka l and political ahernatives. Ideological criticism must take place in the context of a political movement that can put it to work. The revolution is simply not going to be made by literary journals.I0-'
The movement's response to intellectual workers is as integral to the process of coalition-building as
the intellectual worker's response to the movement There is a history of anti-iqtellectualism within the
Left in North America. which has been inherited by the women's movement, W&ile there are certainly
good reasons to distrust the institutions of intellectual production, this distrust is often extended tq anyone
'OJLi1lian S. Robinson. "The Critical Task" in .Sex, Class, and Cdture (Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. 1978). p. 52.
36
attempting to work for p rogess ivdange wi*in those instituuons. A &on will nor have much hopr
of success if one current consistently takes the position that the other has sold out.
This is not to deny that there are real class differences between those securely employed in
universities and those who are not, nor that these differences arepotentidly serious obstacles to an
effective coalition. Jane Marcus has noted how these inequities may make common struggle more A
difficult: --
- them.
0 \
The samizdat circulation among networks of feminist critics works only in a system where repression is equal. If all the members are un6mployed or underemployed, unpublished or unrecognized, sisterhood flourishes, and sharing is a burce of strength. When we all compete " for one job or when one lupine [feminist Woolf scholar] grows bigger and bluer than her sisters with unnatural fertilizers from the establishment the - ranks thin ou Times are hard and getting harder.'06 \
5 e .'
These are historic divisions within the women's movement, d we can offer no easy ans L
a$ EE?' We can suggest, however, some modest proposals for facilitating dialogue between the different
currents. One task is combatting the isolation of each current from the other. We found in our survey that ,
critics in one area seem often unaware of the work of the other, and vice versa. If the theoretical and
P strategic quesuons facing feminist literary criticism are to be'debated openly. then feminist critics must
acquaint themselves with the full range of material available. This bibliography is one step toward that
end. The relative lack of accessibility of the small feminist periodicals compounds me problem of isolation.
Feminist critics in the academy are in a position to help make this work more accessible by lobbying their
institutions to acquire these journals for their libraries. and by using material from them in the classroom.
Small periodicals could help their own visibility by providmg annual indexes to their contents.
Creating a broader forum for debate and exchange, however, wcl have to involve more than 'I
feminist critics reading &ch others' work. A shift in the patterns of publicatior. could have beneficial
effects. Marge Piercy speaks of hey own reviews of women's writing as a*form of tithing, as something that
is owed back to the co&unity. lo' Academic critics could perform this service in the little magazines, or 7
could review contemporary small press feminist work for the women's studies journals. Recently, a r \
number of new feminist periodicals have begun publishing which bring together academic work and
contemporary feminist writing, notably The Women's Review of Boaks and Woinen's Review from
England They join Fromiers in an explicit attempt b bridge the two strands and are welcome additions to P
the feminist publishing scene. Another publication tactic for feminist critics to consider is submitting work
to mass-circulation women's magazines. The isolation of different strands of the women's movement from
each other pales in comparison with the isolation of the women's movement as a whole from women \ '
outside it; perhaps it is time to take our message to a broader audience.
G F
Our task is not an easy one. We must expose the conditions of women under patriarchy, even while 0 . t
we imagine and struggle toward new possibilities.. The work we have accomplished to date demonstrates
quite clearly that literature and literary practices can be both complicit in our oppression and crucial to our
liberation. Feminist literary criticism has accomplished a great deal, and has the potential td achieve even '
' 1 more, provided that it remains rooted, both in theory and pactice, in the political' movement ~ h k h gives it
'o-honymous. "An Interview with Marge Piercy." Kalliope. IV.2, 1982, p. 45.
~ d a i . International ~ e v i e w Afiican Literature Taday Agenda Amerxcan Book Cdlectw American Ethndogist
LIST OF JOURNALS SEARCHED
-
American Imago . American J w n a l of Phildogy American Literary Realism 187G 1910 American Literatw e American Quarterly American Schdar
" American Studies C
American Transcendental Quarterly Annual Mediaevale Anthropdogical Linguistics Antioch Review A phra Arethusa A riel Arizona Quarterly Atlantic Monthly
. Atlantis Australian Literary Studies Ball State University Fomm Black American Literature Forum Black Schdar P
, BlakeStudies I
Book Cdlector Booklegger A Brtxdsheet Bronte Society Transactions Browning Society Ndes Bucknell Review 'i \ Bulletin of Research in the Humanities (Bulletin of the New Ywkj Public Library CEA Critic CEA F m m CLA J w n a l Cambridge Quarterly Cambridge Review Canadian Children's Literature C a d i a n Drama Canadian Forum Canadian J w n a l of Social and Pditical Theory Canadian Literature
danadian Newsletter of Research on Women fRescurces fbr Fernrust Research) Canadian Poetry C a ~ d i a n Review of American Studies Canadian Review of Compcuative Literature
-- -
E n d y Drckrneon BulIetm @tc&spn Stdres) Engilrsh Engluh Hamcd Revten. En&h in Ajitca 4 --
English k u r r a l Entpirah btertvy Hidary Engis)! Literary R e m m c e En&& Literature in Tranarron E*h m e d ~ - - E&U~ Sfsrdres (Awerdam) Engitslh Shcdies EngfLPir Siirdtes in Afirco Erg1ish Studies m Canada Essays and Studies Essays in Cnttcwn h y s in Liferutwe ESQZP m CCanrrdn Wrtrlng Exrmpolotim Feminist In ler~ionai Fernnut Issues Femints! Review Feminist Studies Fire weed FdWwe /
FdkIwe Fenurusts' Cmrnumcatron FdWwe Women's Cmmurucatron) Frnrm jbr Mcdern Lonpage Srudses
0
Freedun ways Frmtrers Genre $=
Geagta Revtew Gred Lakes Revien Hartfid Studies ln bteratwe Harvard Library Bulletrn .. Hecde Helicon Nine Henry k m e s Revrew P
Heresies Hrsponr~ H~ttary Workjhop Hdlins Critrc Hmq Baak Magame Hudson Revrew
a ,
Hwnaruttes .-hstnetlon Revten* Hunttngtm Library W e r i y , Hyderia , Independertr S h a v m frrdion b n a l of English Stud~es Iaeilecr @S A Today)
t
lnterclrange Interwtond fictton Re wren.
Internattond Jwnal ofthe Socidogy of language international Jwnal of Women's Studtes Iowa Review lslandx A New Zealand Quarterly of Arts and- Letters Jacrnal of Afican Studies J w d of American Fdklove Jwnal of American Studies Jcurnal of British Studies Jwnal of Canadian Fictioh J w n a l of Commonwealth Literature larrnal ofCmmunication " J w d of Ethnic Studies Jwnal of Hellenic Studies Jwnal of Irish Literature Jwnal of Medieval and Re&ssance Studies Jwnal of Maiern Uteratwe larrnal of Narr ive Technique Jwnal of Negr "d History Iacrnal of Popular Culture Javnal of Women's Studies in Literature KoCIiope 1
Kanwr Quarterly a
Keats- Shelley Jwnal Keats- Shelley Memovial Bulletin Kentucky Rmknce Quarterly K t l ~ p l p i Lady Umque- Inclination- OF the- Night -@l Longuage in Society Language and Stde Latin American Theatre Review - Lej Cwve ' Lesbian Tide Library Chron.de Llllth k p Llterary Review Llterary Review flew Jersey) Llteratwe/Film Quarterly kteratwe and Htstwy kterature and Psjchdogy London Magazine LAW Brazilian Review McNeese Review Maenad Makara Malaha Review Manushi Margins Markham Review
barxist Perspectives - Massachusetts Review Massachusetts Studies in ~ n ~ l i s ; M eanjn Mediaeval Studies M ediaevalia Medievalia et Hurnanistica Medium Aevwn Melw Michigan Quarterly Review Midwest Modern Language Association Builetm Midwest Quarterly Milton Quarterly Milton Studies Minnesota Review Mississippi Quarterly Modern British Literature Modern Drama Modern Fiction Studies Modern Language Journal A - Modern Language Ndes ~ o d h Language Quarterly Modern Language Review +
Modern Phildogy Modern Ptxtry Studies Modernist Studies Mosaic
. Mother Jones Ms Mundus Artiurn New England Quarterly New German Critique NEW Lejt Review New Letters New Literary Hrstwy Nineteenth Century Fiction Nineteenth Century French Studies ~ i n e t e l h Century Theatre Research North Dakooa Quarterly Northwest Revlew Novel Obsidian PMLA
4
Pacific Scxidogiccd Review Papers in Linguistics Papers on Language and Lterture Paris Review Pornassus: Poetry in Revlew Partisan Review Perspectives on Contemporary Lterature
Phildogrcal Q m e r l y Phoenix Ph $on Pwtrcs Prairie Schooner .Pr&s Ptesence Aficrune Prrrnavera Prarpects Psychaanalptic Revrew Psychdogy of Women Qwuterly Quarterly Jacrnal of Speech - 'Quarterly Review of Lterature Queen's Quarterly Rackhm Lterary Studres Rodrcal Teach--- - Red Letters ' Re/ioctwy Grrl Regionalism and the Female Imgrnatron Renaissance and Mdern Studres Recoverrng Oterature Remssance Drama Remssance Papers Research rn Afican Lueratures # Research Oppwturutres in Rencussance Drama Reswces fi Femrusl Research Canadian Newsletter of Research on Women) Restaratron and 18th Century Theatre Research Revrew Revrew of Englrrh st&$ Revrew of Natronal bteratures Rrce Unrverstty Studres Rrverslde Quarterly Room of One's Own Sun Jose Studies Saturday Revrew The Second Wave Serrals Revrew Sewanee Review Sex Rdes Shakespeare Quarterly Shakespeare Studres Shakespeare Survey Shantih Shaw: An Annual Revrew of Bernard Shaw Studres Shaw Revrew Shenandaah S1gm Srng Out! Srruster Wrsdom Socral Pdicy ,
Soundings S a t h Asian Review - S k t h Atlantic Bulletin Sacth Atlantic Quarterly Sacth Cardim Review Sacth Dakota Review Sact hem Expare Sacthern Fdklore Quarterly Southern Humanities Sacthem Quarterly Sacthern Review southern Review: Lterary a& Interdisciplinary Essays Sacthwest Review S p e Rib t
Spokedoinan Studies in American Fiction t
Studies in Black Literature Studies in Browning and His Circle Studies in Canadian Lrterature Studies in Eighteenth- Century Culture - -
Studies in English Literature Studies in Phildogy Studies in Romanticism Studies in Scottish Literature Studies in S h m Fiction Studies in the Literby Imagination Studies in the Novel StNe Symposium Tennessee Studies in Literature Texas Quarterly Texus Studies in Lrterature and Language* TDR. The Drama Review Theatre Quarterly Theatre Research International Theatre Studies Theatre Swvey Third Woman (of Lutinas in the Midwest) 13th Mwn This Magazine Thomas Hardy Yearbwk Traditio Tulane Studies in English Twentieth Century Literature
' USA Today (Intellect) U niversity of Dayton Review University of Michigan Papers in Women's Studies University of Twonto Quarterly University of Windsor Review Victwian N e'wsietter
Vlctorlan Poetry Victorian Stdres Vuguua Quarterly Revrew V rrgrnia Wcdf Miscellany W a s c a ~ eeview WesternAmencan Literature West C a w Revrew Western Fdklore Western Humanities Reveiw W m e r r A Jacrnal of Liberatron
, Warnonspeak Woman's Art Jaunal Women and Language Mews Women and Literature Women Spe&ng Wmen's Studies in Communicatron W men's Studies international Quarterly Women's Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal Women's Studies Newsletter (Women's Studies Quarterly) Wardsworth Circle Wwld Literature Written in E~glrsh World Literature Taiay Yale French Studies Yale Review Y earbtwk of Englrsh Studies
We were uMMe to obtain full issues of the f&lowing journals, however. one or more useful articles were obtained through interlibrary loan.
A DE Bdletm Amencan Humarr Amerlcan Poetry Review Anglo- Welsh Revlew - -
Archrves jlw Scandlmvlan Phildogy Armchar Detective Australran Aut h w Aumrahan Studles rn Kench Black World Boo& F m m Bulletrn of Concerned Aslan Schdars Callaloo Califinia Hlstwy Canadian Fdklwe Canadren Cenierpcnnt Chrrstopher Street Concerns Dcris Lessing Newsletter Etre Encare
Feminist Art Jtnunal , *
First World , Gay Book Bulletin Gissing Newsletter Graduate Woman ,
Great Lakes Review Helios lllinais Classical Studies Iowa State Journal of Research Jwnal of American Culture Jwnal of American Fdklwe Jtnunal of South Asian Literature Kate Chopin ~ewsletter Kenpn Review Language Qlarterly Lex et Scientia Literature in North Queensfand Law'siana Studies Kentucky F d k h e Record Misswi Historical Society Bulletin Missaui Phildogical Asmiation Publications Minority Vaices Negro Histwy Bulletin New LmueI Review New Boston Review Paid M y Dues Punpb University Research Bulletin Radical History Review Restoration. Studies in Englrsh'Iterary Culture. 16611'- 1700 Revue Francais Detudes Americarnes Scandinavian Review Society fw the Study of Midwestern Oteraturq Newsletter Smthern Studies Stan fwd French Review Social Text Sarthern hterary Jmrnal Studies in American Jewish Literature Texus Saerthern University Faculty Research Journal+ Ulbandas , . Umop Umon Seminary Quarterly Revlew Umversity of Hartford Studies ln Lrterature Victorian Institute Jwnal The Witch and the Chameleon
USERS' GUIDE TO THE BIBLIOGRAPHY
- This - is a bibliography of feminist literary o criticism published in Ehglish language journals from 1975
through 1981. The bibliography is divided into six major sections:
A) Textual and Contextual Studies;
B) Folklore and- Oral Tradition;
C) Interviews; -
D) Langage and Gender;
E) Pedagogy and Research; - % -
F)%"eory. /
The Textual and Contextual Studies section is further divided by time period, from the period of Antiquity
to the present, and, from the Sixteenthth Century onward, within that by genre.
Format
Entries are numbered sequentially throughout the bibliography, and listed alphabetically within
particular sections by the authors of the articles., Each entry consists of a citation, a set of key words, an
'explanatory note, if necessary. and a list of specific works and authors covered, if any. 1
&'
Citation: The citation provides the author and title of the article. the volume, number. year and#and .x4
page numbers of the journal in which it appeared. The volume number is given in Roman numerals,
followed by the issue number in Arabic. When a journal does not publish i@volumes, the issue number
only is given in Arabic numerals. Journals issued annually are numbered by volume, in Roman numerals.
For some articles, we have been unable to find full publication details. This is indicated by the notation
[Citation Inc.] at the end of the citation.
Keywords: The set of keywords following the citation in an entry includes all of the subject categories ,
under which that article has been indexed. The keywords function as an abbreviated annotation:
individually. each indicates a main theme or issue addressed in the article to. which it is appended; read
together they suggest the framework for the discussion. The keywords describe but do not evaluate the
content of the articles. For example, the terms "Female/Feminist Aestheticw and "~idactic Literature"
refer 'to analyses rather than examples of these concepts. As much as possible. the keywords are based on
terms or phrases commonly used in the field, but may not always reflect the exact word choice of the /
authors of articles they follow. In order to draw users' attention to all of the articles which consider similar
topics or areas, when a range of possible terms exists, we have selected one. Discussions of sourtesy books,
conduct manuals k d advice columns, for example, have all been designated by the phrase "Advice
Literature." The alternative phrases are cross-referenced in the Subject Index. General keywords or those
covering broad areas may be followed by narrower terms; e.g. "Black women - and Education." When a
series of narrower terms is required, the main keyword is not repeated; e.g. "Writers. Women -
@discovered - Conditions of. " ,
Authors and.Titles: Each entry concludes with a list of authors and works specifically discussed in the
article. We have not cited authors and works referred to in passing, although these may be generally
indicated in a note. When an author is cited. but no work, this usually refers to a biographical discussion. I .
or a general discussion not focussed on a particular work. Authors are listed in alphabetical order with
works following. /
Note: When additional information which falls outside the scope of the key words is required, it is
provided in an explanatory note which app the key words and the authors and works. Coursc
outlines included in articles in the Pedagogy and Research section are frequently mentioned in ihis .
manner, as are detaiis of language studies. In the Cross-Gerlre sections within each time period, and in the
~ k s - ~ i m e section, the specific genres and time periods covered in each article are indicated in the note.
For more information use of the Subject Index and
-- --
- 4 \
Authorflitle Index, s& thdpuid& u, thke &
indexes.
Using the Bibliography: The bibliography has been developed to meet a variety of research needs. It
provides access to the material collected through several avenues, which are designed to wbrk in
conjunction with one another: the major sections of the bibliography,,the time ~e r iod cl&ification, the . ,
genre breakdown, the AuthorRitle Index, the Subject Index, and the Index of Authors of,Articles.
The w r with a particular theme in mind, for example, female friendship, could consult the Subject
Index under "Friegdships. Female' to fisd a ange of articles in which this subject is hi*& She might e -
> 8
b e the internal time and genre classification to help nanow her search. Or, if her ipterest;in the theme is " :
~ 0 ~ e C t e d to a panicular author - e.g. Charlotte Bronte - she could check the ~rEtbm'Title Index to find
enh-y numbers duplicated there. IL 1
A user with a more general area of interest such as the nineteenth cenhqy novel. would find the .<
internal organization more helpful and could tum d k d y to the &&eknth~entury Prose &on of the 0 .<&L.
bibliography. A survey of the entries listed there - titles, keywatd annotations, and lists of authors and *.
7 ,
texts -\odd suggest a number of directions in which she mi&~continue.
s a
P
The uskr desiring information on a specific writer Or work would find the Author/Title Index most . C' -. % . i
useful. The keywords in individual entries will help h q klect the most appropriate articles to pursue. " -
'L-<-
" r
- < .
,
,"-. i , , , "*:,
tr. - A
P .
, >:-' L F - 7 , , * -. I. # l
w
r i * t +
"
I \ I . I
I. ANTIQUITY 1 -
1. Arthur, Marylin B. "Review Essay: Classics," S&m, II.2, 1976,382-403.
8 Power, Female - Uck of - Male Fear of; Power, k ale - and the d
Public and Private. Separation of; Family, Women and; Imag Images of Women, Theory of; Feminist Process - in Research;
" A- - Discusses "controversies surrounding the status of women in classical Athens atld the wh ,c
- of the ancient evidence for the theory of matriarchy." The second section of the essay reviews at length Sar? B. Pomeroy's Gaddesses, Whores, Wives and Staves: m e n i)l Clmsical Antiquity and, more briefly, Philip Slater's The Glwy of Hera ^ -
Aeschylus; Aristophanes; Aristotle; Euripides; Herodotus; Hesiod; Plato. . ,
. ,
a;
2. ' Arthur. Marylin B. "The Divided World of IIiad VI." Women's Studies. ~m.l/2.1981.21-46. - 1
Militarism, Women and; Public and Private, Separation of; Violence against Women;' Masculinity - and Militarism - and Honour; Family, Women and - as Woman's s
Sphere. i
Homer: Aiad . I .
5
3. Barnard, Sylvia. "Hellenistic Women Poets," Classical Journal , LXXIII.3, 1978; 204-13. I $
1 I
Writers, Women - Rediscovered - Conditions of; Childhood; Family, Women i d ; Prostitution.
i
Anyte; Erinna; Nossis.
., 4. C u m , Leo C. "Rape and Rape Victims in the Metamwphuses ," ~rethrrsa;Xf.l.h, 1978,
213-41. , - < - .<'
- 1
Violence against Women; Power. Male; Sexuality. Male; Pdwer. ~ e & - Lack ol: Images of Women - virgin - Victim - Temptrss - Animal - Sex Objec~ Rivalry, Female; Adultery; Phallic Criticism; Seduction; . , Chastity; Female. - i Ovid: The Metamwphmes .
5. Daugherty, Margaret "Women in Euripides' Moral Quest" San Juse Studies, IV.1,1978,7,2-81.
Masculinity - and Militarism; Reason vs. Passion; Militarism, Women and; Sex Roles - Rejection of.
Euripides: Medea ; The TroNn W m e n ; Alcesric ; Helen .
6. Dewald, Carolyn. "Women and Culture in Heriklorus' Hrsrcuies .* H'men's Srrrdre~ . V111.1. 2, 1981.93-127.
I Images of Women - Moral Custodian - Virmous Woman - W o n ; Vlctim; Eamrli . Women and; Power. Female; Independence; Female; Violence. Fmaie; Power. ema ale - Lack of; Violence against Women; Passivity. Female; Marriagc - as
' Political Alliance - and Courtship; Militarism, Women and; imperialism, Womcn and; Religion, Women and - Classical Greek.
I 1
Traces the theme of 1 throughout the His~arres 1 a
Herodotuq: Histories .
7. DuBois. pa&. "Sappho and Helen." Arethw . X1.1/2. 1971. 89-99, . %
. . I . , ..
Mythologid Figures in Women's Writing - Helen;. Love Poeu). Women's' Re-vision - of Stereotypes; Oral Tradition, Women and.
" .
HofZer: The Odyssey ; Sappho.
8. Fisher, Elizabeth k "Theodora and Antonina - in the Yistwla Arcana : History and/or Flctmn"," -
Arethw . X1.1/2, 1978.253-79. d
Images of Women - htellectual Inferior - ~ & a l Inferior --Victim - ~ e x u a l f ~ lkvounnp Woman-Whore-VimousWoman; Sexualit)-,Female-MaieFearoi: Independence, Female; Family. Women and; Sex Roles, Marriagea- as Pol~ucal Alliance. q
Prompius: Histcila Arcana ; de Bellis . ', -
9. Foley. Helene P. "Sex and Stare in Ancient Greece." ~iai-rrtrks: \':4. 1975. 31-36. J
. '
Mother/Son Relationships; Power, Fernaie - Male Fear of; Family. Womcn and: Violence, Female; Re-vision - of Myth; Religion, Womcn and- Clasial Greck: Critical Schools. Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism - Frcu&an/Ps)rchoanalyu~ . * Criticism. , \
Aeschylus: The Oresteia ; Euripides: Medea ; Bacchae . i
10. Foley. Helene P. "'Reverse Similes' an3 Sex Roles in the Odyssey ." Aierhrrsa . X1.1/?, 197h. 7-26. *
Sex Roles; Power. Male - and.the Social Order; power. Female; hiarnagc - and /
53 -
Anon)man: T h r 8 & o j f h r T h m N c g h 1 s o n d a f i y h r &am. R~chardF. Bums. ' '
HaItetr 3~6th P. 'Sappbo and her %xaf Cunrext: Sense and ~cnsuality,~ Stgm . fV3, 1979. G.t7 -e4.
#
. 1 - m - fkf in i~sms of; SttWturc, Fernale;' SeruaJir)'. F d p ; Physial A ~ ) c l l r a m ; kt@ of Passage; k w m a e in Wmcn's Fmri)..
Sappho ' . k
Revis ion - oTCritical Tradkion: Physical Appearance: Lanpugc. !atnarcha! - and Fwnale Invisibility.
i- - L
Santirocco. Matthew S. 'Sulpicia Reconsidered." CIaaical JavMf. LXXfV.3. 1979, 29-39 .
Revision - of Critical Trahtion; Lov%Poetry. Women's; Phallic Cnuasm: Power, Female - Lack of.
-
Sulpiax ,
SegaI, Charles. "The Menace of Dionysus: Se~Roles and Reversals in Eunpides' Bocchae " A r ~ t h w , XI.1/2, 1978. 18.5-202.
v. 1 - Sex Roles - Rejection of; " Reawn v s Passion; Masculinity; Images of Wo n.
Irrational Woman - Amazon: Nature. Women and; Sexw!irp. Female - Male Fear of; Rim of Passage.
a, @
19. Stigers. Eva ~ s h f e . P y u c S e w : A Kesponsr to Hallett on Sappho." S3gn.s. IV.3, 1979,465-71.
zY C
Lestnanism - rfifixitions of; Perhnae'in Women's Pwtrq.; Ixsbian(s) - I ~ v c Poc'tr; k
- Sexuality; h v e Poem. Women's: SexuaIi1).. Femalc.
Response To Hallttr. Judith P. "Sappho and her Soclal Context: Sensc and Scnsul~t) ." Signs. IV.3, 1979.447 3% ;
5 c * 2
Sappho.
20. Stigers. Eva Stehle. 'Sappho's Private ~or l 'd . ' Winnen'r Studie~ . lfII1.1/2. 1981, 47-63. a -
r
:esbwt(s) - Lovc Poem - Sexuality - Kclationships; Lovc Poetry. Wohcn's. Yesonde in Women's Poetry; Scxualir). Male; Seducuon; Sexuality. Eemaic - a?
1 -
Ananeon; Archilochusi Ibycus; Sappho.
&nman, Linda S. 'Workers and bonk;" labor. Idlcn~ss and Gender Ikfinition in Hesiud's Beehive.' Arethim . XI.1/2. 1978,'27-41.
Antiquity
lrnaia of Women - Parasite; Work. Women and - Domestic labour. Family. Women and; Sexuality, Female - and the Double Standard; MascWty - and Honour; Misogynist Tracts.
* Hesiod: Wwkr and Days ; Tkeogeny . t
. "
Trible, Phyllis. "Two Women in a Man's World: A Reading of the Book of Ruth," Sacndings, LIX.3. 1976. 251-79. .
Family. Worn* Marriage - as h o m i c Necessity; Friendships. Female; MotheriDaughter Reli5tionships; Independence, Female; Public and Private, Sepafation of; Power, Male - and the Social Order; Religion, Women and - Judaism.
Anonymous: The Bible (The Book of Ruth). i s c
Walco~ Peter. "Herodotus on Rape." Are thw . X1.1/2.1978,137+.
Violence against Women; Masculinity - and Honour - and Militarism; Images of Women - Temptress; Sexuility. Female - Male Fear of:
Herodotus.
Wiggers, Nancy. "Sexual Stereotypes in the Writing of Four Greek Women," Heliar. IV, 1976, 50-52. [Citation Inc.]
Sex Roles; 1rn;iges of Women - Submissive Wife; Power, Female L- Lack of.
Anyte; Corinna.; Erinna.
Winkler. Jack. " G ~ d e n s of Nymphs: Public and Private in Sappho's Lyrics." Wmen's ~ t u d i e ; . VIII.1/2. 1981, 65-91. 9
Public and Private, Separation of; Reader. Woman as; Subculture, Female; Sexuality, Female - as Superior to Male; Lesbian(s) - Sexuality; Masculinity - and Miliwism - and Heroism; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Genitals - Flowers - F r u i ~
Sappho.
\ -. Zeitlin. Frorna I. "The Dynarmcs of Misogyny: Myth and Mythmaking in the Oresteia ," Arethusa. XI.1/2. 1978. 149-84.
Power. Male - and the Social Order; owe;. Female - Male Fear of; Marriage - and Male Authority; Sexuality. F e d e - Male Fear of; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Mother/Son Relationships; Violence', Female; Rationality, Male.
Antiquit! r
--
Aeschylus: The Orestera. v -
27. Zeith, From I. "Travesties of Gender and Genre in Aristophanes' Thesmophw~azc~lsae ." Critical Inquiry, VIII.2. 1981, 301:27.
Transvestism;
Anstophanes: 2.
Sex Roles; Public and Privat~. Separation of; ' Sexuality, Femalc.
T h e s m o p h w i a z ~ e ; Euripides.
II. PRE-SIXTEENTH CENTURY
\
28. ~ e r s . David. "Criseyde: Woman in Medieval Society." Chaucer Review. XIII.3.1979, 177-200.
Marriage - and Male Authority - as EconQClic Necessity; Power. Female - Lack OR Power. Male; Passivity. Female; Couftly Love.
Chaucer, Geoffrey: Traifus and Crisejde .
29. Allen. Shirley S. "The Griselda Tale and the Pomayal of Women in the Decameron ." Phildogicd Quarterly. LVI.1,1977,1-13.
, Revision - of Stereotypes; Images of Women - Submissive Wife; Sexuality, Female; Marriage- and Male Authority; Adultery.
Boccaccio, Giovanni : Decameron .
30. Beer. Frances. "The Continuity of Female Stereotypes: From Recluse to Bunny," Canadian Women's Studies , 1.1, 1978.40-42.
lmages of Women - Temptress - Madonna - Intellectual Inferior - Deceiver - Narcissist -.Unclean Woman; Religion. Women and - Christianity; Advice Literature.
Anonvmous: The Ancharess's Rule. A
31. '
Beer. Fratces. "The Wife of Bath: Sexuality vs. Symbol." Canadian women's Studies. 111.2, 1981,7-8.
Sexuality. Female; Images o r Women '- Idealized Love Object - Tempuess; Power. Female.
Chaucer. Geoffrey: The Canterbury Tales.
32. ' Bell, Susan Groag. "Christine De Pizan (1364-1430): Humanism and the Problem of a Studious Woman." Feminist Studies. III.3/4. 1976, 173-84.
Education of Women; Writers, Women - Conditions of; AdviceoLiterature; Work. Women and; Isolation of Women; French Literature, Women and.
Boccaccio. Giovanni: Concerning Farnau Women ; Pisan, Christine de: Le Livre de la Cite des Dames ; Le hvre des Trds Vertus ; Le Livre de la Mutacion de, F&ne .
Berggren. Ruth. "Who R e d y Is the Advocate of Equality in the Marriage Grpup?."
PreShteenth Century
Massachusetts Studies in English ,-VI.1/2, 1978. 25-36.
Marriage - and Equality/Mutuality; Courtly Love; Images of Women - Submissive 'Wife - Deceiver - Child-Woman.
Chaucer. ~eof f rg ; : The Canterbury Tales.
Bolton, W. F. "The Wife of Bath: Narrator as Victim," Women and hteratwe . I (New Series). 1980.54-65.
Marriage - and Male Authority; Power. Female; Violence against Women; Images of Women - qhild-Woman - Irrational Woman - Victim; Physical Appearance; Class Position. Women's.
m
Chaucer, Geoffrey: The Canterbury Tales.
* " ,
Burke, Linda Barney. "Women in John Gower'~ Confess~o Amantls ." Med~aeval~a . 111. 1977, 238-59.
f Images of Women - Frigid Woman - Shrew - Temble Mother - Witch; Revision - of Stereotypes; Love. Rqmantic; Didactic Literature. 1'
Gower. ~ohn? ~&fess io Amantis .
Clark, Susan L and Julian N. Wasserrnan. "Constance as Romance and Folk Heroine in Chaucer's Man of k w ' s Tale ." Rice U m v y s ~ t y Stud~es . LXIV.1, 1978. 13-24.
b t e s of Passage; Power, Female.
Chaucer, Geoffrey: The Canterbury Tales . 1 i
Cotton. Nancy. "Katherine of Sutton: The First English Woman Pllaywnght," Educallond Theatre Journal, XXX.4.1978.475-81.
d
Religion. Women and - Christianity; Mythological Figures In Women's writin[- Man Magdralene; Theatre. Women in the. %
/' /'
A, Katherine of Suncan: "Elevatio Hostiae" ; "Deposi tio Cmcis" ; "Kesunexio Dom~nica" ; "Visitatio".
-i
Delaney. Sheila. "Sexual Economics, Chqycer's Wife of Bath, afd The Bwk of Margery Kempe ." Minnesota Review. 5 , 1975.164-15.
d
Sexuality, Female; . Class Positiqn. Wonlen's; Marriage - as Economic Necessity - and Woman's Fulfillment; Money. W o e and; Religion. Women and - ,9
A9 i'
d d
Christianity; ~ysticism, Women and; . a Alienation, Female.
Chaucer, Geoffrey: The Canterbury Tdes ; Kempe, Margery: The Book of Margery Kempe .
Delaney, Sheila. "Hwe et Jehane : A Case Study of the Bourgeois Woman in Medieval Life and Letters." Science and Society. XLV.3, 1981,27487.
Class Position. Womzn's; Power. Female; Momy, Women and; Work, Women and; Marriage - and Male Authority.
Anonymous: F7we et Jehane .
Dubinski, R. R. "In Defence of the Wife of Bath," English Quarterly, VIII.1/2,1975,55-65.
Revision - of Stereotypes; Sexuality, Female; Marriage - Arranged - and Woman's Fulfillment; Misogynist Tracts.
Chaucer. Geoffrey: The Canterbury Tales ("The Wik ofBathYs Prdogue") ; The Canterbury Tales ("The Wife of B&'s Taleu).
Eckhardt. Caroline D., " W o r n as Mediator in the Middle English Romances," Jcaunal of Popular Culture . XIV.1.1980.94-107. \
Images of Women - Mediator - Moral Cmodian - Madonna; Sex Roles.
Anonymous: Alliteratrve a me ~ r t h k e ; Flors and ~ l a n i h e f w ; Sir L,uunjbf ; R m n De La Rare ; Boethius: The Consdation of Philmophy ; Chaucer. Geoffrey: The Canrerbury Tales ; Dante: The Divine Comedy ; Malory. Thomas: Morte Darthur .
Edmiston. Susan. "A Chronicle of Courtly Erotica: Murasaki and The Tule of GTJ ." MS. , V1.9, 1978. 59, 74-79.
Japar~ese Literature, Women and; Marriage - and Courtship - as Entrapment; Autobiography. Women's; Literary Tradition - Women's.
Shikibu, Lady Murasaki: The Tale of Genj . -4
43. Ellis. Deborah. "The Wife's Lament in the Context of Early English Literature: The Paralysis .
of Desertion." Jwnal of Women's Studies in Literature. 1.3.1979.220-32. . t
Isolation of Women; Passivity, Female; Marriage.
Anonymous: Angle Saxon ~hronicles;' The Wonderer ; The Seafbrer ; The Wiji'r h e n t .
Pre-Sixteenth Century , - - - - -
i
44. Feinberg, Karen. "From the Book of Notable Women." Chrjmhs, 5.1977. 37-41.
Independence. Female; hast tit^. Female; Images of Women -,Virgin.
Anonymous: The Bwk of Ndable Women.
45. Frankforter, A. Daniel. "Sexism and the Search for the Thematic Structure of theflays of Hroswitha of Gandersheim." international Journal of Women's Studies. 11.3. 1979.221-32.
4 Writers. W o m e ~ - Conditions of (Pre-16th Century European); Phallic Criticism; " Religion, Women and - Christianity; Chastity. Female; Prostitution; Motherhood; Sexuality. Female.
Hroswitha: ~ r i m w d & ; Galliconus ; Dulcitius ; Cdimachus ; Abraham ; Paphnutrus ; Sapientia .
46. Fries, Maureen. " Feminae Populi : Popular Images of Women in Medieval Literature." Journal ofpopuiar Culture. XIV.l, 1980.79-86.
Images of Women - Idealized Love Object - Temptress - Deceiver - Virgix? - Submissive Wife - Shrew - Madonna; Courtly Love.
Chaucer, Geoffrey; Dante; Langland, William: Piers Plowman ; Prudentius: Pswhomachia . - A*
47. Fries, Maureen. "The 'Other' Voice: Woman's Song. Its Satire and Its Transcendence In Late Medieval British Literature," Studies in Medreval Culture. XV, 1981. 155-78.
Courtly Love; Images of Women - Other - Forsaken Woman - Decewer - Virgin - Fallen Woman; Love. Romantic - Destructive Power of; Religion. Women and - Christianity; Power. Female - Lack of -; Seduction; Revision - of Stereotypes.
Anonymous: "Kyrie, so Kyrie"; "Alas! Alas! the while"; Chaucer, Geoffrey: The Canterbwy Tales CThe Reeve's Taleu) ; The Canterbury Tales CThe Merchant's Tale") ; Troilus and Crise)rie ; Dunbar. William: The T wa Maritr Wemen and the . Wedo ; Esenbach, Wolfram von; Henryson. Robert: Fable ofChantecleer ; "Robene and Makyne"; "Complaint of Crisseid"; Mwalf Fabillis ofEsope the Phrygm:. ; Morungen. Heinrich von; Vqgelweide. Walther von der. ' - -
48. Gardiner. Judith Kegan. "Fifteen Joys: A Medieval Look at Marriage." Uruversity of Michigan Papers in Women's Studies. 11.4, 1978. 65-81.
Mamage - as Entrapment; Revisionpsf Critical Tqadition; Images of Women - Sexually Devouring woman - Deceive$ Pregnancy Xhildbi rth ; Communities of Women; Misdgynist Tracts. 1
<-
,
Pre-Sixteenth Century
Anonymous: The Fifleen Joys of Marriage ; Hdi Meidenhad .
49. Hanning, Robert W. "From Eva and Ave to Eglentyne and Alisoun: Chaucer's Insight into the Roles Women Play," Signs, 11.3. 1977,580-99. %
Images of Women - Madonna - Temptress; Religion, Women and - Christimity; Power. Female - Lack of; Power, Male; Marriage - and Male Authority; Education of Women. ,'
Chaucer. Geoffrey: The Canterbury Tales.
50. Hanson-Smith. Elizabeth. "A Woman's View of Courtly Love: The Findern Anthology Cambridge University Library Ms. Ff.1.6.," Jaunal of Women's Studies in Literature .1.3, 1979. 179-94.
Writers. Women - Rediscovered; Courtly Love; Love Poetry, Women's; Power. Fernate - Lack of; Isolation of Women; Passivity, Femaie; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Personae in Women's Poetry.
Anonymous: The Findern Anthdogy .
51. Hawkins. Harriet "The Victim's Side: Chaucer's Clerk's Tale and Webster's Duchess of Malj ." Signs. 1.2. 1975. 339-61.
/
Images of Women s oral Inferior - Submissive Wife; Re-vision - of Critical Tradition; Maniage - and Male Authority; Self-abnegation; b@xxhism, Female.
Chaucer. Geoffrey: The Canterbury Tales ( " ~ j z e ClerKs Tale") ; Webster. John: The Duchess of Malj .
52. King. Margaret L "Goddess and Captive: Antonio Loschi's Poetic Tribute to Maddalena Scrovegni (1389). Study and Textw Medievalia et Humanistica , X . 1981,103-114.
lmages of Women - Amazon - Bluestocking/Learned Woman - Virgin - Virtuous .Wornan; Chastity. Female; Power, Female - Male Fear of.
Loschi'~ text (Latin version) follows the article. 114-27. ?
Loschi.'Antonio: The Temple of Chastity ; Scrovegni. Maddalena.
53. h n g . Margaret Leah. "Thwarted Ambitions: Six Learned Women of the Italian Renaissance." Soundings. LIX.3.1976.280-304. '
Writers. Women - Conditions of (15th Century Italian) - and Silence; Education of Women; Marriage - and Conflict with Creativity; Religion, Women and -
i d " 6 ~hristianityi lmages of Women - BluestockjnplLearned We-,- l@ian&tmare, Women and
1
% ,
includes a brief bibliography of each woman
Barbaro. Constanza; Caldiera. Catarum; Fedele, Cassandra; onz zag: Cecilia; Nogarola, Ginerva; Nogarola. Isotta.
54. Kostoroski-Kadish, Emilie. "'Feminism' in the Jeu &Adam ." -Kentucky Romance Quarterly. XXII.2, 1975,209-21.
Revision - of Myth; Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Men's Wriung; Independence. Female; Images of Women - Temptress.
Anonymous: Jeu &Adam .
55. Ladden, Arlene. "Fays, Floozies and Philosophical Flaws."*Heresies , 1.1, 1977, 42-44. P
Courtly Love; Religion. Women and - Christianity; Images of Women - Unclean Woman - Idealized Love Object; Sexuality, Male.
Overview of Middle Ages
Anonymous: Ancrene Riwle ; Chrysostom, John; Nostredame. Jehane de: Les Vies d e ~ '
Plus Celebres et Anciem Puetes Provencawc ; Rudel. Jaufre; Salimbene; Sordello; Tour. Guilhem de la.
56. Lemay, Helen Rodnite. "Some Thirteenth and Fourteenth Century Lectures on Female Sexuality." International Journal of Women's Studies, 1.4, 1978, 391-400.
Sexuality, Female - Male Fear ofr. Images of Women - Sexually Devouring Woman - Unclean Woman - Deceiver - Virgin; Menstruation; Chastity, Female; Regnancy/Chil$birth.
Anonymous: On the Secrets of Women .
57. Losel-Wieland-Engel~m, Berta. "Feminist Repercussions of a Literary Research Project." Atlantis . VI.1. 1980. 84-90.
Feminist Process - in Research; Re-vision - of Critical Tradition; Writers, Women - Rediscovered; Violence. Female; Militarism. Women and; Religion. Women and - Christianity; G e m Literature, Women and. .f Anonymous: Nibelungenlied .
Luecke, lanemarie. "Darigen: Marriage Model or Male Fanmy," J w r d q,fWome~'s Studies in hteratwe ,1.2,1979,107-21. .
Revision - of Critical Tradition; Images of Women - Submissive Wife - Child-Woman; Marriage; Courtly Love; Independence, Female.
Chaucer. Geoffrey: The Canterbury Tales ; Pisan. Christine de; Paston, Margaret
McMillan, Ann. "Men's Weamns. Women's War: The Nine Female Worthies, 1400-1640," Mediaevalia . V. 1979.113-39.
Images of Women - Amazon; Militarism. Women and; Power, Female; Indepcndence, Female; Androgyny; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Woman Warrior.
Anonymous: "The Nine Ladies Worthy"; Boccaccio, Giovanni: Concerning F a m w Women ; Descharnps. Eustace: Oeuvres completes ; Ferne. John:. The Blazon of Gentrie ; Heywood, Thomas: The Exemplary Lives and MemcKable Acts of Nine of the Most Wwth y Women ofthe Warid ; Pisan. Christine de: City of Ladies c i t e des Dames).
Marchalonis. Shirley. "Above Rubies: Popular Views of Medieval Women." Journal of Populur Culture, XIV.l, 1980.87-93.
Images of Women - Submissive Wife - Idealized Love Object; Passivity;Female.
Overview of the middle English metrical romances (Anonymous, untitled)
Oberembt, Kenneth J. "Chaucer's Anti-Misogynist Wife of Bath." Chaucer Review , X.4. 1976, 287-302.
Marriage - and Male Authority; Sexuality, Female; Reason vs. Passion; Religion, Women and - Christianity.
' *
Chaucer. Geoffrey: Thz Canterbury Tales.
Palorno. Dolores. "The Fate of the wife of Bath's 'Bad Husbands'." Chaucer Review. IX.4, 1975,303-19.
Mamage - as Economic Necessity - as Entrapment; Sexuality, Female; Crime, Women and; Adultery.
Chauccr. Geoffrey: The ca&erbury Tales .
Payer.Vierre. "Eve's Sin, Woman's Fault: A Medieval View," Atlantis, 11.2(Part 2). 1977. 2-14.
64
lmages of Women - Fallen Woman - Moral Inferior - Intellectual Inferior; Religion. Women and - Christianity; Misogynist Tracts.
Alexander of Hales: Summa thedogica ; Aquinas. Thomas: Summa of Thedogy ; Augustine, Saint: De Genesi ad litteram ; Bornventure. Saint: Commentaria in secundurn libmm sententianun ; Isidore of Seville: Liber sententiarum ; Kramer. Henry and James Sprenger: Malleus Mafejicanun ; Lombard, Peter: Books of Sentences ; Philo Judaeus: Questions and Answers on Genesis ; Robert of Melun.
Petroff, Elizabeth. "Medieval Women Visionaries: Seven Stages to Power," Frontiers . 111.1. 1978.34-45.
Mysticism, Women and; Religion. Women and - Christianity; Power. Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's W.-iting - Paradise; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Great Goddess. &
Bollandist Fathers: Acta Sanctmm .
Policelli, Eugene F. "Medieval Women: A Preacher's Point of View." international J w n a l of Women's Studies, 1.3.1978.281-96.
Religion, Women and - Christianity; Advice Literature; Education of Women; ~ d a ~ e - and Equality/Mutuality; Sexuality. Female -; Family. Women and - as Woman's Sphere; Images of Women - Intellectual Inferior.
Bernardino of Siena.
Price, Paola Malpezzi. "Masculine and Feminine Personae in the Love Poeuy ot Christine de Pisan." Women a d Literature, I (New Series), 1980.37-53.- 1
Love Poetry, Women's; Personae in Women's Poetry; Style. Female vs. Male; Language, Women's Use of - Subjective Voice; Courtly Love; Images of Women - Idealized Love Object; Revision - of Stereotypes; Troubadours, Women; French Literature. Women and.
Pisan, Christine de: Cenr Bdades ; Aurres Balades ; "Dit le Debat de deux Amans"; "1; Dit de Poissy"; "Dit du Duc des Vrais Arnans".
Rabine. Leslie W. "The Establishment of Patriarchy in Tristan and lsddr ." Women's Sradle~ , VI1.3. 1980. 19-38. I s
Re-vision - of Critical Tradition; Love; oma antic - Destructive Power of; Public and Private. Separation of; Power, Male - and the Social Order; Sex Roles; Folklore; Court ly Love; Power, Female - Lack of.
*
Anonymous: Tristan and Isdde .
* ,$..
Rhodes; Jewel1 k k e f "Female Stereotypes in Medieval Literature: Andmgyny and the Wife of , Bath," Jmrnal of Women's Studiesin Literature. 14,1979.348-52.
I .
~nhrogyny; Sex Roles - Rejection of: Independence. Female; ~ a k i a g e .
Chaucer. Geoffrey: The Canterbury Tales.
Rickey, Carrie. "The Straits of Literature and History." Heresies. 1.4.1977/78. 19-21. .,
Writers, ,Women - Conditions of (Pre16th Century Japanese); Japanese Literahue, Women and; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; Class Position, Women's; \ I
Sex Roles.
Shikibu. Lady Murasaki: The Tale of Genj ; Shonagon, Sei: The Pitiow Book .I
Schotter, Anne Howland '"Woman's Song in Medieval Latin." Studies in Medieval Culture . XV, 1981.19-33.
Images of Women - Other - Victim - Forsaken Woman - F Woman; Seduction; Violence against Women; Humour, Women as Objects of; "r e Bonding; Language. Patriarchal - and Female Invisibility.
Anonvmous: Carmina B u r a ~ ; "Huc Usque, Me Miseram"; Ovid
Shapiro. Marianne. "The Provencal Trdairitz 1978,560-71.
'Troubadours. Women; Courtly Love.; Women and.
and the Limits of Courtly Ime," Signs. III.3.
Love Poetry. Women's; French Literature,
d'hduza. Clara; Castelloza; Dia, Countess of; Porcairagues, Azalais de; Tibors, -Lady.
n Henryson's Cresseid and Sexual Backlash." lirerature and Pswhdogy .
Sexuality. Ftrnale - Male Fear of: %ges of Women - Te Devouring Woman; Courtly Love.
Chaucer. Geoffrey: T d u s and Criseyie ; Henryson. Robert: Tesrment of Cresseid ; . Shakespeare. H'illiam: Troifus and Cressida ,
Thohpson, Raymond H. "'For inow . . . ': The Knight Errant's Treatment of Women in the English d u r i a n Atianlis. IV.2.1979.34-47.
Images of Women - Crone - Deceiver - Tempuesi - Victim; Male Bonding;
--
Prestxteeats C m t ~
Masculinity - and Heroism; . Adultery; Violence awnst Women; Courtly lnvc ,f' ~ n o n ~ m o u s ~ Gddgmr and Gawane ; The Twke and G m t n : Sir Ipncela o/I)ut~ktn : Y wain and Gawain ; Sir Percevd of ~ d e s ; The A w n f p ofl Arlhavi: ; Sir G c w m a d the ~ r e e i Knight ; King A n h w Md the L n g o f C o n w d 1 ; The Boy uN1 thr Montir .- The Avvwing of Klng A ~ h u r ; The kuste o f S p Gowtane ; La Chevafrer a f E p w ; la Vengeance Raquidef ; L'Atre Perflleux ; Chaucer. Geoffrey: The Canrerbwy T d c ~ r ' f ht Wifi of &-h's Prdogue") ; Chestre. Thomas: tiberms Desconur ; Sir Lmrn$x/ ; 7 roves, Chretien de: Y vain ; Percevd .
- 74. Vickers. an& J. "Diana Described: Scattered Woman and Ss t~ered Rhyme.* Crtr,rai Inqwrk ,
VIII.2. 1981. 26479.
Courtly Love; Physical Appearance; Images of Women - Idmllred I.nw O b j e ~ t . Italian Literature. Women and.
75. Williams, Edith Whitehunt "What's So New About the Sexual Kevoluuonl." T r . w Qrmnrrib . XVIII.2, 1975.46-55.
Sexuality, Female; Power, Female.
Discussion of the Old English verse riddles in the Exeter Hook
Anonymous: The Exeter B a d .
, III. sI%TE~F;TH CENTURY PROSE
Levin, Carole. "Women in The Bwk of ~ h r l y r s as Models of Ijehavior in Tudor England." I n r e r m i d h n d qf w m e n ' s Studies . IV.2.198i.196-207.
- 1,
~ & v i & Litenture; ' ~el ip ion . Women and - Christianity; lm&s of Women - Intellectual Inferior - Moral Custodian - Submissive Wife -,Whore - Witch; Re-v~s~otl - of Stereotypes.
Foxe. John: Acts and Monuments ; The BoDk of Manyrs . 0
f
Weinstein. Minna F. ' " ~ e m n s a - u c t i n ~ Ow Pas[: ~e f l ecuons on Tudor Women." lntem~rronnl Jcwnal of Women's Studies. 1.2. 1978.133-40.
Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Writers, Women - Kedisc Feminist Process - in Research.
Several Elizabethan~women, scholars anbwriters. arc mentioned in passing bur not cited , here A
- -
TV. SIXTEENTH CENTURY POETRY G* R L
. - DuBois. Page Ann. "'The Devil's Gateway': Women's Bodies and the Earth!y Paradise," - Women's Studies, VII.3. 1980.43-58. . a.
Images of Women - Deceiver - Temptress - Unclean Woman - Sexually &vouring B Woman - Crone - Witch; Misogynist Tracts; Sexuality, Female - Male Fear of;
Nature, Women and; Physical Appearagce. '
Kramer. Henry and James Sprenger: M@leus Maleficarum ; Lmris, Guillaurne de; Lyly, John: Eupheus ; Meun. Jean de: Roman de la Rose ; Nashe, Thomas: "Christs Team over Jerusalem" ; Rolle, Richard: "The Beginning of Man's Lifew ; Spenser. Edrnund: Amwettl ; The Fairie Queene . A
Hymel, Cynthia Drew. "Hero h d Leander: A Male Perspective on Female ~elydity." Jaunal of Women's Studies in Lilerature , 1.4, 1979.273-85.
Sexuality. Female - Male Fear of; Seduction; 2lyc&Appearance; Images of Women - Sexually Devouring Woman; Chastity. Fe Sexuality, Female. \
&larlowe. Christopher: Hero and Leander.
Jones. Ann Rosalind. "Assimilation with a Difference: Renaissance Women Poets and Literary Influence." Y d e French Studies. 62,1981.135-53.
Images of Women - Idealized Love Object; Love Poetry, Women's; Style. Female vs. Male; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Wooing Woman; Sex Roles - Rejection of; French hterature, Women and.
Guillet Pemette du: Rhymes ; Labe. Louise: Sonnets ; Sceve. Maurice: Delie .
81. Kahn. Coppelia. "The Rape in.ShakespeareYs k r e c e , " Shakespeare Studies, IX. 1976,35-72.
Sexuality. Female - and the Double Standard; Chastity, Female; Marriage - and Male Authority - Arranged; Violence against Women; Power. Male - and the Social Order; Masculinity - and Honour - and Male Rivalry; * Suicide, Women and. ?
/'
Shakespeare. William: The Rape oflucrece . a
82. h p p , Bettina L " buise Labe: Renaissance Woman (1522-1566)," W m e n and Literature . 111.1. 1979, 12-23.
t
- - -- Writers. Women - Conditions of; Oral Tradition. Women and; Love, Romantic; Love Poetry. Women's; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Wooing Woman;
? *
French Lrterature. Women and
Labe. Louise: Sonnets ; Elegies ; Wwh . a - bi r7s 0
ra - P
83. Marquit, Doris Griese~. ' " ~ e ~ u d d e n l ~ Revenged': A Shakespearean Way fromi7the Bedroom 10 the ~arricades," University of Michigan Papers in Wornen's-Studies , 11.1. 1975.103-1 1, . % *
k . V~dence against Women; -Suicide. Women and; Chastiv. Female; Publrc and Private. Separation of.
7
Shakespeare, William: The Rape oflucrece . 4
84. Thurman, Judith. "Lost Women: Louise Labe - Still Scandalous after 400 Years," Ms. . V111.9, 1980.91-97.
Writers, Women - Rediscovered - Conditions of; Love Poem. Women's; French Literature, Women and. -
- i Labe, Louise. -
V. SIXTEENTH CENTURY DYMA .. = ' \
, & A
d (D
Alexander, Bonnie L "Cracks in the Pedestal: A Reading of A W m l t Elled With Kindness ," Massachusetts Studies in English , UI.1, 1978. 1-1:: %
Adultery; Seduction; Images of Womln - Fallen Woman; Class Position, Women's; Work, Women and; Family. Women and; Passivity, Female;- Chastity, Female.
, L a -. -. - . . Heywood, Thomas: A Woman Killed With Kihdnexs .
86. Asp. ~ a r o l ~ n . "In Defense 6f Cressida," Stvdrrs in Phildogy . LXXIV.4.1977.406-17.
Self-abnegation; I Identity, - Female; Power, Female - Lack of.
- Shakespeare, William: Trailus and Cressida .
%
87. Asp. Carolyn. "'Be Bloody, Bold and Resolute': Tragic Action and Sexual ~ t e rmtyp in~~ in Macbeth ." Studies In Phildogy , LXXVIII.2.1981.153-69.
? Sex Roles; Masculinity - and Violence; Power, Male; Power. Female - Lack of. x
Shakespeare, William: Mecbeth .
88. Berry, Ralph. 'Measure fw M e w e on the Contemporarq' Stage." Humanities Association Review. XXVII1.3. 1977. 241-47.
1-
Power, Male; Independence. Female; Sexuality, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward.
.Shakespeare. William; Measure fbr Measure .
'.= 8 9 Carlis1e:Carol J. "The Critics Discover Shakespeare's Women." Renaissance Paprs . 1979, * . - 59-73. *>" - ,
h Phallic Criticism; Culr of True Womanhood; hve.'~omantic; Theatre. Women in the.
I)lscussion"of 18th and 19th century critics' attitudes to Shakespeare's female characters, and of 18th and 19th century stage pom~yals
. - Shakespeare. William.
, 90. i r '
Deats. Sara @uxon. "Mward I1 : A Study in Androgyny." E d Sire ~ r u ~ e r s i ; ~ F- . XXII.1, 1981, 30-41. 2 . ,V?
t 4
~ndr6yny; lmagesiof Women - ~ub&ssive Wife - Temptress; Revision - ot ' &
Stereotypes; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Violence. Female; ~ o m o s e ; d i t ~ . Male. 0
Marlowe, Christopher: Edward I I .
a - ' . D . 1
Erickson, P e t r B. "The Failure of Relationship I in Love's Loboeir's Lcrsr ." Women's Studle~ . IX.l, 1981, 65-81.
Power. Female - MalelFear of; Speech ~ a ~ e m s . Female vs. Male; lmapes of Women - Other - Idealized Love Object - Muse; Sex Roles - Rejection of: Male ,
Boading; ~ d e ( ~ e m a l e Relationships. - -
Shakespeare, Williag: Love's Labads Lasf . ,
f
Ferris, Dianne. "Elizabeth I and Richard N : Portiaits in 'Masculine' arid 'Feminine"hnces." International JwnaI of Women's Studies. IV.1,.1981,10-18. ~
Sex Roles; Masculinity; Images of Women, Theory of; Yc!iSca: Activism, Women and.
.- Shakespeare, William: Richard I I .
Fitz, L. T. "Egyptian Queens and Male Reviewers: Sexist Attitudes in Antony and Cleoparra - - - Criticism," Shakespeare Q m e r l y , XXVI11.3.1977. 297-316.
Phallic ; Revision -o f Critical Tradition: Sexuahty, Female - and thc Double Standard; Love, Romit ic ; Suicide, Women and.
-
/ Shakespeare. William: Antony and Cleopatra . a
-
Frey. Charles. "Shakespeare's Imperiled and Chasteni Daughters of Romance," South Atlantic Bulletin, XLIII.4, 1978. 125-40. .*
FatherIDaughter Relationships; Power. M e - and the Social Order; Mamage T as Political Alliance - and Male Authority; Nature, .Women and; Chastit), Female.
overview of Shakespeare's plays, with special focus on the late romances ' d
Shakespeare; William: Pericles ; Cymbeline ; The Winter's Tale ; The Tempest ; Henry VIIl ; The Two N d l e Kinsmen.
Gamer, Shirley Nelson. " A Midsumnler Night's Dream : 'Jack Shall Have Jill;/Noupht Shall s .
, - . y . .
8
- -- ~ --- : Sixteenth Century Drama b
I - I. . - , Go Ill'.m ~ a n i $ r Studres . IX.1, 1981.47-63. - '1
Power, Female - Male Fear of; Friendships. Female; Lesbiaiiism - Encoded; -. Heterdsexism: * f
A
- Shakespeare. Williami A Midsummer Night5 Dream . i Y >.. - & -
, 96. Ciour!ay. .Pauicia Southard. "'0 ~ y ' ~ o s t Sacred Lady': Female Metaphor in The Wintecs Tale ," English Literary ce . V.3.1975.375-95.
C - Revision - of Stere images of Women - Earth Mother - Idealized Qve Object;
' Artist, Woman aS; emale Relationships; Power, Male - and the Social Order.
Shakespeare. William: T e Winter's Tale. "
1 \
97. Greene. Gayle. "'This That You Call Love': Sexual and Social Tragedy in bthello ," Jwnal of wmen'a tudies in fiteratwe .I.1, 1979, 16-32. r
1 Revision 4f Critical Tradition - oistermW; Love, Romantic - e v e Power of; Masculinity; Passivity. Female; Sexuality, Female - Male Fear Power, Female - Lack of; Chastity. Female; ' Images of Women - Whore - V i r a - Object - Deceiver.
Shakespeare. William: Othello . . 5
--
d
Hutchings. Geoffiey. "Emilia: A Case History in Women's Lib," English Studies in Afiica , XXI.2. 1978. 71-77.
]love. Romantic - Desuuctive Power of; Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment - and Male Authority. R
Shakespeare. Willian;: Orhello. - -
McKewin, Carole. "Shakespeare Liberata: Shakespeare, the Nature of Women, and the New Feminist Criticism." M m k , X.3.1977.157-64.
Re-vision - of Critical T~ditiok - of Stereotypes; Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Men's Writing; Images of Women, Theory of; Marriage - and Equality/Mutualiry; Independence, Female.
Shalgespeare. William. - . i
k McLuskie, Kate. "Feminist .Deconstruction: The Example of Shakespeare's Taming of the Shrew ," Red Letters, 12.1981.33-40.
.' - f Marriage * and Male ~ u t h o n i ; - Hm6u.1. Women asQbjects of; Power. Male - and the Social Or&r. . A - - - - *-
a
Shakespeare William: The Taming of rhe Shrew . i I T
. 101. ~ o w a i Barbara A. "Images of Women in Shakespeare's Plays." Sarihern Hurnaru~les R&& . i XI.2. 1977. 145-57.
. . Images of Women - Temptress - Witch - Deceiver - Whore - Virgin; Power. Female - Male Fear of; Sexuality, Female - Male Fear of; Fathe;/Daughter Relationships. . .
\
~ h a k h e a r e , William: The Comedy of Errws ; Two Gentlemen of Verona ; LQVP's P LubcRu's L.ust ; Much Ado abooct Ndhing ; ~ a m l & ; Of hello" King Leu ; Pericles ;
Cymbeline ; The Wintefs Tale ; The Tempest ; R-omeo and Juliet . *
102. Neely, Carol Thomasf "Women and Men in Othello : 'what should such a.fool/Do with so good 6
a woman?," Shakespeare Studies; X , 1977.133-58. .
Masculinity - and Honour - and Male Rivalry - as Destructive Force; Sexuality. b Female - Male Fear of; Love, Romantic; Power, Female - Lack of.
, C' F' 2
' Shakespeare. William: Othello. '
103. Neely, Carol Thomas. "Women and I&ue in The W~nter's Tale ," Phildogrcal Quarterly ." , LVII.2, 1978, 181-94.
.p
Nature, Women and; Power, Female; Sexuality. Female; - Mother/Daughte-r Relationships; Pregnancy/Childbirth; . Sexuality. Female - Male ear of. - -
w
eare, William: The Wintefs Tale. ,G
104. Novy, Marianne. "Patriarchy, Mutuality. and Forgiveness in Klng Lear ," Scurhern Hurnarut~es Review, XIII.4, 1979. 281-92. --
'( ' * " Power. Male; Father/Daughter Rklationships; Sexuality. Female - Male Fear of.
Shakespeare, William: King Lzur : I
105. ' Novy, Marianne. "Shakespeare and Emotional Distance in the Elizatiethan Family." Theatre J w n a l . XXXIII.3, 1981. 316-26. .
Family. Women and; Masculinity; Transvestism; Male/Female Relationships; Sex Roles; Reason vs. Passion.
ShakespeareJVilliam: Cwidanus ; King Lzar ; Hamlet ; Othello ; The Comedy of -
- --
' D -
h@=- Errws ; ASP" Like h ; Meanrre fm Measure ; The Winter's Tale . .
VQ .. - . . . + 'i
.if@. c $Jovy, Marianne. "Demythologizing Shakqeare," ~ k n ' s Studies , IXJ, 1981,17-27. -
Revision - of Critiml Tbdition; Power. Female - Male Fear of; * ~ e m i ~ s m , Fe-Twentieth ~ e n h k y - Influence on Men's, Writing. I) -
. .
Drama .
Shakespeare, William. 4
U . d l
107. Novy. Marianne L "Giving Taking, and the ~o!e of Portia in The Merchant of ~ e k c e ." Pitildogical Quarterly , LVI11.2, 1979. 137-54.
.Self-sacrifice; Marriage - and Equality/Mutuality; . . Power. Female; Self-realization; Masculinity - as Socially Destructive Force.
P-
Shakespeare, Wil l iq: The Merchanf of Venice. - 108. Novy. Marianne L "Patriarchy and Play in The Taming of the Shrew ." English Literary -
Renaissance. IX.2.1979.264-80. ,
Marriage - and Male Authority - and Equality/Mutuality; Sex Roles; Power, Male - and the Social Order. .
Shakespeare. William: The Taming of the Shrew .
109. Okerlund. Arlene N. "In Defence of Cressida: Character as Metaphor." Women's Studies UI.3, 1980. 1-17. - w. '
..
4 Revision - of Critical Tradition - of Stereotypes; Images of Women - Whore; Sexuality. Female - and the Double Standard; Militarism, Women and.
Shakespeare, w i l l i b : Trdus and Cressida .
110. Richmorid. Velma Bourgeois. "Rennaissance Sexuality and Marlowe's Women," Ba@ State ' Vmversity F m m , XV1.4.1975.36-44.
?i
- Images of Women - Deceiver; .Power, Female - Lack of; __ Death. Women and; \ Madness. Women and; Religion, Women and Christianity; Masculinitjr.
Marlowe. Christopher: Tarnburlaine ; Doctor Faustrcr ; The Jew of Malta ; Edward I . ; The Massacre at Paris ;'Didq Queen of C t h a g e .
111. Richmond, Velma Bourgeois: "Shakespeare's Women," Midwest Quarterly, XIX.4.1978, . 330-42.
"
e
- - - - - - Sixteenth Century Drama $ 2. . < * - *-?
~ a r r i a ~ e - and Woman's Fulfillment - @ Equality/Mutuality; - Sex Roles; - -. -
Education of Women; Religion, Wome? and - Protestant Reformation; RoleModels, Female; Androgyny; PoweGemale; Publ ichd Private. Separation of.
Overview of
- Shakespeare, William. /
112. Shapiro, Susan C. "Shakespeare's View of Motherhood." CEA FwuK.TII1.4.1978.8-10. - Images of Women - Terrible Mother - Madonna; Power, Female - Male Fear of.
Shakespeare, William: Macbeth ; King Lear ; ~ n t o n y d Cleopatra ; Coridanus ; The Winter's Tale.
113. Staton, Shirley F. "Female Transve3tism in Renaissance Comedy." Iowa State Jacrnal of Research , LVI.1,1981,78-89.
~ransvestism; Andmgyny; Identity. Female; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Power. Female; Lmages of Women - Submissive Wife - Virgin - Victim - Waiting Woman.
Beaumont, Francis and John Fletcher: Philaster ; Greene. Robert: James N ; Lyly. John: . Gallathea ; Shakespeare, William: As Ytm Like lt ; Cymbelme.; The Merchant of
Veriice ; TweljZh Night ; Two Gentlemen of Verona .
114. Sundelson. David "Misog-jmy and Rule in Measure" fw Measure ." Women's Studies ..l>i.l. 1981,83-91.
Power. Male - and the x i o r d e r ; Power. Female - Male Fear oC Sexualit). % Male; Androgyny.
#
Shakespeare. William: Measure fw Measure. 3 ?
- Death, Women and;. Militarism, Wofien and. I Response,to: Leverenz. David. "The Woman in Hamlet: Aq interpersonal Vie~."~Sigru . IV.2.1978.291-308.
.e VI. SIXTEENTH CENTURY CROSS-GENRE ,s @
L.
116. Schleiner. Winfried. " D i v i ~ virago : Queeii Elizabeth as an Amazon," Studies in Phildogy , LXXV.2,1978,163-80.
Images of Women ' Amazon; Militarism. Women and. -
Prose apd Poetry
Aske, James: Elizabetha Triumphanr ; Dans. Aldophus van: "Eliza"; Eleutherivs (pseud): Triumphalia de Victwiis Elizabethw; Foxe, John: Acts and Monuments ; Gager. William: "William Gager to Queen Elizabeth "; Heywood, Thomas: The '
Exemplary Lives and M e m d l e Acts of Nine of the Mart w d h y W-ornen of the Wwld ; Jonson. Ben: M;csque of Queens ; Spenser, Edmund: The Fairie Qwene .
VII. SEVENTEENTH CENTURY PROSE
Alcover. Madeleine. "The Indecency of Knowledge." Rrce University Studies . LXIV.1.1978, 25-39.
-r
Education of Women; Images of Women - Bluestocking/Leained Woman; Advlcc Literature; French Literature, Women a d .
Barre. Poullain de la: De I'Egalite des d m Sexes ; Education des Dames ; Scudery, Madeleine de: Le Grand C p ; Clelie ; Entretiens de Mwal ; Eenelon. Francois: Trme
I
de PEducation des Filles ; Moliere, Jean: Les Femmes Savantes .
k c h e r . Margaret "The Compleat Woman: A Seventeenth Century View of women." Atlantis , II.2(Part 2). 1977. 16-21.
Advice Literature;. Education of Women; Class Position, Women's; French Literature. Women and.
Bosc. Jaques du: The Compleat W m n (Z'Honneste firnme) . A+---
119. Brink, J. R.' "Bathsua Makin: 6cholar and Educator of the Seventeenth Century." international Jwnal of Women's Studies. 1.4.1978.417-26.
Education of Women; Communities of Women.
Makin, Bathsua: An Essay to Revive the Antienr Educatron of Gentlewomen ; Milton. John: Of Education ; Schurman. Anna Maria van. a
120. Kinnaird, Joan K "Mary ~ s t e l i and the Conservative Conmbution to English Feminism." Jwnal of British Studies. XIX.1. 1979, 53-75.
L 0
Education of Women; Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Literary Tradition- Women's; Religion, Women and - Christianity; Marriage - and Male Authority - and Woman's Fulfillment; Public and Pnvate. Separation of; Sex Roles; Advice Literature. ''
Astell. Mary: A Seriacs Proposal to the Ludres fw the Greatest Interest ; Letters Concerning the Love of
and Civil War rn This Kingdom .
after Wit ; Some Rejections upon Marriage ; The Daughter of the Church of England ; An Impartial Enqaury rnto the Causes of Rebeflron
J
121. Norman, Marion. ,"Eve's Daughters at School." Atlantis. III.2(Part 1). 1978.66-81.
Seventeenth Century Prose
Be4 Education of Women; ' Writers, Women - Conditions of (17th Century British); Class Position. Women's.
\ Includes~overview of edumb n of many 17th century women of letters
Astell. Mary; Hutchinson, Lucy; Legh, Lettice; Milton, John: Of Education ; Pennington, Mary; Ward, Mary; Whitehead. Anne.
/ , C
Rowan, I h q M. "~eventeenth&ntury French Feminism: Two ~pposin'g Attitudes," International J w n a l of Women's Studies. III.3.1980.273-91. .
Education of Women; ' Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing - Influence on Men's Writing; Writers. Women - and Silence; Work, Women and - Need for Useful Occupation; Marriage - and Equality/Mutuality; Religion. Women and - Christianity; Self-sacrifice; French Literature, Women and.
Bane. Poullain de la: De PEgcrlite des d m Sexes ; De P~uca t ion des Fernmes ; De PExcellence des Hommes ; Fenelon, Francois: vis a une Dame de Qualite ; Trru'te de PEducation des Rlles ; Gournay, Marie le Jars k : Egalite d e i h m m e s et des femmes ; Grief des dames ; Scarroa Francoise d'Aubigne. Mme de Maintenon.
Sizemorq, Christine W. "Early Seventeenth Century Advice Books: The Female Viewpoint" S w h Atlantic Bulletin. XLI.1. 1976. 41-48.
--- Advice Literature; Physical Appearance; Religion. Women and - Christianity; Marriage - and Equality/Mutuality - and Male Authority; Death, Women and; Sexuality, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward n .
Grymeston, Elizabeth: Miscelanea Meditations ~ e h a r a t i w s ; ~oceline, Elizabeth: The Mothers Legacie to Her Vnboh Child ; Leigh. Dorothy: The-Mothers Blessing.
Smith. Della. "Mary Rowlandson's Narrative: A Puritan hest-seller." Maenud. L1, 1980.5-14. 8+m. --
Colonialism. Women and; . Religion, Women and --~uri&sm; Captiviry Narratives; Racism - Relation to Sexism
.
Rowlandson, Mary: The Soveraignty and Goodness of God, Together with the ~aith@ne& of His Promises Displayed; Being a Narrative of the Captivity and Restauration of Mrs. Mary owla ads on .
Sullivan. Patricia A. "Female Writing Beside the Rhetorical Tradition: Seventeenth Century British Biography and a Female Tradition in Rhetoric." Internationaf J w n a l of Women's Studies. 111.2, 1980. 143-60. 1'
1 C Style, Female vs. Male; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; Biography,
I
'ii 79
" Seventeenth Century Prolrc, - -
*
guage. Patriarchal - Rhetorical Tradition; Literar! Tradiuon - c.
Cavendish. Margaret: The L.ifi of Willtam Cavendish ; Sprat. Thomas: " Lifc of CmLq "
1 ?( ~hndi. Pllm B -Annr Rmdyl t~ f : 7 h c E ! € k C~mp~l lent inLhriran Pmu)-.* Wmen'r - S t d i c : . VILl!?. 1980. 39-53.
- Sexuafit), ).mait; l m g q and Mcrtifs tn W m m ' s Writing - Fire - kahckage - Sun;
8 - , Notuft. .Wmm and; I I i q s W en and; i3omemc hetry; WrittKfWomen - . w t i m of; Yrqpmq/Chil k" birth; Fathf.ler/hu&tsr 8dationti;hips;
' '-Ma&YF~$~ie,,K&tionrhipsi ~ c l i ~ i & ~ a n e n and - Qlrin$nity. " - t$$
4 ~f & p c e ~ Anne: -Upon (he Burning of Our Haace; "T?~lhe Four Elmenlsa: $*c&zcrnpinucmg: =Of thr Four Hwnaun in Man's Connrmtim'.
L
\
k ' < - Writers. Women -' Kcxhsmvcrcd. -
Ftvc p r t v r d ! unpublished pms with a bncf tntfcducuon
FA*um of Vimcn; Images of Womm - 1ntrifm.uaf Inferior'- Mard Inferior - FaIlw~ Woman; Kctipian, Wamm and - Christianity.
King. Anne. "Annc Hulchlnson and Anne Bradsucet: Literature-and Expencncc. Faith and '
Works in Massadtusenr Bay Colon)." l n l e r m d h n a i o f W m n ' s S f d l e s . 1.5. 197b. 6144467.
#
Relrgion, Women and - Puritanism; Writers, Women - Conditions of (17 th Ccnrun American); . RoleModels. Femalc; Self-abnegation; Power. Female; a
Independena. Female.
Bradsueer. Anne; Hutchinson. Anne.
h d y . Mama. " 'A Free and Open Encounter': Milton and the Modem Reader." hlrlion Studies, IX. 1976.3-36. .
. . Reader. Woman as; Power. Male; Power. Female - Lack of; Mamape - and Malc Authoriry; Public and Pnvate. Separation of; Images of Women - Moral Infenor - Fallen Woman - Earth Mother.- Muse - Virtuous Woman - Deceivcr - Tempuess.
/
~ i l t c h . John: Paradise Larr ; C a m ; Samson Agonines .
Mthl. Jane M. "Catharina Regina von Greiffenberg: M@* Traits in a Baroquc Poet" S m h Arlantic Bulletrn . XLV.1. 1980. 54-63. D
Writers. Women - Redwovered - Conditions of; Religion. Women and - Protcsun~ '
Reformation; G e m i i Literature. Women and.
-Greiffent>erg. Catharina Regina von. . -
Mesenger.,Ann P. "Lady Winchilsea and Twice-Fallen Women." Arlantl~ . III.Z(Part 1 ) . 197h. 82-98.
Personae in Womep's Poeuy; l&?es of Women - Intellectual h f e b 0 r - Narcissisr - Fallen Woman;' Humour. Women's Use of: SaGre, Women's Use of ; . Physical Appearance; Education of Women; Power. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward
Finch. Anne. Countess of Winchilsea: The Poem of Anne. Canless of W~nchilsea . -
Pallisrer. Janis L " A Note on Sor Juana De la dnu." Women and Lueratwe . V11.2. 1979. ' 42-46.
Writers. Women - Redwovered; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Mexican literature. Women and.
De La Cruz. Sor Juana: Obrm ; Redondillas.
P a l o m Dolores. "Margaret Cavendish: Defining the Fernalc Self." Women's Srudte~ . VII.l/2.
Seventeenth ' Century Poetry
1980.55-66, 0
Power. Female; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Woman Wamor - Clothing - Food - Disguise; Masculinity; Male Characters in C
Women's Writing; Nature. Women and; Domestic Poetry; Utopias; f Androgyny; Love Poeuy, Women's.
-& Cavendish, Margaret: Natures Pictures ; The W wld's Olio ; Plays ; Plays, Never Be fwe 7 Prlnted ; P ~ m s and Fanues ; CCXI Socrable Letters ; The Descriptton of a New Wwld,
, Called the Blazing- Wwld .
137. Wasserman. George R. "Hudibrav and Male Chauvinism," Studies in English ~r t e ra tbe , - XVI.3. 1976.,351-61.
Images of Women - inte~~echlai Inferior - Irrational Woman; Power, Male - and the Social Order; Rationality. Male.
Butler. Samuel: Hudibrus . 0 .'
-- -
IX. SEVENTEENTH CENTURY DRAMA
138. Beilin, Elaine. "Elizabeth Cary and Tke Tragedie of Mariam ." Papers on Longuage and Literature . XVI.1.1980.4464.
Marriage - and Mali: Authority; Power. Male; ~ r i i e r s . Women - Condiuons of. - Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Female Christ; Religion. Women and - < d
Christianity; Reason vs. Passion; Self-abnegation.
Gary, Elizabeth: The Tragedie of Mariam, The Fare Queene o f k w r y .
139. Berggren. Paula S. " ' ~ o m h s h ' Mankind: Four Jacobean Heroines," Internatrod Jmrnul oj W o m e n ' s Studies .I.4. 1978. 34a-62.
Images of Women - Victim - Fallen Woman; ~ d u l t e r y ; Power. Female - lack of. Chastity. Female; Sexuality, Female - and the Double Standard.
Middleton, Thomas: Women Beware Women ; Mare Dmernblers Sesrdes Women ; Webster. John: The White Devil ; The Duchess ofMal/ i . 4 *
140. Cohen. Derek. "The Revenger's Comedy: Female Hegemony in The Country U'r* ." Arlanrr~ . V.2. 1980. 120-30.
*
Sexuality, Female - and the Double Standard; Power, Female; Adultery; Images of Women - Sexually Devouring Woman; Alcohol. Women and.
Wycherley. William: The Country Wi fe . a
141. Huebert. Ronald. "'An Artificial Way tofipeve': The Forsaken Wernan in Beaumont and Fletcher. Massinger and Ford." ELH . XLIV.4. 1977. 601 -21.
Images of Women - Forsaken Woman - Deceiver - Intellectual Inferior - Sexually Devouring Woman; Power. Female - Lack of; Chastib. Female; Seducuon; Power. Male.
Beaumont, Francis and John Fletcher: The Mad's Tragedy ; Ford. John: The Broken - Heart ; Massinger. Philip: The Duke of Milan .
'A a 142. Juneja, R e n u "Eve's Flesh and Blood in ons son's Barthdomew f i r ." Comparalrve Drama . '
XII.4. 1978179. 340-55.
Marriage - and Marriage Law - as Economic Necessity; Power. Fernale - Latk of; Money, Women and; Independence. Female.
% Seventeenth Century Drama
C Jonwn, en:- ~ a r t h d w e w Fair.
b
b
Kau. Candace Brook. "The Desened Mistress Motif in Mrs. Manley's La7 Lover. 1696." Restoration and 18th Century Theatre Research . XVI.1,1977,27-f9.
Images of Women - Virgin - Fallen Woman - Abandoned Woman; Revision - of p Stereotypes; Chastity, Female; * Sexuality. Female - and the Double Standard;
Marriage - and CoWship.
Betterton. Thomas: The ~evenge , a A Match in Newgate ; Congrqe. William: The Old Bachelw ; The Dcaible Dealer ; Manley. Mary Delariviere: The Lart Lover, or, The Jealous Husband ; Shadwell, Thomas: The Squire of Alsatia .
Pearse. Nancy Cotton. "Mary Pix. Restoration Playwrightpw Restoration and 18th Century Theatre Reseaich . XV.l, 1976.12-23.- ;
Writers, Women - Rediscovered - Conditions of; Marriage - as Enuapment; Love. Romantic
Overview c.
Pix, Mary. q
Pearse. Nancy Cotton. "Elizabeth Cary. Renaissance Playwrightw T e r n Studies in Literature and Language. XVIII.4,1977.601-08.
' Writers. Women - Rediscovered - Conditions of. Z
Caq. Elizabeth: The Tragedie of Mariam, The Faire Queene of Jewry.
Root. Robert L Jr. "Aphra Behn. Arranged Marriage, and Restoration Comedy." Women and bterature . V.1.1977. 3-14.
-
Marriage - as Economic Necessity - and Equality/Mutuality - and Male Authority; Adultery; Literary Tradition - Women's; Images of Women - Submissive Wife; b v e , Romantic.
Behn, Aphra: The Faced Marriage , w, The Jealous Bridgegroom ; The Town Fop, w, Sir Timothy Tawdrey ; The FdsiCount, w , A New Way to Play an Old Game ; Sir Patienr Fancy,; The Lucky Chance, w, The Alderman's Bargain ; Centlime. Susanna: Love at a Venture ; Hook, Lucyle: She Ventures and He Wins ; Manley, Mary Delariviere: The h t Lover, w , The Jealous Husband ; Pix, Mary: The Spanish Wives ; The Innocent Mistress.
Spivack. Charlotte. "The Duchess of Malfi: A Fearful Madness," J w d of Women's Studies in -
85
e seventeenth Century Dram
Lrterature ,I.2, 1979. 122-32. C --
, Madness, Womeaand; Power. Female; Independence. Female: Violence agains~ Women. L +
P
Webster, John: The Duchess of M a . .
3 8 . Stanton, Do- C. "Power or Sexuality: The Bind of Corneille's Pulcherie." Women and '
9 Lrterarzug . I (New Series). 1980, 236-47. --
Power. Female - '~ack ok Sexuality. Female; Power. Male; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Marriage - and Male Authority; French Literature, Women and.
Corneille, Pierre: Pufcherie . .
X. SEYENTEENTH CENTURY CROSS-GENRE a _ _
r - \
d
149. Aers, David and Bob Hodge. "'Rational Burning': Milton on Sex and Marriage," Milton , Studies. XIII. 1979. 3 3 3 .
Marriage - and Male Authority - and EqualityIMutuality; ~iV&e; Sexuality. Male; Reason vs. Passion; Religion. Women and - hitanism; Class Position, Women's; ,
Prnages of Women - Intellectual Inferior - Submissive Wife. & b
4 ' Rose and Poetry ;
P Milton, John: Paradise h t ; The Doctrine and Discipline ofDivorce ; Tetrachwdon ; Christian Doctrine .
150. Carver,Larry. "AphraBehn:ThePoet'SHeartinaWoman'sBody."~hper~onLonguageand bteratwe ; XIV.4.1978.414-24. ,
8-
Writers, Women - Rediscovered - Anxiety of Authorship; Phallic Criticism; Reason vs. Passion; Anger. Female; Power. Female - Lack of; Language. Women's Use of - Irony.
/ / '
-An overview discussi~n of Aphra Behnys life and work'Prose, Poetry and
Behn. Aphra. '
15 1. Day, Robert Adarns. "Muses in the Mud: The Female Wits Anthropologically Considefed," Women's Studies . VII.3, 1980, 61-74.
Writers, Women - Conditions of (17th Century British); Literary Tradition - Women's.
'Prose, Poetry and Drama
Behn, Aphra; Carter. Elizabeth; Cavendish;Margaret; Dacier. Mme.; Dryden, John; Elstob, Elizabeth; Finch, Anne. Countess of Winchilsea; Graffigny, Mme. de; Manley,
. Mary Delariviere; Philips. Catherine; Pix, Mary; Rambouillet, Mme. de; Trotter, Catherine; Wroth, Lady Mary.
' 159. Drew-Bear, Annette. "Cosmetics and Attitudes towards Women in the Seventeenth Century," Jmnal of Popular Culture. IX.l. 1975,31-37.
~ h y P ~ a l Appearance; Images of Women - Deceiver - ash ion Plate - Narcissist -+
Whor,e - Idealized Love Object; Advice Literature; Adgtery.
Prose and Drama . e
lit
Q
- - -- - Seventeenth Cmtury Cross-Chue
Alchemist ; Sepnus ; The Deuif is an Ass ; &come. m The ugh: Delightes fw ludles, To Adorn Therr Tables. P e r m .
6&h Beauties, Banquets. Perybmes and Waters ; Tuke, Thomas. Discourse Against Painting and Tincturing of Women .
153. Gardiner, Judith Kegan. "Aphra Behn: Sexuality and ~elf-~e&ect." Women's Siudle~ , VI4.1/2. 1980,67-78.
Writers, Women - Conditions of; Love. Romantic; S e w l i e . Female; '
Androgyny; Lesbian(s) - Love Poem; Love Poetry, Women's; Imagery and' Motifs in women'; Writing - Fire - Landscape; In pendence, Female; Re-wsion - of Myth. 4 i'
Rose, Poetry and Drama
Behn, Aphra: Orwnoko, or The Ropl Slave ; The Lucky Chance, or, The Alderman's Bargain ; The Dulch Lover ; Sir Patlent Fancy ; Abdelazar ; "The Willing Misuiss"; "On Desirew; "A Letter to a Brother of the Pen in Trib"',atio$"; "Love Arm'd" ; "The Disappointment".
154. McGuire, Mary h. "Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of ~ewcas tk , on the Nature and Statusof ,
Women," ~ n t e r n a t i d J w n p l of Women's . % Studies. 1.2, 1978. 193-206. - I
, , Writers. Women - Conditions of (17th Century British); Marriage - and Male Authority; Education of Women; Physical Appearance; Images of Women - Intellectual lnferior - Su6missive Wife - Moral Inferior; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Power, Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - W o v n Wamor - Philosopher-Queen.
d
- Prose, Poetry and Drama - C _
I Cavendish, Margaret. ,
155. . Paz, Octavio, "Juana Ramirez," trans. Diane Marting. Signs, V.1, 1979, 8C-97.
- Mexican Literature, Women and; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Single Women; Poverty, Women and; Religion, Women and - Christianity; Courtly Love; Marriage - and Conflict with Creativity.
Poetry and Drama
Dg La Cruz: Sor Juana. - L
C
,156. Roberts, Josephine A. "Lady Mary Wroth's Sbrnets: A Labyrinth of the Mind." J w n a l of Women's Studies in Literature . 1.4. 1979. 319-29. 4 6
&
Love, Romantic - Desmt ive Power of; Writers, Women - Conditions OR Personae . in Women's Poetry; Power, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward. .
Prose and Poetry + - Wroth, Lady Mary: Pamphilia to Amphilanthus ; The Countess of Montgomerfs Urania .
. f - r /
Stanton, Dornna C. "The Fiction of Preciasite and the of Women," Yafe French tudies . 62,1981,107-34. - \i
Images of Women - Hysteric - Irrational Woman - Old Maid - Bluestocking/Learned Woman; Humour, Women as Objects of; ~ o t h e r j ~ o n Relationships; Images of Women, Theory of; French Literature, Women and. '
i
Prose and Drama. Overview discussion of 17th C e n w French'writing on the image of the precieuse, with more extended discussion of the works cited below -
Moliere. Jean: Icr Precieuses ~idi&es ; Pure. Abbe Michel fie: La Pretieuse ; Somaire. Badaud de: Le Dictionnaire des precieuses .
2 Woodcock, George. "Founding Mother of the English Novel: Aphra Behn," Room ofone's , Own. 11.2/3.1976.31-44.
Writers, Women - Rediscovered - Conditions of.
Prose and Poem b
Behn, Aphra: Love Letters between a Nobleman and His Sister ; The Court of the King of Bantam ; The Adventures of the' Black M y ; The Unfwunate Happy w y ; The Histwy of [he Nun, w The Fair Vow- Brenker ; The Nun, or The Perpv'd ~ e a u t ~ ; The
, Far Aft, w The Amowcs of Prince Tarquin and Miranda ; The Wandering Beauty ; Orwnoko, w The Royal Slave ; The Widow Ranter.
h
XI. EIGHTJCENTH CENTURY PROSE
159. Barter: Beverly. "Grace Growden ~ a l l o w a ~ : Survival of a Loyalist. 1778-79." Frontiers. 111.1. 1978, 62-67.
Forms, Non-Canonic.1- Dia.ries/Joilrnals; Anger, Female;. Independence. Female; Mother/Daughter Relationships; &lonialism, Women and.
Galloway, Grace Growden: "Diary of Grace Growden Galloway". 0
160' Boos, Florence and William Boos. " ~ a t h a r i n ~ Macaulay: Historian and Political Reformer." . - internahonal J w n a l of Women's Studies. 111.1, 1980.49-65. /
.Political Activism, Women and; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Education of Women; Forms, Non-CanonicaJ - LenerS.
Macaulay. Catharine: The History of England ; Letters on Education .
C
161. Brownley. Martine Watson. "'The Purest and Most Gentle Portion of the Human Species': Gibbon's Portrayals of Women in the Decline and Fall ." South Atlantic Quanerly . LXXVIl.l, 1978.1-14.
Images of women - Virtuous Woman - Intellectual ~nfe'rior - Moral Inferior; Sexuality, Female - and the Double Standard.
Gibbon, Edward: The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.
162. Clancy. Pamcia A. "Mme. Leprince de Beaumont: Founder of Children's Literature h France." Australian Journal ofFrench Studies, XVI.2.1979.281-87. -
Writers. Women - Rediscovered - Conditions of; Revision - of Critical Tradition; Education of Women; Feminist Pedagogy; Didactic Literature; French Literature.
- Women and.
Beaumont, Jeanne Marie Leprince de: Le Magasin des Enfants ; Nouvemt ~ d ~ a r r n Francais ; Civan, R i de Bungo ; Le Magasin des Pmtvres, des Artisom, des Domesm~que~. et des Gens de Campngne ; L.e Magasm des Addescents ; Le Mentor Maderne ; Beauty and the Beast (Za Belle et la Bete).
163. Copeland, Edward W. "Money in the Novels of Fanny Burney." Studies in the Novel. VIII.1. 1976.24-37.
Money, Women and; Marriage - as Economic Necessity; Class Position Women's; Writers, Women - Conditions of (17th Century British).
a e y , Famy: Eveha ; Cecilia ; CamiIla ; The Wonderer, or Female Di&dties . -- --
164. Cutting. Rose Marie. "A Wreath for Fanny BMey's Last Novel; The Wonderer's &ntribution to Women's Studies," CLA Jwnul , XX.1.1976.57-67.
I
Sex Roles - Rejection of; Political Activism. Women and; one^: women and; Work, Women and; Artist Woman as; Independence, Female; Didactic Literature.
Burney , Fanny: The Wanderer, w Female Diflculties . a
165. Cutting, Rose Marie. "Defiant Women: The Growth of Feminism in Fanny Burney's Novels." Srudies in English Literature. XWI.3.1977.519-30. s
Independence. Female; Money. Women and; Power, Female - Lack of; Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Wark, Women &d - as Economic Necessity.
Burney. Fanny: Evelim ; Cecilia ; Camilla ; The Wanderer, w Female Difficulties. 0
w
166. Dc Magnin, Peggy Karnuf. "Rousseau's Politics of Visibility." Diacritics, - . V.4.1975.51-56
3 Power. Female - Lack of; Images of Women - Other - Moral.Inferior; Public and Private, Separation af; French I$erature. Women and
. .L, - Rousseau, Jean-Jacques: Discwse on Inequality ; Letter to d' Alembert ; Essay on the Origin of language .
- 167. Denton, Ramona. "Anna HOG and Richardson's &bivalent Artistry in Clarissa ," Phildogical Quarterly. LVIII.1, 1979, 53-62. \'\
Marriage - Arranged - 2nd Equality/Mutuaiity - and Woman's Fulfillment; . ' Independence, Female; Love, Romantic - Destructive Power of; Family, Women
and - and Parental Authority.
Richardson. Samuelflarissa . I
168. Doody, Margaret Anne. "Deserts. Ruins and Troubled Waters: Female Dreams in Fiction and the Development of the Gothic Novel." Genre. X.4.1977.529-72. //'
/
Rationality. Male; Sexuality. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Gothic. Female; Madness, Women and; Imagery and Motifs in Wonien's Writing - Dreams
. - Enclosure - Landscape - Houses - Labyrinths: Male Characters in Women's Writing; Intuition. Female; Anger, Female; Identity. Female; Public and Private, Separation of.
4
0
Eighteenth Centug -- - -
9
Prose
Barker, Jane: Love Intrigues ; A patch work Screen f i the Ladies ; Burney , Fanny: Cecilia ; Camilla ; Haywood, Eliza: The History of Miss Betsy Thcughtless ; Lee, Soph~a: The 8ecess ; Lennox. Charlotte: The Female Qttixo~e ; MacKenzie Henry: The Man of Feeling ; Pope, Alexander! Elasa to Abelard ; Radcliffe. Ann: The Castles of Athlrn and Dunbayne ; A Sicilian R m n c e ; The Italian, or the Confessional of the Black Penitents ; Reeve. Clara: Old English Baron ; Richardson. Samuel: Sir Chwles
" Grandison ; Scott, Sir Walter: The Bride of lnmrnerrnow ; Smith. charlotte: Emmelrnv ; Desmond . ..
-. Dunn, Susan "Education and Seduction in Les Liaisons Dangereuses ," Symposium . XXXI V.2, 1980,125-37.
Education of wornin; . Seduction; Sexuality, Female; Power, Female - Lack of; Love. Romantic; Aging. Women and; Reader, - Woman as; French hterature. Women and.
C .
Laclos, Choderlos de: Les Liaisons Dangereuses ; De I'educatrort des femme~ . •‹
Ellis, Katherine. "Charlotte%ith's Subversive Gothic," Feminist Studies, III.3/4, 1976, 51-55.
Gothic. Female; Family, Women and - and Parental Authority; Class Position, - Women's; Marriage - Arranged - as Economic Necessity; Love. Romantic.
- v / Smith. Charlotte: ~esmond ; Celeslina . :g-
li
Harvey. A. D. "Clarissa and the Puritan Tradition." Essays in Crirrcism . XXVIII. 1. 1978. ,/ 38-51.
Images of Women - Virgin - Fallen Woman - Sexually Devouring Woman; Sexualit), Female - and the Double Standard; Sexuality, Male; Advice Literature; Chasut). Female; Religion, Women and - Puritanism; Violence against Women.
L
Richardson. Samuel: Clarissa . 2 - /'
Hirsch. Marianne. "A Mother's Discourse: Incorporation and Repetition in La Prmcesse de Cleves ," Yale French Studies, 62, 1981.67-87.
Revision - of Critical Tradition; " Freudian Theory, Relation to Women's Writing; MotherLDaughter Relationships; Identity. Female; Love, Romantic - Destructive Power of; Independence, Female; Language. Women's Use of - C p u n g a New
aD- Discourse; French Literature. Women and. ?
Lafayette. Marie, Mme de: La Princesse de Cleves . I *
Kelly, G. D. "Godwin, Wollstonecraft. and Rousseau." Women and bteratwe . 111.2, 1975,
Eighteenth Century Prose . . L - - - --
Reason vs. Passion; MaleIFemale Relationships; French Literature. Women and. L
Godwin. William: H e e t w d , w The New Man of Feeling ; Roweau, ~ean-~ac~ues: Emile ; Lo Reine Fanzasque ; Wollstonecraft, Mary: A Vindication of the Rights of Woman ; ~etters'to Irnlay ; Maria, w the Wrongs of Woman ; Letters Written During a Short Residence in Sweden, Norway and denmark . . ,, .3
Kelly. Gary. "Amelia Opiey~ady Caroline Lamb, and haria Edgeworth: Official, and Unofficial Ideology." Ariel . XII.4. 1981. 3-24. .s
Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Heroine's Death as Closure - Subtext; Literary Tradition - Women's; Subculture. Female; Sentimental Fiction; Male/Female Relationships; Didactic Literature.
Edgeworth, Maria: "Ennui"; "Vivian"; "The Absentee"; Lamb, Lady Caroline: Glenarvon ; Graham Hamilton ; Opie. Amelia: Father and Daughter ; Adeline Mowbray.
m
Kolodny. Annette. "Tuming the Lens on 'The Panther Captivity': A Feminist Exercise in Practical Criticism," Critical Inquiry, VhI.2.1981.329-45.
/
Images of Women - Moral Custodian; Sentimental Fiction; Nature, Women and; - Captivity Narratives; Masculinity. ,
Panther. Abraham: "The Panther Captivity".
&
~eGaies. Marlene. "The Cult of Womanhood in Eighteenth-Century Thought," Eighteenth- Century Studies, X.1.1976.21-39.
- Cult of True Womanhood; Chastity. Female; Emily, Women and - and Parental Authority; Mamage and Male Authority - Arranged - as Economic Necessity; Love. Romantic; Images of Women - Virtuous Woman; Sentimental Fiction; Religion. Women and - Christianity; Power, Male; Sexuality. Female - Male Fear of; Class Position. Women's; French Literature. Women and.
Laclos, Choderlos de: Les Liaisons Dangereuses ; Richardson, Samuel: pamela ; -
Clarissa ; Rousseau. JeaxyJaques: La Natvelle Helaise ; Ernile ; Sade, Marquis De. '
McAlexander, Patricia Jewell. "The Creation of the Amen& Eve: The Cultural Dialogue on the Nature and Role of Women in Late Eighteenth-Century America," Early American Lrterature . IX.3.1975.252-66.
Cult of True Womanhood; Advice Literature; Images of Women - Moral Custodian; Reason vs. Passion; Sentimental Fiction; Adultery; Love, Romantic; Education
. -
of Women. L
Godwin, William: A n Enquiry Concerning ~ditica.1 lustid and trs 1n.juenre on b'mw . and Happiness ; Memoirs of Mary Wdlstonecraj ; *the. Johann: The S a r o w ~ qf Ymng Werther ; Gregory. John: A Father's Legacy r g ~ i s D y ; Kenrick. Wtllnrn: The Whde Duty of Wuman ; Murray. Judith Sargent: The Gleaner A Mluellanecw Praduction ; Neal, James k: Education and Genius of the Female Sex ; Richardson. Samuel: Clarissc ; Rousseau, Jean-Jacques: La Nacvelle Helase ; Emile ; Rush. Benjamin: "Of the Mode of Education Proper in a Republic"; Wollstonecraft, Man : A Vindication of the Rights of Woman .
. 178. McMullen, Lorraine. "Frances Brooke's Early Fiction." Canudlan Drercuure . 84. 1980. 3 1-41
Literary Tradition - Women's; Sentimental Fiction; L v e , Komanuc; Indeperidence. Female.
'P Brooke. Frances: The History of Lady Mia Mandeville . n
* I
< \ ,+--
179. May. Gita. " ~ a d a r n e de Sue1 and Stendhal: A Case of Grudging Recognixion." W'umen and Literature, VI.2.1978, 14-24.
r
Writers. Women - Conditions of; Phallic Criticism; Images of Women - Bluestocking/Learned Woman; French Literature, Women and.
Stael. Mme. de.
180. Miller, Nancy K. "The Exquisite Cadavers: Women in hghteenth-Ccnrup Ficuon." D~acrtrrc~ . V.4, 1975, 37-43.
Images of Women - Dead Woman - Other - Virgin; Violence against Women; Sexuality, Female - Male Fear of; Chastity. Female; French literature. Women and
Laclos, Choderlos de: Les Liaisons Dangereuses ; Richardson. Samuel. Clarrssa ; Pamela
181. Miller, Nancy K. "Female Sexuality and Narrative Structure in Lu NouveNe Helase and Le, Liaisons Dangereuses ," Signs, 1.3. 1976. 609-38. /
Seduction; Chastity. Female; Sexuality. Female; Death. Women and. Adulrcn , FatherDaughter Relationshipi; Self, Divided; Sexualit). Male. l a&. Komanlrr '
C
Destructive Powef of; Images of Women - Fallen Woman - V m m ; Cnua l School3 Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - Smcturalism/Post-Suucturahsm; French Literature. Women and.
-
Laclos, Choderlos de: Lej h a i m Dsngereuses ; Roucseau. Jean-Jacques: Lc Narvellr Heloise .
lh.; , P c ~ r r a W o r r s . ' TRc Pregnant Pam&: Chracwizatian and Popular Medical Anitudes in the hphtcenth CXntup." Eq&eetifh Cenfwy Silidtes . XIV.4.1981,432-51.
i
- Rcgnmq/(Jlildbirth; W t g . Fcmalc; MoQerhood; Sexuality. Female - Wanen's Amhvalcnm toward; Advicc brtrature; Images of Women - Invalid - Hysttnc. ,
s df 18th Century medial writings, espeaally midwifery manllsls conaim dlwrpn K x h a r h . Samuel: Pamela ; Smolletr. Tobias: The Adventures ofperegrine Pickle ; Stcmc, iauricacm: The Li* aJrd Opnionr oflrisrnvn S h a d y , Gedernan .
*
1 h-4 Pmve). Mar\. -1dedogy and The Mysteries of Llddpho .' dr@icism . XXI.4.1979.307-30.
Cult of TNC Womanhood; Reason VL Passion; Gothic. Female; Power. Mde; PUNK and Pnwc. Stpsraticm ol; Monty. Women and; Power, Female; Imager); and Motifs in Women's Writinp - H u w s ; Class Position. Women's. =!
&dcliffc. Ann: The Mpcrtes of Uddpho .
l b j! Kaaphorsr. Madelcine 8. 'Adclc Vcnw Sophie: The Well-Educated wornan of Mme de \ .
Genlls.' Rtca Owvcrstrg St;rdres , L;r;IV,l, 1978.41-50.
Exmum of Women; Childhood; Class Position. Women's; French Literame. W m c n and
Gcnlts. Caroline-Stephanie: Adele er Theadore ool Lerrres w I'Edurd~on ; Rousseau, ;can-Jacques: Emiie .
1 SQ Roberts. ktrc B. 'Sophu lm's The Recess (1785): The Ambivalence of Female Gothi'cism." A - l a m x h u q r Srudrrs rn Engilsh : V1,3/4.1978.68-82.
Wit, Female; hapcry and Motifs in Women's writing - Enclosure - Escape - r'urruii; k k R d e s .
h e , Sophia: The Rcces . --
. - 2 Eighteenth Century Prose
187. Rdberts, Bene B. "Marital Fears and Polygamous Fantasies in Eliza Parsons' Mysterrm ,.
Warning ." J w n a l of Popular Culture. XII.1.1978.42-51. - Gothic, Female; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing Subtext; Male Charabters in Women's Writing; * Marriage - as Economic Necessity - and Woman's Fulfillment; Family, Women and - aqd Parental Authority.
- Parsons, Eliza: The Mysterim Warning ; Radcliffe. Ann: The Mysterres oj-'Uddpho ; Walpole, Horace: The Castle of Otranto .
Rogers, Katharine M. "Sensitive Feminism vs. ~onventional Sympathy: Richardson and Fielding on Women." Novel . IX.3.1976.25670.
Femiqism. ~ r e ~ w e n t i e t h Century - Influence on Men's Writing; Mamage; Chastity. Female; Friendships, Female; Single Women; Independence, Female; Education of Women; Love. Romantic; Seduction; lmages of Women - Sex Object - Submissive Wife - Intellectual Inferior.
Fielding, Henry: T& Jones ; Amelia ; Jonathan Wild ; Joseph Andrews ; Richardson, Samuel: Pamela ; Clarissa ; Sir Charles Grandison*.
Rogers. Katharine M,. "Inhibitions on Eighteinth-Century Women Novelists: Elizabeth Inchbald and Charlotte Smith," Eighteenth- Century Studies , XI.1, 1977.63-78.
, Sentimental Fiction; Chastity. Female; ~du&tion of Women; Publishing. Womcn - and; Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship.
Bumey. Fanny; Inchbald, Elizabeth: A Simple Story ; Richardson. Samuel; Smith, "
Charlotte: Emmeline ; The Banished Man ; Marchmont ; Desmond ; The Old Manor House ; Montalbert ; Wollstoneaaft, Mary.
Rogers, katharine M. "Sensibility and Feminism: The Novels of Frances Brooke," Genre . X1.2. 1978.159-71.
Sentimental Fiction; Love,_R"ornantic; Mamage - and Courtship - and Equalityhfutuality; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Writers. Women - as Subjects of Women's Writing; Independence, Female.
Brooke, Frances: The IHiszoryof Emily Montague ; The Excursron ; Richardson, Samuel.
Rogers. Katharine M. "Dreams and Nightmares: Male Characters in the Feminine Novel of the Eightmth Century," Women and Literntzue . I1 (New Series). 1981,9-24.
Male Characters in Women's Wiiting; Marriage - and Equality/Mutuality - and Male Authority; Love, Romantic; Public and Private. Separation of; Masculinity.
b
- -
-
96 , '
Bennet. Agnq Maria: De Valcacrt ; Brooke, Frances: The History of Em.lyMontague ;O
' Bumey, Fanny: Cecilia ; Evelina ; Camilla ; The Wanderer, w Female Difficulties ; Fielding, Sarah: The ~dventuresof avid Simple ; Inchbald. Elizabeth: A Simple Story ; Lee. Hamet: "The German's Tale: Kruitzner"; Lee, Sophia: The Receb ; Lemox, *
Charlotte: The Female Quixote ; Radcliffe. Ann: The Mysteries of Uddpho ; The Italian, w the Conjksional of the B1al.k Penitents ; Smith. Charlotte: The Old M a w Hacse ; Desmond ; Marchinont ; The Young Phihopher ; Sheridan, Frances: Memoirs of Miss Sidnemdiilppk.
& *
Runte, Roseann. "Dying Words: The Vocabulary of Death in Three Eighteenth-Century . English and French Novels." Canadian Review of Compative Literature. eVI.4.1979,360-68.
Death. Women and; Images of Women - Dead Woman; Sexuality. Female; Love, Romantic - Destructive Power of; French Literature. Women and.
~&los, Choderlos de: Les Liaisons Dungereuses ; Richardson, Samuel: Clariw ; Rousseau, Jean-Jacques: La Noorvelle Heloise .
Staves, Susan. " E v e l i ~ : or, Female Difficulties." Madern Phildogy , LXXIII.4,1976;368-81.
Chastity. Female; Self-abnegation; Power. Female - Lack of; Violence against Women; Sltire. Women's Use of.
Bumey, Fanny: Evklina ; Cecilia ; Camilla ; The Wanderer, or F e d e Dificulties ; Richardson, Samuel: Sir Charles Grandison .
Staves. Susan. . "British Seduced Maidens," Eighteenth- Century Studies, XIV.2,1980/81. 109-34.
Seduction; Sentimental Fiction; Love, Romantic; Father/Daughter Relationships; Class Position, Women's; Family. Women and - and Parental Authority; Death, Women and; Chastity, Female; Marriage - Arranged - and Equality/Mutuality;
7 Images of Women - ~ b l e n Woman - Victim.
Bage. Robert: Barham Downs ; Cleland, John: The Memoirs of Fanny Hill ; Defoe, Damel: Mdl Flanders ; Goldsmith, Oliver: The Vicar of Wakefield ; Griffith. Elizabeth:
A
The History of l a d y Barton ; Inchbald. Elizabeth: A Simple Story ; Nature and Art ; Kelly, Hugh: Merndrs of a Magdalen ~MacKenzie Henry: The Man of Feeling ; Opie, Amelia: Father and Daughter ; Reeve. Clara: The Two Mentws ; Richardson, Samuel: Pamela ; Ciarissa ; Rowson. Susanna Haswell: Charlotte Temple ; West Jane: The Advantages of Education .
Stock, Phyllis H. "The Theory and Practice of Women's Education in Eighteenth Century France," Eighteenth-Century iife .I1.4, 1976.79-82.
Education of Women; Family. Women and - as Woman's Sphere; Images of Women
UgbteWth Century Yrosc
-
- ~ n t e l l & a l Inferior; French hterarure. Women and.
Taylor, Anne Robinson. "This Beautiful h d y Whose Words He Speaks: Defoc and His Eemalc Masqaerades." Women and Literature : V1.2,1978,25-34.
- - C
Masculinity; Sexuality.Male; Sexuality.Female; Money.Womenand.
Defoe, Daniel: M d l Flanders ; Roxana .
Todd. Janet "Reason and Sensibility in Mary Wollstonecraft's The Wrongs of Wwnan ." Rontiers . V.3, 1980, 17-20.
Reason vs. Passion; Love.-Romantic - Destructive Power of; Didactic hteraprc.
Wollstonecraft, Mary: 'Maria, tx the Wrongs of Woman ; A Vrndlcatron of the Rrght~ of Woman. .
Todd, Janet "Posture and Im wture: 'The Gothic Manservant in Ann Radcliffe's The Itahan ," Women and Litwature . I1 ( N N Sefi.e$, 1981.25-38. t
Male Characters in thic,Female; Masculinity; Androgyn); s Position. Women's,
Confessional of the Black Peruleni~ .
's Mask of Reason in A Vrndrcatlon of the Rrght~ o/ Woman ," Dalhwi
Writers. Women - Addressing Male Readers; Images of Women - Intellectual Infenor; Reason vs. Passion.
Wollstonecraft, Mary: A Vindication oft he Rights of Woman .
Whatley, Janet "L'Age equivoque: Marivaux and the Middle-Aged Woman," Uruversrty of +
Twonto Quarterly. XLVI.1.1976.68-82.
Aging. Women and; Sexualit).. Female - and the Double Standard; Phvslcal Appeaqce; Renunciation; French Literature. Women and.
=be - Marivaux. Pierre: L-e Spectateurfianccus ; U p fiom the Cmntry (LP Paysan parvenu).
Williams. David. "The Fate of French Feminism: Boudier de Viltemen's Amr DeJ Femme5 ,: &ghteenth- Century Studres , XIV.l. 1980. 37-55.
Advice bterature; Cult of True WomBnhood; Images of Women - M o ~ d CasEcAiztn: - Education of Women; French Literature, Women and.
Boudier de Villemert, PierreJoseph: L' Ami des FeHmes ; Rousseau, Jean-Jacques: Emile .
, 202. Williamson, Marilyn L. "Who's Afraid of Mrs. Barbauld? The Blue Stockings and Feminism,"
international Journal of Women's Studies, 111.1. 1980.89-102.
7 Feminism, PrtTwentieth Century - Influence on women's Writing; Images of Women - Bluestocking/Learned Woman; Revision - of Stereotypes; " Education of Women; Advice Literature; Marriage - and Male Authority; Independence, Female; Class
-
Position. Warnen's; Writers, Women - Conditions of (18th Century British); Literary Salons. Women and.
Barbauld. Anna Laetitia: "The Rights of Women"; "To a Lady with Some Painted Flowers"; Early Lessonsfi Children ; Chapone, Hester: Letters on the Improvement of the Mind, Addressed to a Young Lady ; A Matrimonial Creed Addressed by M i s Mulso to Mr. Richardson ; Edgeworth. Maria: Lettersfbv Literary tadies ; More, Hannah: Bar Bleu ; Strictures on the Maiern System of Female Education ; Cwlebs in Search of a Wifi .
203. Wilson, Bruce L "'Sex and the Single Girl' in the Eighteenth Century: An Essay on Marriage and the Puritan Myth," Journal of Women's Studies in Literature .1.3,1979.195-219.
Single Women; Class Position. Wonen's; Money. Women and; Marriage; Isolation of Women; Poverty. Women and; Family, Women and; Religion, Women and - Puritanism; Self-realization; Power. Female - Lack of; Sexuality. Female - Male Fear of; Power. Male.
Defoe, Daniel: M d l Flanders ; Richardson, Samuel: Clarissa . -
w
20.1. Woodcock. ~ e b r ~ e . "Mary Manley and Eliza ~aywodd ," R m of One's Own .11.4.1977.49-65.
Writers. Women - Redihvered; Literary Tradition - Women's. L
Haywood. Eliza: The Hrstory of Miss Betsy Thoughtless ; The History of Jemmy and Jenny Jessom y ; Lave in Excess ; The Mercenary Lover ; h e l i a ; Bath Intrigues ; Memoirs of a Certain Island AdBcent to the Kingdom of Utopia ; The CM of Caramania ; Eovaai, Princess of Ljzveo ; The Femaie Spectator ; A Letter fiom H - G - G. Esq. ; The Virtuacs Villager, w Virgin's Victwy ; The Fwtunate Fmndlings ; Manley, Mary Delariviere: Memoirs of the Lifi of Mrs. Manley ; The L a Lover, or, The Jealous Husband ; Almyu ; A Stage- Cwch J w n e y to E w e r ; The Secret History of Queen , &ah and the Zurasians ; The New Atalantis ; The Power of Lave ; The Fdr Hypr i t e . P
Q
XII. EIGHTEENTH CENTURY POETRI
' . - Aers, D. "William Blake and the' Dialectics of Sex," ELH. XLIV.3, 1977, SIX-14.-
Sexuality. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Alienauon, Female; Wort,, Women and. - Blake. William: Visions of the Daughters of Albion ; The Four Zrrar ; Europe ; Milton ; -
Jerusalem.
Applegate, Anne. "Philis Wheatley: Her Critics and Her Conuibution," Negro Amerrcan Literature Forum. IX.4,1976,123---26.
Black Women - Writers. Conditions of - Writers, Rediscovered; Slavery; Writers. Women - Conditions of - Rediscovered.
Overview
Wheatley. Phillis. 3 8
' 6 Cowell, Pattie. "Jane Colman Turell: 'A Double Birth'." 13th Moon, TV.1, 1978, 59-66.
Writers, Women - Conditions of - Anxiety of Authorship; Father/Daughter Relationship; Religion, Women and - Puritanism; Domestic Poetry.
Turell. Jane Colman. -
208. Delaney, Sheila. "Sex and Politics in Pope's Raje of the Lcck ," English Studles In Canada , 1.1. 1975.46-61.
Class Position. Wonlen's; '~mages of Women - Narcissist - Coquette - Sex Object; Images of Women, Theory of.
Pope, Alexander: The Rape of the Lock ; Moral Essay 11 ; Windsor Forest .
209. Fox, Susan. "The Female as Metaphor in William Blake's Poetry." Critlcal Inqutry . 111.3. 1977, 507-19.
Images offwomen - Victim - Terrible Mother - Castrating Bitch; Passivity, Female; Re-vision_-of Critical Tradition; Power. Male - and the Soclal Order.
Blake. William: Aphorisms on Man ; Songs of Innocence ; The Book ofThel ; Milton ; Jerusalem ; Europe ; The Four Zoas ; Visions of the Daughters of Albion ; Arnenca .
- I
210. Giddings. Paula. "Critiel Evaluation of PhilPs Wheatley." 3w-bn StataCdkge &-v iew. W.1, -
1976.74-81. , o
tr /
Black Women - writers. Conditions of: Revision - of Critical Tradition; Slavery; Racism; Writers, Women - Conditions of (18th Century American).
Wheatley. Phillis.
211. Gubar. Susan. "The ~ e d e Monster in Augustan Satire." s i b , IU.2.1977.380-94.
Images of Women - Unclean Woman - Deceiver - Coquette - Animal - Object - Fallen Woman - Whore - Terrible Mother; Power, Female - Male Fear of; Sexuality, Female - Male Fear of; Male/Female Relationships; Misogynist Tracts.
Arbuthnot, John. Alexander Pope, Jonathan Swift, John Gay, Thorps Parnell, and Robert Harley: Memdrs of the Extraordinary Life, Wwks, and Discoveries of Martinus Scriblerus ; Pope, Alexander: "Epistle to a Lady"; Dunciad ; Swift, Jonathan: Cassinus and Peter ; Strephon and Chloe ; " A Beautiful Young Nymph Going to Bed"; The Battle of the B a h ; "The Lady's Dressing Room".
212. ~uddlesbn. Eugene L "Early American Verse Satire on Women." University of Michigan Papers in Women's Studies ,.I.4, 1975, 85-94.
t B g
r
Images of Women - Coquette - Shrew - Fashion Plate - Narcissist - 3
Bluestocking/Learned Woman; Humour. Women as Objects of; ~ i&nis t '~ rac t s ; Education of Women; Marriage - and Courtship - and Woman's Fulfillment; Work, Women and - Domestic Labour; , Power. Female; Popular Culture - Magazines.
4
Overview of 18th Century American satirical magazine verse by men and women, mainly anonymous
, 9
213. Nussbaum. Felicity. "Pope's 'To a Lady' and the Eighteenth-Century Woman," Phildogical Quarterly, LIV.2,1975.444-56.
Images of Women - Coquette - Narcissist - Bluestocking/Learned Woman - Virtuous Won-+
a
Pope. Alexander: "Epistle to a Lady".
214. Wilcoxon. Reba. "Mirrors of Men's Fears: The Court Satires on Women." Restoration Studies in English Literary Culture 1666- 1700 ,111.2.1979.45-51.
Humour, Women as Objects of; Images of Women - Animal - Sexually Devouring Woman - Unclean Woman - Whore - Lesbian as Woman in Need of a Man; Misogynist Tracts; Masculinity; Sexuality. Female - Male Fear of.
*. b
- - -- -- Q@eeu€LCenhtry-
B
Anonymous: "The Ladies March " ; "A Panegyrick Upon Cundums" ; Be@. Apha: "A Letter to a Brother of the Pen in Tribulation"; Dorset, -: "Countess of Dorehestern; * Sedley, -: "In the Fields of Lincoln's Innw; Wilrnot, John, Earl of Rochester: "The Fallw: .
%. "Sodom"; "On the Women About Town"; Wilson. John Harold: "On the Ladies of the Court". ,
XIII. EIGHTEENTH CENTURY DRAMA
\ 215. Conroy, Peter V.. Jr. " ~ a r i v a u x ' ~ Feminist Polemic: lo Cdonie ." Eighteenth-Century L1/e.
VI.1,1980. 43-66.
Feminism, ~refwent ie th Century - Influence on Men's Writing; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Class Position, Women's; French Literature, Women and.
Marivaux, Pierre: La Cdonie . - d
216. Dammers, Richard H. "The Female Experience in the Tragedies of Nicholas Rowe." W m e and Literature. VI.1.1978.28-35.
Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment - and Equality/Mutuality; Revision - of Stereotypes.
Rowe. Nicholas: The Ambitious Stepmother ; The Tragedy of Jane Shore ; The R o d Convert ; The Fdr Penitent . -
217. Mattes. Eleanor. "'The Female Virtuoso' in Early Eighteenth Century ~ n ~ l i s h hama," Women and Literature. 111.2. 1975. 3-9.
Images of Women - Bluestocking/Learned Woman - Career Woman; Education of Women.
D
Centlivre, Susanna: A Bdd stroke fw a Wife ; The Basset- Table ; Moliere. Jean: Les Femmes Savantes ; Wright Thomas: The Female Vertwrso .
218. Wood, John A. "The emal ale Eunuch': An Eighteenth-Century Ideal." McNeese Review, XXVI, 1979/80.40-46.
* Images of Women - Virtuous Woman - Submissive Wife; Images of Women, Theory of; Chastity. Female; Sexuality, Female - and the Double Standard.
Cibber, Colley: Love's Last Shijt ; Ste?le, Richard: Thet Consciou Lovers ; Wycherley, William: The Cuunfry Wifi .
G
XIV. EIGHTI$ENTH CENTURY MISCELLANEOLIS
-
219: Koon, Helene. "Eliza Haywood and the Female Spectator ," Huntington Library Quanerly . 0 XLII.l, 1978,43-55.
> Advice Literature; Education of Women; Chastity. Female; Marriage - and Courtship - and Woman's Fulfillment; Public and Private, Separation of; Publishing, Women and.
Discussion of The Female Spectator, periodical published by Eliza Haywood. first published 1744.
Haywood, Eliza.
XV. EIGHTEENTH CENTURY CROSS-GE4R.E
-
~ e & . Deborah. "Salonieres and Literary Women in Late Eighteenth-Century Berlin," New German Critique. 14.1978.97-108.
Writers, Women - Conditions of; _ Class Position, women's; Education of Women; Marriage - and Courtship; Subculture, Female; Jewish Women, Writing by and about; ' Literary Salons. Women and.
Prose. Poetry and Drama
Martin, Wendy. "Women and the American Revolutior?," Emly American Literature. XI.3, 197U77.322-35. --
Militarism, Women and; Forms, Non-Canonical - Letters - Diaries/Journals; Reawn vs. Passion; Political Activism, Women and; Images of W o y n - Virtuous Woman
Prose and Poetry
Adams, Abigail; Bleecksr. Anne Eliza: "Written on the Retreat From Burgoyne"; The Histpy of Maria Kittle ; Gutridge, Molly; Murray, Judith Sargent: The Gleanet': A Miscellaneacs Praductiofi .
Palomo, Dolores. "A Woman Writer and the Scholars: A Review of Mary Manley's Reputation." W h e n and Literature, VI.1.1978,36-46.
Phallic Criticism; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Sexuality. Female; * Satire, Women's Use of.
Review of Manley criticism. Prose and Drama
Manley. Mary Delariviere. ".P
Weales, Gerald. "The Quality of Mercy, or Mrs. Warren's Profession." Georgia Review . XXXI11.4, 1979. 881-94.
'3 e2
Writers. Women ' Rediscovered; Satire. Women's Use of; Pol i t id Activism, Women and
Poetry and Drama
Warren, Mercy Otis: The Adulateur ; The Defeat ; The Groyp. A A ,:"tical Comedy ; Pwms, ~ r a w h i c and Miscellaneour .
XVI. NINETEENTH CENTURY PROSE
Arnmons, Elizabeth. "Heroines in Uncle's Tom's Cabin ," American hterature . XLIX.2. 1977, 161-79.
Motherhood; Slavery; Feminism, PreTwentieth Century - Influence on W9men1s Writing; Cult of True Womanhood; Public and Private. Separation of; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Images of Women - Moral Custodian - Earth Mother; Revision - of Stereotypes; Religion, Women and - Christianity.
Stowe. Harriet Beecher: Uncle ~brn's Cabin .
Anderson, Bonnie. "The Writings of Catherine Gore." J w d of Popular Culture, X.2.1976, 404-23.
Cult of True Womanhood; Love, Romantic; Class Position, Women's; Maniage - and Male Authority - and$Woman's Fulfdlment; Family, Women and - as Woman's Sphere; Public and Private, Separation of; Images of Women - Moral Custodian - Submissive Wife; Male Characters in Women's Writing.
Gore, Catherine: The Diary of a Desennupe ; The Hamiltons ; Cecil ; Pin Money ; Progress and Prejudice ; The Dean's Daughter ; Mothers and Daughters ; Mrs. Arm page; or Female Domination ; The Diamond and the Pearl .
Atkinson, Colin b. and Jo Atkinson. "Sydney Owenson. Lady Morgan: Irish Pauiot and First ' Professional Woman Writer," Eire Ireland: A Jwnal of Irish Studies , XV.2, 1980, 60-90.
- Writers, Women - Conditions of; Literary Tradition - Women's; Phallic Criticism; Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Money. Women and; Political Activism, Women and; Independence, Female.
Stael, Mme. de; Fielding, Sarah; Fry, Elizabeth; Haywood, Eliza; Jameson, Anna Brownell; Norton. Caroline; Marcet, Jane; Martineau. Harriet; Owenson, Sydney. Lady Morgan: Woman, or, Ida of Athens ; The Princess, or, the Beguine ; St. Clair, or Fust Love ; The Novice of St. Dominick ; O.Donnel1, A National Tale ; Florence MacCorth y ; France ; Italy ; The QBriens and the QRahert ys: A National Tale ; . Woman and Her Master.
Auerbach, Nina. "Dickens and Dombey: A Daughter after All." Dickens Studies Annual . V , 1976.95-114.
\
Fathermughter Relationships; Public and Private. Separation of; Power. Male; Images of Women - Moral Custodian; Male Bonding; Mamage - as Ecomnic Necessity.
- -- Nineteenth CXihry Prose
Dickens. Charles: Dombey and Son
228. Auerbach, Nina. "Austen and Alcon on Matriarchy: New Women or New Wives?," Novel, X.l, 1976.6-26.
Communities of Women; Single Women; Motherhood; Power, Male; Power. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century -
I Influence on Women's Writing; Family. Women and - as Woman's Sphere; Marriage - and Conflict with Creativity; Independence, Female; Childhood.
J
Alcott, Louisa May: Little Women ; Little Men ; Joys Boys ; An Old- Fashioned Girl ; p Work A Story of Experience ; Austen. Jane: Pride and Prejudice .
229. Auerbach. Nina. "Elizabeth Gaskell's 'Sly ~avelins': Governing Women in Cranford and . Haworth,"ModernLanguageQtcarterly,XXXVm.3,1977,276-91.
Communities of Women; Poverty. Women and; ' Single Women; Independence, Female; Power. Male; Literary Tradition - Women's; Biography, Women's.
Bronte. Charlone; Gaskell, FliLabeth: Cranfwd ; The Lifi of Charlite Bronte . d .
230. Auerbach. Nina. "The Rise of the Fallen Woman," Nineteenth Century Fiction. XXXV.1.1980. 29-52. * 8
L.
Images of Women - Fallen Woman - Victim; Prostitution; Adultery; Seduction; Power, Female; Sexuality, Female - and the Double Standard; Isolation of Women; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Punishing Heroine.
Browning. Robert: The Ring and the Bmk ; Dodgson, Charles (pseud Lewis Carroll): Ahce m Wonderland ; Eliot, George: Adam Bede ; The Mill on the Floss ; Gaskell, Elizabeth: Ruth ; Hardy, Thomas: Tess of the d'Urbervilles ; Hawthorne, Nathaniel: The Scarlet Letter ; Milton. John: Paradise Last ; Tennyson, Alfred, Lord: Ld$ls of the King.
231. Auerbach. Nina. "Magi and Maidens: The Romance of the Victorian Freud," Criticd Inquiry, . VIII.2. 1981.281-300.
Images of Women - Victim - Hysteric; Power, Male; Power. Female - Male Fear of; Revision - of Stereotypes.
i
Indudes discussion orSigmund Freud's Dora. An Analusis of a Case of ~ w e h B - -
Doolittle. Hilda (H. D.): Helen in Egypt ; Du Maurier, George: Trilby ; Stoker. Bram: Dracuia ; The Lady of the Shroord : The Luir of the White Wwm ; The Jewel of Seven Stars .
- - + - -- --
Baines. Barbara. "Villette , A Feminist Novel." victbrians hwrture Iinunnl, Y. 1976. 51- 54k {Citation Inc.]
Role-Models. Female; Images of Women - Madonna - Career Woman - Coquetw - + Old Maid - Victim; Revision - of Stereotypes: Isolation of Women;
Self-realization; Independence, Female; Anbrggyny. ...I-
Bronte, Charlotte: Villette .
Bardes. Barbara Ann a.5 Suzanne Gossen "Cooper and the 'Cup and Saucer' Law: A hcu Reading of The Ways of the H o w ," American Quarterly, XXXIIS. ,1980. 499-518.
I
Xoney, Women and; Independence, Female; Images of Women - Madwoma'n - Submissixe Wife; Power, Female - Male Fear of; Fernini$m. he-Twentieth Ccntun . - Influence on Men's Writing.
Cooper, James Fenimore: The Ways of lhe Hour.
Bametl Louise K. "Jmesian Feminism: Women in 'rlaisy Miller'." Studies ~n S h m krcrron , , .
XVI.4,1979,281-87.
Sex Roles; Independence. Female; Feminism. Pre-Twentieth Centuq - lnflucncc on Men's Writing.
James, Henry: Daisy Miller.
Baruch. Uaifie Hoffman "The Feminine ~ildundsroman: Education through ~ a r n a ~ c . ~ , r&
I '%
Mussachusetts Review. XXII.2. 1981. 335-57.
Marriage - and Woman's Fulfilment - and Equality/Muuality - ac Entrapmcnr; Bi1dungsrornan;Female; Self-realization; Adultery; LDVC. Kornanllc; Scxuaht!, Female - and thc Double Standard; Education of Women; French I~tcrarurc. Women ad.
Austen, Jane: Emma ; Bronte, ~hariotte: h e E p e ; Stael. Mmc. dc: Cwlnne . t-ftot. George: Middlemarch ; Flaubert. Gustave: Madame Bovary ; James, Henry. Thc Piwtrml of a W y ; Lawrence. D. H.: Lady Chufterlefs Lover .
Belkin. Roslya "Rejects of the Marketplace: Old Maids in Charlotte Rronte's Shrriej. ." International Journal of Women's Studies . IV.l, 1981.50-66.
Single Women; Revision - of Stereotypes; Aping. Womcc and; Clau Pauuau. Women's; Power. Female - Lack of.
Bronte. Charlotte: Sjlirlcy.
108
Nineteenth Centu Prose -- f /
Poscr. Fcrmfc - bck of; ' Educqion of Women; ~ a & e - and M@e Authority - as Ecwlormc Neoasit).; Pgwer. Mile - and the Sodai Order: Narrative Strategies in W@fnts Writing - Punishing Heroine.
. & . L* U~M. Cmrpe: L h h e l ' l k ~ ~ . ,.
23h Lrgg~n, Rub S. . "A Lort Soult: ~ d r ~ without Hope in The Awakening ." Regionalism and fhe F e d & fmpgrntll~an. 111.1, 19?7,1-7.
'v Wort, W m e n and; Self-realization; KoleModels, Female; Motherhpod; Amst W-n as.
C"hopin, Kate: The A wakening ; "Oteme's Holiday"; "Cavanelle"; "Wiser than a God"; 'Thc Wood-Choppers"; "Polly'..
5
IW. - - Bcrgmum. Hamet F. 'Hew Adams'r Esther : No ~ailh' in the Patriarchy." Murkhum Review. X, Summer. W31.63-67.
k x Rdes . Power. Male; independence. Female.
2 JLi Rerkc. Jacqueline. " G t c Chopin's Call ro a Larger Awakening" Kote C h o p Newsletfcr .1.3, 1976, 1-5.
lmaga of Women - Angel in the House - Child-Woman - Ma.donna: Revision - of Stcritotypcs; Scxualiry . Ftmalc; Suicide. Women and.
Chopin. Kate: The A wakning .
24 1 Hcrhan. Josa. 'The Nunurant Fantasies of Olive Schreiner." Frontiers, IL3. 1977.8-1'1. A
Cuh of True Wom8nhood; Writers. Women - Conditions of; Motherhood; MaIllc/Fmle Relabonships; Friendships, Femle; African Literature, Women and.
Schrancr. Olrvc. Dreams ; F m M a n to Mm ; The Stwy of an A#i& Farm ; Woman and Lclbour . r
I l f =I.. . h e r . Mapc11en. "Capiruhtion: Marriage. Not Freedom - A Study of Emilia Pardo Bazan's
Mcmauu dr wr s d t c m and Galdas' Tristana ." Sympcnium . XXX.2.1976.93-109.
Indcpcndnm. Femalc: ~ & e - &d Woman's Fulfillment - md L-
Equality/Mutuality; ~ d l y . Womqn and - as Woman's sphere; Class Position. Women's; spanishb Literature, Women and. -
Galdos. Benito ~ e r e z : T r i s t ~ m ; Pardo Ekmn. Emilia: Dona Miiagras ; Memonu dr un sdteron .
243. Blake, Kathleen. "Middlemarch and the Woman Question." ~lne teen th Century Fiction , XXXI.3.1976.285-312.
Work, Women and; Identity. Female; Education of Women; Power. Fe Lack of; em in ism, PreTwentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Heroine's Mamagecas Closure.
Eliot, George: Middiemarch .
244. Blake, Kathleen. "Sue Bridehead. 'The Woman of the Feminist Movement'." Studie~ In hnglrsh Literature . XVIII.4, 1978.703-26.
New Woman, The; Sexuality, Female - Repressed - and the Double Standard; Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Men's Writing; Marriage - as Entrapment; Chastity. Female.
,
Hardy. Thomas: M e the Obscure .
245. Blake. Kathleen. "Olive Schreiner - A Note on Sexist Language and the Feminist Writer," Women and Lrterature , I (New Series), 1980,81-86.
Language, Patriarchal - and Sexual Stereotyping; Images of W h e n - Child-Woman - Object - Other; Lesbianism - Encoded; African Literature, Women and.
Schreiner, Olive: The Story of an Ajiican Farm ; From Man to Man ; Undine ; "The Buddhist's Priest's Wife"; "Three Dreams in the Desert".
246: Bogarad, Carley Rees. "The Awakening : A Refusal to Compromise," University o/'Michigan Papers in Women's Studies. 11.3, 1977. 15-31. .
Sex Roles - Rejection of; Self-realization; Artist, Wbrnan as; Sexuality, Eemalc. Motherhood - Women's Arnbivalewe toward; Isolation of Women; Imagery and
, Motifs in Women's Writing - Flying - Water. -
Chopin, Kate: The Awakening.
247. Brand. Alice Glarden. "Mary Willuns Freeman: Misanthropy as Propaganda." New Enzland Quarterly, L1,1977,83-100.
A , - .
Nineteenth Century Prose
~ a l e l ~ e m a j e Relationships; Anger, Female; Self-abnegation; Power, Female - Lack of; Single Women; Marriage * - and Courtship; Masculinity.
Freeman, Mary Wilkins: A Humble Romance and Other Stwies ; Six Trees ; A New England Nun and Other Stwies ; The Copy Cat avnd Dther Stories ; The Winning Lady and Other Stwres .
>
248. Bremer. Sidney H. "Invalids and Actresses: Howells's Duplex Imagery for American Women" -- American Literature. XLVII.4.1976.599-614.
Public and Private, Separation of; Domestic Fiction; Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Cxntury - Influence on Men's Writing; Family. Women" and; independence, Female; Images of Women - Invalid - Deceiver.
Howells, William Dean: April Hopes ; Suburban Sketches ; Mrs. Fanell ; The Stcry oja Play.
249. Bremer. Sidney H. "William &an Howells' Ingenues and the Road to Marriage." American Lterary Realism 1870- 1910, XII.1.1979.143-50.
Marriage - and Courtship; Single Women; Domestic Fiction; Family. Women and "
- as Woman's Sphere; Images of Women - American Girl; Class Position, Women's.
Howells, William Dean: Indian Summer ; The Rise of Silas Lapham ; An Open- ~ & d /--- Conspirac y ; A Hazard of N ew Fmunes ; April Hopes ; A Midern Instance .
250. Brenzo. Richard. "Beamce Rappaccini: A Victim of Male Love and Horror," American Lterature . XLVIII.2. 1976. 152-64.
Power. Female - Male Fear of; Sexuality. Female - Male Fear of; Images of Women - Sexually Devouring Woman; Self-sacrifice; Revision - of Stereotypes.
Hawthorne. Nathaniel: "Rappaccini's Daughterw
25 1. Bruce. Margaret H. "Mary Brunton (1778-1818): An assess men^" J w n a l of Women's Sttrdies *
in bteratwe , 1.1. 1979. 1-15. = a
Writers, Women - Rediscovered; Didattic Literature; Marriage; Self-sacrifice; Er ication of Women. .
Brunton. Mary: Self Contrd ; Discipline ; Emmeline .
. ? 5 2 Bush. ~6beben " ~ f l n ~ : The Emergence of a Southern- Intellectual Woman," The S ~ h e r n Review (Louisiana). XIII.2. 1977. 272-88.
a
Regionalism in Women's Writing; W riten. Women - Rediscovered - Conditions of; Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing: Slaveq.
- k n g . Grace: Monsieur. Motte ; Tales of a Time and Place
Caine, Barbara. "Sarah Ellis and 'The Women of England'." Re$actory Grrl , 17, 1979. 19-93.
- Advice Literature; Class Position. Women's; Cult of True Womanhood; Images of Women - Angel in the House - Mod Custodian - Submissive Wife; Revision - of Stereotypes; Singlewomen; Marriage; Masculinity.
Ellis. Sarah Stickney: The Women ofEngland ; The baughters of England ; The ZrvrJ o f England ; The Mtxhers of England.
w
Childers, Mary. "Thoqas Hardy. the Man Who 'Liked' Women." Crrttcrsm . XX111.4, 1981, ' 317-34.
Revision - of Critical Tradition; Images of ~ o m e i - Other - Victim - Deceiver - Madwoman; Sexuality, Male; Masculinity.
Hardy, Thomas: Jude the Obscure ; T e n of the dVrberviiles ; A Par of B k Eyes ; Two on a Tovyer ; The Woodlanders ; The Return ofthe Native ; The Mayor ofCmwbrrdge.
P 1-
Christ, Carol T. "Imaginative Constraint, Feminine Duty. and the Form of ~ h a r l o t t c ~ ~ r o n t e ' s Fiction." Wmen ' s Studies . VI.3. 1979.287-96.
"
Writers. Women - Conditions of - Anxiety of Authorship; Fernale/).eminist Aestheuc; Reason vs. Passion; Narrative Strategies in Women's Wri ring - Heroine's M a m q c a3
Closure; self-sa5fice; Renunciation.
Bronte. Charlotte: Jane E y e ; Shtrley ; Viilette '; The Professw .
+.
Crabbe. John K. "The Harmony of Her Mmd: Peacock's Emancipated Women," 'Jennesser Studies rn Literature . X X I I I . 1978.75-86.
Independence. Female; Femmism.'Pre-Twenueth Centur) - Influence on Men's Writing; Educa~onofWomen; Marriage-Arranged; Adv~cel~teraturc. Images of women - Virtuous Woman - Intellectual Infefior. -
-
Bowdler. John: "Thoughts on the Proposed Improvement of Female Mucauon". Chapone. Hester: Letters on the Improvement of the Mind. Addrpsd to a Young Lad . Gisborne. Thomas: An Inquiry rnto the Dutres of the Female Sex ; Gregory. John A Father's Legacy to His Daughrers ; Peacock. Thomas Love: Headlong Hall . Mehncwf . .
Nightmare Abbey ; Maid Marian ; Crolchet Cartle' G r f l Grange.
&
- -- Nineteenth Century Prose
Cruikshank. MargareL "Geraldine Jewsbury and Jane Carlyle." Frontiers, ?.3.1979&64. - Friendships, Female; Fonns, Non-Canonical - Letters; Writers, Women - Conditions of (19th Century British) - and Silence; Single Women; Self-sacrifice; Work. Women and - Need for Useful Occupation.
Carlyle, Jane; Jewsbury. Geraldine.
Curry; Jane. "Samantha '~astles' the Woman ~uestion or 'If God Had Meant Wirnmen Should be Nuthin' but Men's Shadders. He Would Have Made Gosts and Fantoms of 'em at Once'," Jaunal ofPopular Culture , VIII.4.1975.805-24.
Feminism, PreTwentieth Century - Influence on W~men's Writing; Humour, Women's Use of; Independence, Female; Cult of True Womanhood; Images of Women - Moral Custodian; Alcohol. Women and; Sex Roles - Rejection of.
4
Holley, Marietta: My Opinions and Betsey Bobbet's ; Sweet Cicely ; Samantha among the Brethren ; Samantha on the Woman Question ; Samantha at the Worlds F@r ; Samantha among the Cdared Fdks ; Samantha vs. M a h .
Curry, Jane. "The Ring-Tailed Roarers Rarely Sang Soprano," Frontiers, II,3,1977, 128-40. *
Humour, Women's Use of; Images of Women - Coquette - Old Maid - Sex Object - Shrew; Sexuality. Female; Revision - of Stereotypes.
Harris. George Washington: Sut Lovingoaf: Yarns Spun by a Nat'ural Born Durn'd F d ; Hooper. Johnson J.: Adventures-of Captain Simon Suggs ; Longstreet, A.B.: Georgia Scenes. .%
0
Davis. Sara deSaussure. "Feminist Sources in The Bartonians". American Literature. L4,1979, 3
570-87.
Feminism. Prefwentieth Century - Innaence on Men's wr&ing; Public and Private. Separation of; Images of Women - Suffragette.
James. Henry: The Bostonians.
Demeuakopoulos. Stephanie. "Feminism. Sex Role Exchanges, and Other Subliminal Fantasies in Brarn Stoker's Dracda ," Frontiers, 11.3.1977. 104-13.
Sex Roles - Rejection of; Sexuality. Female; Sexuality. Male; Cult of True Womanhood; New Woman. The. - Stoker. Brarn: D r a d a .
262. ent ton: ~ a m o n a L "'That Cagd of Femininity: Trdlope's Lady Law&;" SeuA Arfen~c Bulletin. XLV.l, 1980.1-10. y
Independence, Female; Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment - and Conflict with .Q Career; Love, Romantic - Destructive Power of; Sex Roles - Rejection of;
Political Activism, Women and. - ,
Trollope, Anthony: Phineas Finn ; Phineas Redux .
263. Diel, Emmanuel. "Mark Twain's Failure: Sexual Women Characters." San lase Studies. V.1. 1979.46-59.
Sexuality. Female - Male Fear of; Images of Women - Virgin - Virtuous Woman.
Twain, Mark: Wd'nhead Wilson ; The Mysterious Stranger ; A Connectrcut Yankee In
King Arthur's Court ; Innocents Abrmd ; Letters jiwn Satan ; "Eve's Diaryn ; T m Sawyer ; The Prince and the Pauper ; Huckleberry Finn.
264, Donovan, Josephine. "Harriet Beecher Stowe's Feminism," American Transcendental Quarterly, 47/48.1980.141-57.
Feminism. Pre-Twentietn Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Maniage - and Marriage Law; Education of Women; Work, Women and; Religion. Women and - Calvinism; Friendships, Female; Power. Female.
Includes passing references to Stowe's short fiction and essays, not cited here. -
Stowe, Harriet Beecher: My Wife and I ; The Minisrefs Woaing ; The Pearl of Orr'~ Island ; Oldrown F d h ; Hearth and Home .
265. Doyle, James. "Annie Howells and the Realist-Romantic Conflict," Atlgntis . IV.1. 1978, 41-48.-
" Writers, Women - Rediscovered; Adultery; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing . , - Punishing Heroine; Realism, Theory of; Sentimental Fiction.
' 'i Howells, Annie: Reuben Dale ; "Le Coureur des h i s " ; "A Visit to a Country Housc" ; Howells. William Dean; Tolstoy, Leo: A n 6 Karerunu .
266. .Dyer. Joyce. "Gouvernail, Kate Chopin's Sensitive Bachelor," Southern kterary Journal , XIV.l, 1981.46-55.
Male Characters in Women's Writing; Sexuality. Male; Masculinity. . . \
Chopin, Kate: The Awakening ; " A Respectable Woman"; "Athenaisen. 4\
- - 1 -PF-
* L C 0
267. Elliot, Jeanne B. "A Lady'to the End: The Case of babe) Vane," Victorian S t j i e s , XIX.3,l?V6, -
329-44.
Class Position. Women s; Work, Women and - Need for Useful Occupation; Illness. Women and; Cult of True Womanhood; Sexuality, Female - Repressed - arid the Double Standard.
Wood. Ellen (Mrs. Henry Wood): East Lynne. - -
268. . Ellis, Katherine. "Paradise Lost: The Limits of Domesticity in the Nineteentb,gntury Novel." Feminist Studies. II.2/3.1975. 55-63. \: *,*
Family, Women and; Public and Private, Separation of; Class Position, Women's; Money. Women a d .
Dickens. Charles: Great Expectations ; Shelley, Mary: Frankenstein .
269. Faderman, Lillian "Female SarneSex Relationships in Novels by Longfellow. Holmes, and James." New England Quarterly, LI.3,1978,309-32. h
Lesbian(s) - Relationships; LesQianism - Definitions of; Friendships. Female; Revision - of Critical Tradition. .
Holrfies, Oliver Wendell: A Mwtal Antipathy ; James, Henry: The Bostonians ; Longfellow. Henry Wadsworth: Kavanagh .
y n ., ,. Felman. Shoslpm "Women and Madness: The Critical Phallacy," Diacritics , V.4,1975.2-10. e
Madness. Women and; Images of Women - Madwoman - Other; ~&~chools , Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - Structurali'sm/~ost~~tru~turalism; Realism, Theory of; Language. Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse; Language. Pamarchal - Dualism - as Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience; Rationality, Male; Identity, Female; French Literature, Women and.
Balzac. Honore de: "Adieuw. I
271. Felman. Shoshana. "Rereading Femininity? Yale French Studies. 62.1981.19-44. a"
Critical Schools. Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - Freudian/Psychoanalytic Criticism; Difference, Theory of; lmages of Women - Idealized Love Object; - Language, Patriarchal - Dualism - Rhetorical Tradition; Sex Roles; Transvestism; Lesbian(s) - Relationships; French Literature, Women and.
Balzac, Honore de: The Girl with the Gdden E k s (La Fille mu: ywx d'w).
272. Festa-McConnick, Diana. -- "Emma Bovary's Masculinization:- Convention of Clothes and Morality of Conventions," Women and Literature, I (New Series), 1980,223-35.
Sex Roles - Rejection of; Physical Appearance; Adultery; Masculinity; French O Literature. Women and. F
Flaubert, Gustave: Madame Bovary . .
273. Fetterley, Judith. "Little Women: Alcott's Civil War." Feminist Studies. V.2.1979, 369-83.
Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship;' Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Subtext; Anger, Female; Sensation Fiction; Renunciation; Self-sacrifice; Farni1y;Women and - as Woman's Sphere; Work. Women and - Domestic Labour; Money, Women and; Marriage - as Economic Necessity; Cult of True Womanhood; Power. Male,
- Alcott, Louisa hlay: Little Women ; "Behind a Mask"; "Pauline's Passion and Punishment".
274. Foster. Frances. "'In Respect to Females': Differences in the Portrayals of Women by Male and Female Narrators." Black American Literature F m m , XV.2,1981. 66-70.
Slavery; Slave Narratives; Thought Modes of, Female vs. Male; Violence against Women; Images of Women - Victim - Southern Belle; Revision - of Stereotypes; Power, Female; Black Women - Mother/Daughter Relationships - Relation to White Women; Mother/Daughter Relationships.
Burton. Annie Louise: Memories of Childhood's Slavery Days ; Craft William: Runtung a Thousand Miles to Freedom, or the Escape of William and Ellen Crajl fiom Slavery ; Jacobs, Harriet: Incidents in the Lifi of a Slave Girl ; Keckley. Elizabeth: Behlnd the Scenes: Thirty Years a Slave and Four Years in the White House ; Roper, Moses: The Narrative of the Adventures of Moses Roper ; Smith. Amanda Berry: An Autdiography: The Story of the Lwd's Dealing with Mrs. Amanda Smith, the Cdwed Evangel~st ; Taylor, Susie King: "A Brief Sketch of My Ancestors".
275. Fowler, Marian. "'Substance and Shadow': Conventions of the Marriage Market in Northanger Abbey ," English Studies in Canada, V1.3.1980, 277-91.
Mamage - as Economic Necessity; Money. Women and; Class Position, Women's; Family, Women and - and Parental Authority; Advice Literature.
Austen. Jane: 'Nmhanger Abbey.
276.. Fowler, Marian E "The Feminist Bias of Pride and PreQldice'." ~alhousie Review , LVII.1,
Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on women's-writing; lrnages of Women
-- Nineteenth Century Prose
- Invalid - h teb tua l Inferior - Child-warnan - Fashion Plate: Eduation af W m e n ; -
~ d v i c e Literature. e
0
Austen. Jane: Pride and PreNice ; Bennett, John: Letters to a Young Lady ; Fordyce, James: Sermons to Young W M e n ; Mamulay, Catharine: Letters on Education ; Gregory, John: A Father's Legacy to His Daughters ; KenrickWilliam: The Whde Duty of Woman ; Wakefield, PrisciIla: Rejections on the Present Condition of the Female Sex ;
CeP Wollstonecraft, Mary: A Vindication of the Rights of Woman .
277. Fdton. E Margaret "Jane Eyre: The Development of a Female Consciousness," English Studies in Canada, V.4.1979.432-47. . +
Identity, Female; Independence. Female; Self-realization; Androgyny; Power. Male; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Quest
Bronte, Charlotte: Jane Eyre.
278. Gandy, Clara I. "The Conation and Character of the Irish Peasantry as Seen in the Annals and Cottage Dialogues of Mary Leadbeater," Women and Literature, III.1.1975.28-37. -
Writers, Women - Rediscovered; Regionalism in Women's Writing; Didactic Literature; Class Position, Women's.
Leadbeater, Mary: Annals of Ballitwe ; Cottage Dialogues among the Irish Peasantry.
279. Garrison, Dee. "Inynoral Fiction in the Late Victorian Library," American Quarterly. XXVIII.l. 1976. 71-89. A
Domestic Fiction; Sensation Fiction; Sexuality. Female; Marriage - and Male . Authority; Independence, Female; Sex Roles - Rejection of; PowCr. Female;
Adultery; MaleIFemale Relationships; Male Characters in Women's Writing.
Ainsworth. William: Jack Sheppard ; Braddon, Elizabeth: Lady Audley's Secret ; Broughton. Rhoda: Belinda ; Fonestor, Mrs.: Fair Women ; Fothergill, Jessie: The First Vidin ; Hentz. Caroline Lee: Lirfda, or The Y a n g Pilot of the Belle Crede, a Tale of. Southern Lifi ; Holmes. Mary Jane: Edith Lge ; Lawrence, G. A. : Guy Livingstone ; Marryat, Florence: Woman Againrt Woman ; Mathers, Helen B.: Coming Thrd theBye': de la Rarnee, Marie Louise (pseud. Ouida): Under Two Flags ; Reynolds, George W. M.: Robert McNaire in England ; %uthworth, E D. E N.: The Hidden Hand ; Ishmael ; Stephens. Ann: Malaeska ; Wilson, Augusta Jane: St. Elmo ; Wood, Ellen (Mrs. Henry Wood): East Lynne.
2.80. Gamer. Carol B. "Three Ednas." Kate Chopin Newsletter, 1.3.1976.11-20.
Sensation Fiction; Domestic Fiction; Love. Romantic; Sexuality. Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Birds - Drowning - Water.
f Chopin. Kate: The Awakening ; Craik. Dinah Mulock: The W m n S h g d k ; Wheeler. Edward: Old Avalanche, The Great Annihilator, or Wild Edna. The Girl Brigand.
281. . Gaude, Pamela. "Kate Chopin's 'The Storm': A Study of Maupassant's Influence." Kare Choprn Newsletter, 1.2, 1975, 1-6.
Sexuality, Female; Adultery.
Chopin. Kate: "The Storm": Maupassant, Guy de: "Maroccan; "Moonlight". d
1 ' 282. Gerson, Carole. "Sue Bridehead's Ambivalent Feminism," Rmm of One's Own , IV.3.1979, 7 4 5 .
Sex Roles; Sexuality. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Images of Womerl - Idealized Love Object - Moral Custodian; Self, Divided; Renuriciation:
Hardy, Thomas: Me the Obscure.
283. Gezari, Janet K. "Marriage or Career: Goals for Women in Charlotte Bronte's Novels." Bucknell Review . XXW.1.1978.83-94.
Work, women and; Anger, Female; Single Women; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Heroine's Marriage as Closure; Love, Romantic; Marriage - and Conflict with Career.
Bronte, Charlotte: Jane E y e ; Shirley ; Villette . \
/ 284. Gilbert, Sandra M. "Plain Jane's Pragress." Signs. 11.4.1977.779-804.
Bildungsroman, Female; Marriage - and Equality/Mutuality: Madness. Women and; Anger, Female; Sexuality, Male; Power, Male; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Enclosure - Escape - Journey - Starvation - Fire - Houses - Doubles - Moon - Disguise.
Bronte, Charlotte: Jane E y e . I
- 285. Gilbert, Sadra M. "Horror's Twin: Mary Shelley's Monstrous Eve." Fernrust Studes , IV.2,
1978,48-73.
Alienation. Female; Family, Women and; Sexuality, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Pregnancy/Childbirth; Motherhood; Death. Women and; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Birth; Language. Women's Use of - Naming; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Absent Mother.
Milton, John: Paradise h t ; Shelley, Mary: Frankenstein .
Gorsky, Susan R "The Art of Politics: The Feminist Fiction of ! h & ~ r a n d , " Journal of Women's Studies in hrerature .1.4,1979,286-300.
Writers, Women - Rediscovered; Didactic Literature; New Woman, The; Self-realization; Education of Women; Marriage; Feminism, fie-Twentieth. Century - Influence on Women's Writing.
Grand. Sarah: Ideala: A Studyjiom Life ; The Heavenly Twins ; Babs the Impmible.
Gnulich. Melody. "'Wimmen Is My Theme, and also Josiah': The Forgotten Humour of Marietta HolIey," American Transcendental Quarterly, 47/48.1980.187-98.
Humour. Women's Use of; Satire. Women's Use of; Feminism, Re-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; ' Writers, Women - Rediscovered; Work, Women and; Single Women; Marriage - as Economic Necessity - and Woman's Fulfillment; Regionalism in Women's Writing.
Holley. Marietta: My Opinions and Betsey Bobbet's ; My Wayward Pardner . -C
Greene, Gayle. "Women, Character and Society in Tolstoy's Anna Karenina ." Fro~iers , II.1. 1977.106-25.
Images of Women - Fallen Woman - Other; Education of Women; Sexuality, Female - Male Fear of; Adultery; Russian Literature, Women and
=OlStT' , Leo: Anna Karenim ; The Kreutzer S o a a .
r >
Greenstein. Susan M. "The Question of Vocation: From Romda to Midd lewch ," Nineteenth- Century Fietion , XXXVA. 1981,487-505.
Work. Women and; Education of Women; Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Family. Women and; Renunciation; Motherhood. - - Eliot George: ' ~ o m d a ; Middlemarch ; Silas Marner ; Daniel Derond~ ; The Milt on the . EZm ; "Janet's Repentance".
Grenander. M. E "Henrietta Stackpole and Olive Harper: Emanations of the Gr&t Democracy." Bulletin of Research in the Humanities, LXXXII1.3.1980.406-22.
- 0
Images of Women - Career Woman - American Girl; Feminism, PreTwentieth Century - Influence on Men's Writing.
Harper, Olive: " Snobocracy Abroadw ; James. Henry: The Portrait of a Lady.
Griffin, Gail B. "'Your Girls That You All Love Are Mine': Dracufa and the Victorian Male
- -- Nhteenth Century
Sexual Imagination," International Journal ofwornen's Studies-: II1.5,1980,454-65.
Sexuality, Male; Sexual*, Female - Male Fear of; Cult of True Womanhood; Anger, Female; Images of Women - Animal - Sexually Devourhg Woman - Virgina - Unclean Woman; Menstruation.
Prose '
Stoker, Bram: Dracula .
Griffm Gail B. "The Humanization of Edward Rochester." Women and hterarwe . I1 (New Series). 1981. 118-29.
Mawulinity; Self. ~ i v i d e d f Andrbgyny; Power. Female - Male Fear of; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Doubling; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Moon.
Bronte, Charlotte: Jane Eyre .
Revision - of Critical Tradition; Literary Tradition - Woeen's; Female/Femmist Aesthetic; Advice Literature; Independence. Female. . ,
Review of four new critical works about Austen (Jane Nardin. Lloyd W. Brown. Danel ans sell: Stuart M.. Tave) whi,ch moves into an analysis of Austen's use of imagination to- define the assertive independence of her heroine. Basis for some sections of The Madwoman in the Attic
Austen, Jane. @
Gubar, Susan. "The Genesis of ~ccordin&€diiShirle~ ," Femirust Studres , II1.3/4. 1976. 5-21.
\ Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Starvation - Enclosure; Writers. Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Anger, Female; Self-abnegation; Power. Female - Lack of; Single Women; Money. Women and; Role-Models, Female; Religion. Women and - Christianity; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing -'Doubling -. Heroine's Marriage as Closure.
Bronte, Charlotte: Shirley.
I Habegger. Alfred "W: D. Howells and the 'American Girl'," Texas Quarterly . XIX.4. 1976.
.14&56.
Images of Women - American Girl - Moral Custodian - Shrew; Work, Women and; Independence. Female; Power. Female - Lack of.
B
OTt.
Howells; ~ i l l i & n Dean: A Chance-A ; Annie Kilbtc- 7 ; A Woman's Reason ; Doctor Breen's Daisy Miller ; The Portrait of a Lady.
Habegger, Alfred, "Nineteenth-Century American Humor: Easy-going Males. Anxious Ladies - and Penelope Lapham," PMLA . X3.5.1976.884-94.
Humour, Women's Use OF; Masculinity; Images of Women - Moral Custodian - Bluestocking/Learned Woman - Virgin - Old Maid - Shrew - Irrational Worn; Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Cennuy - Influence on Women's Writing; Selfsacrifice.
Alma Louisa May: Little Women ; Browne. Charles Fawr; Cox, Sarnhel S.; ~olle;, Marietta; Howells, William Dean: Their Wedding Jaurney ; The Rise of Silas Lupharn ; Locke. &id Ross; Neal, Joseph C.; Peck, George W.; Phelps, Eaizabeth Stuart Ward: Doctor Zay ; Sanbom. Kate, ed: The Wit of Women ; Twain, Mark; ~ h i c h e r , Frances: The W~dow Bedott Papers.
Haberly. David T. "Women and Indians: The Last of th-d the Captivity Tradition," American Quarterly. XYVIII.4,1976.431-43.
Iinages of Women A Temptress; Power. Female - Male Fear of; Violence against Women; Racism; Miscegenation
Cooper. James Fenimore: The Last of the Mohicans.
Halperin. John. "Trollope and Feminism." S m h Atlantic Quarterly, LXXVII.2.1978,179-88.
Images of Women - Suffragette - Career Woman; Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment; . Self-sacrifice; Independence, Female.
Overview
Trollope, Anthony.
Harrison. John R "Tho Emancipated : Gissing's Treatment of Women and Religious Emancipation," Gissing Newsletter. XVII.2,1981. 1-10.
Religion. Women and - aristianity; Education of Women; Marriage.
Gissing, George: The Emancipated ; In the Y e w of &bilee ; Isabel Clatendon ; The Whirlpcd ; Wwkers in the Dawn. $
a
Han, Anne. "Studies. Time, the Author as Wife," Bronte Society Transactions, XVI.5.1975, 37682.
N i n e t e # l t b *ow
Writers, Women - Conditions of(l9th Centtu-y British): Ma-- md CmRttt w&t . -
L Creativity; Single Women; Work. Women and - Domestic labout. -
Brontt Anne; Bronte, Charlotte; Bronte. Emily. +- . . - tl
301. Hartiey. J. M. "Geraldine Jewsbury and the Problems of the Woman novel is^" ~ * o r & n ' J . Studies lnternatiod Quartecy ,11.2.1979. 137-53. .-; - -
9' - Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship; ' Self. ~ivhk; Work. Wohen and:
c' Education of Women; Single Women; Imges of Womgn - Angel in the H o w - Career Woman
Jewsbury, Geraldine: Zoe: The History of Two 4 v e s ; The ~ a f f ~ r k e r s : A Tale ; hlarmn Withers ;,Constance Herben ; The Swnnvs of Gentiliry ; R~ghr w Wrong.
302. Heineman. Heiea "Frances Trollope's Jessie Phillips : Sexual Poli t in and the New Pmi I A N . " .
International /ow& of Wmen's Studies, 1.1.1978.96-106. c
Poverty. Women and; Motherhood; Seduction; Images of Women - Immoral Working-class Woman - Fallen Woman; Revision - of Stereotypes; Sexwli ty. Female - and the Double Standard
Trollope. Frances: Jessie Phillips: A Tale of the Presenf Day. -
303. Herrmann, Lesley. " kcques in Rwia: A Program of Domestic Reform for Husbands." S t d r e ~ in the bterary Imagination. XII.2.1979.61-72.
Marriage - aqd Male Authority; Divorce; ~ d u l t e k ; Love. Romantic; Education of Women; Family. Women and - as Woman's Sphere; Male Characten in Women's Writing; French Literature. Women and; Russihn ulterature. Women and.
I
Discusses the influence of Sand's novel on the Russian writers cited
Avdeev. Mikhail: The Reef; chemyshevsky, N . G.: Whal Is ro Be Done? ; Druzhinm. Aleksandr: Pdinka Saks ; Sarid.'Georpe: Jacques ; Tolsroy, Leo: Famdy Happiness .
I ,
-, ..
X 304. H e m . Leslie Singer. "'Woman as Hero' in Turgenev. Goncharov. and Georpc Sand's
Mauprd ." Ulbandw Review , ILL 1979.128-38.
Images of Women - Moral Custodian; Role-Models. Female; New Woman. The; Self-sacrifice; Russian Literature. Women and; French Literature. Women and.
ezb
Goncbarov, Ivan Aleksandrovich: Oblomov ; Sand. George: Mauprat ; Turgenev, Ivan: On the Eve .
Xti Hobta. Glenda ' b e and !askmale: '~eoaale Friendship in Sarah Orne kwen's 'Martha's t ~ d ? ' . ' Stdres m Shm huton : XVII.1,1980.21-29.
9
U Friendshtps. Fcmale; Lts&ianism - Encoded
-ot> ' Homarts. hhgarct 'Elior. Wordsworth, and the Sctnes of the Sisters' Instxuction," Critical Inqvrry . VIIL2.1981.22441.
Sibling Relatiambjps; Reader. Woman as; Education of Women; Chiidhood; P4aturc. Womtn and; Passivity. Female; Power. Male.
El iot George: The MU1 on the Ross ; 'Bmther and Sister'; Wordsworth. William: 'Nuning'; 'Tinurn Abbey'; The Prelude.
-
I ~
HI.&%: Maggte. 'Thomas Hardy and Women: A Psycho-Social Criticism of Tcss d'urberville and Sue Bridthad' Massuchusrfi Stdies in Endash . VL1/2.1978.77-89. d
. . . Revision - of S m a x y p s ; MalelFtmale Relatiomhips; Money. Women and;
Work. Wane;? and; Stxblit).. Fcmalc.
Hard). Thomas: T e s of rhe bUrbcrviUcs ; M e the Obsnve .
Fermnim. PrtTwcnticth G n w y - Influence on Men's Writing - Influence on Wumgn's Writing; hkmqc - and Conflia .&b Career - A.rranged; New Woman. The; .Hosculinic?.
Contains pani& r e f e m to a number of Civil War romances no1 dted here.
Adams. H q : Dmrovocy ; H6wek. William Dean: A Woman's Rcasm i Docta Brccn's k c c ; Jmu. Henry: The Bmmiam ; Jew- Sarah h e : A Camtry Docta ; Phelps. Elizabeth Sruan Ward: D#ra Zay .
Sexuahh. Fcmalc - Women's Ambivalmcc mward; Independence. F d s ; Images of Wormn - Frigid Wornan; Marriage - and Woman's Fulf-t; New Woman The.
Hardy. Thomas: M e rhc Obdarrc ; Law-. D. H.: Study ofThmurr Hardy.
Nineteenth Century Prose \ - -
Jambus. Mary. "Tess's Purity." Essays in Critiiism . XXVIA. 1976,316-38. 2- Sexuality. Female; Phallic Criticism; Images of Women - Victim - Vinuous Woman - Idealized Love Object - Sex Object - Fallen Woman; Seduction; Masculinit!.
Hardy. Thomas: Tess of the GUrberiilles .
r'
Jacobus, Mary. "Villette 's Buried Letter," Essays in Criticism , XXVII1.3. 1978, 228-44.
Identity, Female; Alienation. Female; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - SubGxt; Gothic. Female; Sexuality. Female; Single Women; Work. Women and; Class Position, women's.
Bronte, Charlotte: Viilette .
4
Kaledin, Eugenia: " b & s a May ~icott: Success and the Sorrow of Self-Denial," women'^
Wters . Women - Conditions of (19th Cen'ky American) - Anxiety of Authorship; Self-fice; Sentimental Fiction; Renunciation; Class Position. Women's;
I
Work, Women and - Need for Useful OccuPtion; Mamage - and Woman's Fulfillment - and Conflic? with Career; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Heroine's Marriage as Closure.
Almn Louisa May: d ayital Sketches ; Work A Stwy of Experience ; L t ~ l e Women ; "Cqpid and Chow-Chow".
K~lley. Mary. "At War with Herself: Harriet Beecher Stowe as Woman In Conflict within the ~ome." ' American Studies, XIX.2.1978.23-40.
Writers, Women - Conditions of; Sentimental F ido% Cult of True Womanhood; Family. Women a ~ d ; Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment; Self-sacrifice.
Smwe. Harriet Beecher: The Minister's Woaing ; W e and Our Neighbours ; M Y Wifi and I ; Pink and White ~ y a n n j ; Poganuc Peclple ; The Pearl of Orr'~ Island .
Kelley. Mary. "A Woman Alone: Catharine aria Sedgwick's Spmterhood in Nineteenth-Cenw America," New England Q m e r l y , LI.2,1978,2W25.
'
Sentimental Fiction; Single Women; Mamage -'and Woman's Fulfillmenl - and Conflict with Career; Family, Women and; Independence. Female; Motherhood,
5 Sibhng Relationships; Writers. Women Conditions of (19th Century American). h
s e d p i a c a t b a n n e - k ,
Kelley. Mary. "The ~entirnentalists: Promise and Betrayal in the Home." Signs. IV.3.1979. - - 434-46.
Sentimental Fiction; Domestic Fiction; Cult of True Womanhood; Public and Private, Separation of; Family. Women and; Religion, Women and'- Christianity; Power. Male. *
Curnrnins, Maria; Gilrnan. Cqoline Howard; Hentz, Caroline Lee; Holmes, Mary Jane; McIntosh. Maria; Panon. Sara Willis (pseud. Fanny Fern); Sedgwick, Catharine Maria; Southworth, E D. E. N.; Stowe, Harriet Beecher; Terhune. Mary Virginia; Warner. Susan; Wilson, Augusta Evans.
P, Kennedy. Valerie. "Bleak House : More Trouble with Esther?," J m r d of Wmen's Studies in Lteratwe .1.4,1979, 330-47.
Revision - of Critical Tradition - of Stereotypes; Images of Women - Angel in the House; Identity, Female; Self-abnegation; e* Self. Divided; Renunciation.
Dickens, Charles: Bleak House .
Kessler, Carol Farley. "A Literary Legacy: Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Mother and Daughter," Frontiers . V.3. 1980.28-33.
Writers, Women - Conditions of (19th Century American) - as Subjects of Women's Writing; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Role-Models, Female; Literary w had it ion - Women's; Marriage - and Conflict with Creativity - and Woman's Fulfillment; Images of Women - Angel in the House; Revision - of Stereotypes; Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Domestic Fiction.
Phelps, Elhabeth Stuart, Sr. (pseud. H. Trusta): "The Sunny Side";. "A Peep at Number Five"; "The Angel over the ~ i~h tShou lde r , or the Beginning of a New Year"; "Husband of a Blue"; Phelps. Elizabeth Stuart Ward: The Gates A@ ; The Stwy of Avis ; The Silent Partner ; Doctor 7 a y .
, Kestner, Joseph. "Men in Female Condition of England Novels." Women and Literature, I1 (New Series). 1981.77-100,
Industrialization, Women and; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Work, Women and; Power. Male; Class Position, Women's.
Gaskell. Elizabeth: "The Sexton's Hero"; "Lizzie Leighn; Mary Barton ; North and Sacth ; Stone. Elizabeth: William Langshawe, the Cotton Lmd ; Combination ; Tonna, Charlotte: The Wrongs of Woman ; Helen Neetwud ; Trollope. Frances: Michael Armstrong, the Factcry Boy.
i9 Kier, Kathleen E "The Revival That Failed: Elizabeth Shaw Melville and the ~tedmans:
, . himwent-hlq-k-
I
1891-1894," Wornen's Studies, VII.3.1980.75-84.
Publishing. Women and; Revision - of critical Tradition.
Reexamination of Elizabeth MeCville's role in wing to revive her husband's 11rera~ reputation t
Melville, Herman..
320. Kmetz. Gail. "The Other Carlyle: Jane." Massachurett~ Studies rn Enghsh . V.1. 1975. 50-54.
.Writers. Women - Rediscovered - Conditions of; Forms. Non-Canonical - Ixtten
Carlyle, Jane.
321. Kmetz, Gail- "Mary Sneliey: Ln the Shadow of 'Frankenstein'," MJ. , 111.8. 1975. I?-16.
Writers, Women ; Conditions of ( 1 9 t h P m y British) - Redscovered. e
Shelley. Mary.
322. Kmetz, Gail Kessler. "Olive Schreiner - Woman of the Karroo." Ms. , V1.2. 1977.90-94.
Writers, Women - Conditions of; Feminism. Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Work. Women and; Racism; Militarism. Women and; African Literature, Women and.
Schreiner. Olive: Undine ; The Story of an Afilcan Farm ; Thoughts on Sowh Afirca ; W a n and Lubtnu .
I
323. Knoepflrqacker, U. C. "Unveiling Men: Power and Mascullniry in George Eliot's Ficuon." Women and Literature. I1 (New Series). 1981. 130-46.
Male Characters in Women's Writing; Power, Male; Power. Female; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Educating Hero - Maiming Hero - Male Narrator - Punishing Heroine; Self-sacrifice; Androgyny; Anger, Female.
Eliot, George: Scenes of Clerical hh ; Adam Bede ; The Mill on the Floss ; Middlemarch ; Daniel Deronda ; "The Lifted Veil ".
324. Ladenson, Joyce Ruddel. "Paths to Suicide: Rebellion against Victorian Womanhood in Kate Chopin's The Awakening ." intellect . CIV.2367. 1975, 52-55. -
Bildungsroman. Female; Sex Roles; Identity. Female; Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment; Adultefy.
L
Elior, George: Midd[ewch ; The Mill on the Floss ; Adam Bede ; Romda ; Scenes of Clerical Lik ; Danid Deronda . 0
h
Chopin, Kate: The Awakening. -
Lattin, ~ a h c i a H. "Childbirth and Motherhood in Kate Chopin's Fiction," Regionalism and the Female lmaginution . IV.1.1978,8-12.
\ ~regnancy/Childbirth; Motherhood - Women's Ambivalence toward; Images of - Women - Earth Mother - Madonna.
Chopin, Kate: " Athenaise "; "Regret"; "Desiree's Baby" ; "La Belle Zoraide" ; "Mrs. Mobry's Reason "; "A Matter of Prejudice"; The Awakening.
Lenta. Margaret "Jane Fairfax and m e Eyre: Educating Women," Ariel , XU.4, 1981.27-41. b
Work, Women and; Education of Women; , Money, Women and; Si$e Women; Isolation of Women; Independence, Female.
Austen, Jane: Emma ; Bronte. Charlotte: Jane Eyre .
Lenta. Margaret "Jane Austen's Feminism: An Ori@ Response tb Convention." Critical Qumerly , XXIlI.3.1981.27-36. -
Independence. Female; Male Characters in Women's Writing. /
- Austen, Jane: Emma.
Levin. Susan M. "George Sand in the Sign of Leo." CLA J w n a l . XXIII.3.1980,303-21.
' Identity, Female; Sexuality. Female; Mother/Daughter Relationships;_ ~ d e / ~ e m a l e Relationships; Confessional Mode in Women's Writing; Sentihental Fiction; - Sex Roles - Rejection of; Re-vision - of Critical Tradition; French Literature. Women and.
Sand. George: Lo Confession d'une Jeune fiUe ; Histoire de ma Vie . Lelia .
Levine. George. "Repression and Vocation in George iot: A Review Essay," Women and bterature . VI1.2. 1979. 3-13.
a Revision - of Criticdl Tradition; Work, Women and; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Heroine's Death as Closure - Heroine's Marriage as Closure; Self-sacrifice.
Linehan, Katherine Bailey. "The Odd women : Gissing's Imaginative Approach to Feminism." Madern Language Quarterly, XL4.1979.358-75.
Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Men's Writing; Marriage - and Equality/Mutuality; Single Women; Independence. Female; New Woman. The; Friendships, Female; Images of Women - Angel in the House - Earth Mother.
Gissing, George: The Emancipated ; The Odd Women ; In the Fear of Jubilee ; The
T@- Little. Judith. "Liberated Alice: Dodgson's Female Hero as Domestic Rebel," W ' m e n ' ~ Studre5 III.2,1976,195-205.
Cult of True Womanhood; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Motherhood; Pregnancy/Childbirth.
Dodgson. Charles (pseud. Lewis Carroll): Alice in Wonderland ; Through the Lmhng Glass.
Lockwood. Betty. "And Then, There Were Women." Wmrtnspeak .I.4.1975.22-23. - t Writers, Women - Rediscovered; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Poli t id Activism, Women and; * Australian Literature, Women and.
See also: Part 2, Womanspeak. 1.5.1975.12-13; Part 3. Womanspeak. 11.1.1976.12-33; P2.t 4. Womanspeak. IL2,1976,12-13; Part 5, ~ o r n a k p e a k ,II.3.1976.12-13; and Pan 6. Womanspeak. 11.4. 1976. 20-21.
Baynton, Barbara: Bush Studies ; Human Td l ; Cambridge, Ada: A Marked an ;*- ' r Unspoken Thoughts ; Hand in the Dark and Other Poems ; Praed. Rosa Caroline (Mrs. Campbell Praed): Longleat of Kwalbyn ; The Station Head ; S~ence. Catherine Helen: Clara Morrison ; Handfasted ; A Week in the Future . g
J$
Lockwood, Betty. "And Then. There Were Women.. . Part 2." Womanspeak. 1.5.1975.12-13.
Writers, Women - Rediscovere&; Literary Tradition - Women's; Crime. Women and; Australian Literature. Women and.
See also: .Part 1, Womanspeak, 1.4,1975,22-23; Part 3, Womanspeak, 11.1, 1976.12-13; Part 4, Womanspeak, II.2,1976,12-13; Part 5, Womanspeak, II.3.1976,12-13; and Part 6, Womanspeak. 11.4, 1976. 20-21. . Franklin. Stella Maria Miles (Miles Franklin): My Brilliant Career ; Brent of Bin Bin ; All hat Swagger ; Leakey, Caroline Woolmer (pseud. Oline Keese): The Brad Arrow Being Passagesfiom the History of Maria Gwynnham - A Lifer.
- a -4
Nineteenth Century Prose
334. MacAndrew. Elizabeth and Susan Gorsky. "Why Do They Faint and Die? - The Birth of the Delicate Heroine," J w n a l ofPopular Culture , Vm.4,1975.734-45.
Sentimental Fiction; Sensation Fiction; Images of Women - Child-Woman - Idealized Love Object - Invalid; Passivity, Female; - Renunciation.
Eliot, George: The Mill on the Hms ; MacKenzie Henry: The Man of Feeling ; Walpole. Horace: The Custle of Otranto ; Yonge. Charlotte: The Daisy Chain.
335. McDaniel. Judith. "Charlotte Bronte and the Feminist Novel." University of Michigan Papers in W'men's Studies. 11.3.1977.90-98. .L
Work, Women and - Need for Useful Occupation - as Economic Necessity; Class Position. Women's; Money, Women and; Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment; Single Women; Passivity, F e d e .
Bronte, Charlotte: Shirley.
336. MacDonald, Susan Peck. "Passivity and the Female Role in Pride and Prejudice ." Women and Literature. VI.2.1978. 35-46. 0
Passivity, Female; Sex 4 Roles; ~ o ~ e - w of.
Pride and Preprdice .
337. McInherny. Frances. "Miles Franklin, My Brilliant Career and the Female Tradition," Australian Lrterary Studies . IX.3.1980.275-85.
Literary Tradition - Women's; Marriage - and Male Authority; Male/Female Relationships; Physical Appearance; Masochism. Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Mirrors; Isolation of Women; Violence against Women; Writers. Women - Use of Pseudonym; Phallic Criticism; Australian Literature, Women and.
Bronte, Charlotte: Jane E y e ; Franklin, Stella Maria Miles (Miles'Franklin): M y Brilliant Career.
338. McMahan. ~lizaaeth. "Sexual Desire and Illusion in The Bostonians ," Modern Fiction studies. ' XXV.2.1979.241-51.
Male/Female Relationships; Feminism, PreTwentieth Century - Influence on Men's W&ng; Independence. Female; , Sexuality, Female; Love, Romantic - Desmctive Power of.
James, Henry: The Bostonians. -
McMaster, R D. "Women in The Way W e Lve Now ," E n g l d Srudes rn W a . VIM, 1981.68-80.
Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Men's Writing; Independence. Female; Sex Roles.
Trollope, Anthony: The Way W e Live Now .
MacPike, Loralee. "Environment as Psychopathological Symbolism in 'The Yellow Wallpapex American Literary Realism 1870- 1910, VIIL3,1975,286-88.
Madness, Women and; Imagely and Motifs in Women's Writing - Attics - Windows - Enclosure - Escape; Power. Female - Lack of; Sexuality. Female - Women's ,
Ambivalence toward.
Gilrnan, Charlotte Perkins: The Yellow wallpaper^
u
MacPike. Loralee. "The Social Values of Childbirth in the Nineteenth-Century Novel." International Journal of Women's Studies. 111.2.1980, 117-30.
Images of Women - Madonna - Terrible Mother - Angel in the House; Cult of True Womanhood; Sexuality. Female; Pregnancy/Childbirth; Motherhood; Adultery; French Literature. Women and
i Allen, Grant: The Woman Who Did ; Balzac. Honore de: "A oman of Thirty"; Bennett. Arnold: The Old Wives Tale ; Chopin, Kate: The Awakening ; d'Anunzio. Gabriele: The Triumph of Death ; Gaskell. Elizabeth: Ruth ; Gissing, George: The Odd Women ; Hardy, Thomas: M e the Obscure ; Tess of the d'Urbervilles ; Martineau.-Harriet: deerbrwk ; Meredith, George: The Ordeal of Richard Feveral ; Moore, George: Este - Waters ;. Tolstoy, Leo: Anna K a r e n i ~ ; Warden. Florence: A Vagrant Wife ; Wood, Ellen (Mrs. Henry Wood): East Lynne .
Mallinson, Jean. "The Maiden Archetype in The Heart of the Ancient W d ," Essays on Canadian Writing, 3. 1975.47-51.
Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Demeter - Kore; Nature. Women and; Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment: Fairy Tale Imagery in Women's Writing - Snow White and Rose Red
I
Roberts. Charles G. D.: The Heart of the Ancient Wood .
Manheimer, Joan. "Murderous Mothers: The Problem of Parenting in the Victorian Novel." Feminist Studies , V.3.1979. 530-46. I
Motherhood; Family. Women and; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Public and Private, Separation of, Cult of True Womanhood; Sexuality. Female; Images of
A
A -
Women - Terrible Mother - Angel in the Hm".
Austen, Jane: Pride and Pred ice ; Dickens, Charles: Bleak House ; Eliot, George: Adam Bede .
I
344. Mann. Karen B. "Bertha Mason and Jane Eyre: The True Mrs. Rochester," Ball State . U nive~sity Fwum , XIX.1.1978, 31-34.
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Doubles; Anger, Female; Marriage - as Economic Necessity; Power, Male; Madness, Women and.
m
Bronte, Charlotte: Jane E y e .
345. Mann, Nancy D. "Intelligence and Self-Awareness in North and South : A Matter of Sex and b Class." Rocky Matntain Review of Lunguage and Literature, XXIX.1,24-38. [Citation Inc.]
Public and Private, Separation of; Thought Modes of, Female vs. Male; Revision - ' P of Stereotypes; Cult of True Womanhood
a - Gaskell, Elizabeth: Nwth and Sarth ; Ruth ; Mary Barton ; $#via's Lovers.
346. Marcus. Jane. "'Clio in Calliope': History and Myth in Meredith's Diana of the Crossways ," Bulletin of the New York Public Library, LXXIX.2.1977,167-92.
Political ~'ctivism, Women and; Feminism. PreTwentieth Century - Influence on Men's Writihg; Cult of True Womanhood; Class Position, Women's; Re-vision - of Myth; Bildungsrornan, Female; Independence. Female; Identity, Female; New Woman. The.
Meredith, George: Dish of the Crassways ;,Norton, Caroline: The Letters of Cardine Nwton t o h d Melbatrne .
- b
347. Michot-Dietrich, Hela. ' "Blindness to 'Goodness': The Critics' CAauvinhn? An Analysis of . Four Novels by Zola and the Goncburts." Madern Fiction Studies. XXI.2.1975.215-22. .
Re-visior! - of Critical Tradition; Class Position, women'^; Selfkicrifice; French - Literature. Women and.
Goncourt, Edmond de and Jules de Goncourt: Germinie Lacertetu: ; La Fille Elisa ; Zola. Ernile: L'Assmmdr ; N a m .
I 2
348. Midler. Marcia S. "George Eliot's Rebels: Po aits of the Artist as a Woman." Women's Studies. VII.3, 1980. 97-108. l.Y
Artisl Woman as; Marriage - and Conflict with Creativity; Independence. Female; D
Nineteenth Centun Prow
0
Motherhood - Women's Ambivalence toward. ,
Eliot, George: "The Love Story of Mr. Gilfiln; Middlemarch ; Armgart ; Daniel Deronda ; " Erinna " .
349. Miller, Lorraine. "Mrs. Gaskell: The Importance of Being Family." Refiactwy Girl , W. 1976. 7-13. [Citation Inc.]
Sex Roles; Class Position. Women's; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Two Suitors Convention; Sex Roles - Rejection of.
Gaskell, Elizabeth: Mary Barton ; North and South .
d
350. Mitchell, Sally. "Sentiment and Suffering: Women's Recreational Reading in the 1860s." Victorian Studies, XXI.1.1977.29-45.
Reader, W o r n as; Sentimental Fiction; Images of Women - Victim - Fallen Woman; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Maiming Hero - Heroine's Death as Closure.
Makes passing reference to additional British women writers of the 1860s and additional works by the authors cited below
Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - ~ h o i n e ' s Marriage as Closure; Bronte. Charlotte: Jane Eyre ; Broughton. Rhoda: Not Wisely but Too Well ; Eiloart. Elizabeth: Meg ; Woman's Wrong ; Eliot. George: Middlemarch ; Norton. Caroline: Lost and Saved ; de la Rarnee, Marie Louise (pseud. Ouida): Under Two Hags ; Wood, Ellen (Mrs. Henry Wood): East Lynne ; Yonge, Charlotte: The Clever Woman of the Family.
, 351. Moers. Ellen. "Mme de Stael and the Woman of Genius," American Schdar . XLIV, Spring, 1975,225-41.
Literary Tradition - Women's; Writers, Women - Condition: of (19th Century French) - as Subjects of Women's Writing Artist, Woman as; h a g s of Women -
r Superwoman; Independence. Female; French Literature. Women and.
This article was later published as a chapter of Moer's book Literary Women
Barrett Browning, Elizabeth: Aurora Leigh ; Stael, Mme. de: Cwinne .
352. Moers, Ellen. "Fraternal George Sand," American ~ c h d a r , XLVIII, Spring.1979, 221-26.
Writers, Women - Conditions of (19th Century French); Literary' Tradition - Women's; Revision - of Critical Tradition; Artist. Woman as; Images of worn& - Liberated Woman; Utopias; French Literature. Women and
Nineteenth Century Prose ---
Sand. George.
/-
353. Moller, Mary Elkins. "Thoreau. Womankind, and Sexuality," ESQ: A "Jwnal ofthe American Renaissance, XXII.3.1976.123-48.
Sexuality. Male; Images of Women A Intellectual Inferior - Idealized Love Object - Fashion Plate; Reason vs. Passion; Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Men's Writing.
- Thoreau, Henry David: The Journal of Henry David Thweau ; Walden ; "Love"; "Chastity and Sensuality " .
354. Monaghan, David. "The Myth of every body"^ Dear Jane': A Reassessment of Jane Austen," Atlantis, 111.1. 1977. 112-26. F
Re-vision - df Critical Tradition; Class Position. Women's; Education of Women; - Sex Roles; Sexuality. Female.
Austen. Jane: Emma ; Sense and Sensibility ; Mansjield Park ; Pride and ~ r e ~ i c e ; P ~ ~ S I U Z S ( ~ O ~ . IY
%- 355. Morgan. Ellen "Isabel ~rch'er: Resistance to the Patriarchal Order." University of Michigan Papers in Women's Studies, 1.4. 1975,95-106. L
Independence. Female; Marriage - and Woman's Fulfdlment - as Entrapment; Love, Romantic - I)estructive Power of; Passivity, Female; Role-Models, Female.
~ k e s . Henry: The Portrait ofa M y .
356. Moms, Patricia. "Some Notes on the Women in David Copperfield : Eleven Crude Categories and a Case for Miss Mowcher." English Studies in Afiica . XXX.1.1978.17-21.
Images of Women - Fallen Woman - Virtuous Woman - Angel in the House - Virgin - Intellectual Inferior - Moral Inferior - Child-Woman - Sex Object; Re-vision - of Stereotypes; Cult of True Womanhood.
Dickens, Charles: David Copperfield .
357." Newton, Judith Louder. "Pride and Prepdice : Power, Fantasy and Subversion in Jane Austen," Feminist Studies . IV.1.1978. 27-42.
5-
Mamage - as Economic Necessity - and EqualityIMutuality; Money, Women and; Class Position, Women's; Power, Male; Independence, Female; " Power, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Male/Female Relationships.
- -
Nineteenth Century Prose
Q
Austen, Jane: Pride and PreQcdice .
Niemtzow. Annette. "Marriage and the New Woman in The Portrait of a Lady ," American Literature, X L F . 3 , i975,377-95.
Marriage - as Entrapment; ~ ivorce ; Domestic Fiction; New Woman, The: Sexuality, Female - Repressed - Women's Ambivalence toward.
James, Henry: The Pwtrdt of a Lady ; The Gdden Bowl ; The American ; " Rose-Agathe " .
O'Brien, Sharon. "The Limits of Passion: Willa Cather's Review of The Awakening ." Women and Literature, III.2.1975.10-20. i",
Love, Romantic - Destructive Power of; Sexuality. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; -2 Adultery.
Cather. Willa: M y Antonia ; M y Mortal Enemy; A hz Lady ; Lucy Gayheart ; The ong of the Lark ; Chopin, Kate: The Awakening.
Ohrnann, Carol. "Historical Reality and 'Divine Appointment' in darl6tte ~ronte';~iction." Signs. II.4,1977,757-78.
Feminism. PreTwentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Poverty. Women and; Class Position, Women's; Power, Male; Political Activism. Women and; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Maiming Hero; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Passivity: Female; Anger. Female; Work, Women and; Marriages and Equality/Mutuality; Imagery and Motifs in M e n ' s Writing - Hunger - Thirst - Journey.
Bronte, Charlotte: The Piofessw ; Jane Eyre ; Shirley ; Yillette .
Pace, Jean. "Flaube?t's Image of ~ o & n , " The Southern Review. (Louisiana), XIII.l. 1977. 114-30.
Images of Women - Intellectual Inferior - Irrational Woman - Madonna - ldealized Love Object; French Literature. Women and.
. Makes passing reference to Flaubert's other works
Flaubert, Gustave: Madame Bovary ; L'Educatim Sentimentale .
Parker, Rosie. "Portnit of the Artist as a Young Woman." Spare Rib . 34.1975,32-35.
Artist Woman as; Fonns. Non-Canonical - Diaries/Journals; Alienation. Female;
- Writers, Women - Canditions of,
Bashkirtseff, Marie: Diaries .
\363. Parrill. Anna S. "Portraits of Ladies," Tennessee Studies in Literature , XX, 1975.92-99.
Independence, Female; Marriage - and Male Authority. *
James, Henry: The Pwtrait of a Lady ; Meredith, George: The Egoist .
364. Paxton, Nancy L "Subversive ~emi&srn: A Reassessment of Susan Ferrier's h4&iage ." Women and Literature-, IV.1.1976.18-29.
Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Absent Mother - Heroine's Marriiige as Closure - Subtext; Marriage - and Equality/Mutuality; Education of Women; Writers, Women - Rediscovered; Sentimental Fiction. A >
*.. . Ferrier. Susan: Marriage ; The ~nheritake . . - O
m
365. Pell, Nancy. "Rpistance, Rebellion, and ~arriag'k: The Economics of Jane Eyre ," Ninetee& Century Fiction . XXXI.4. 1977. 397-420.
F
Money. Women and; Work, Wornel; s d : Marriage - as Economic Necessity; Independence, Female; Violence. Female; Isolation of Women; Power, Female - Lack of.
~rch te . Charlotte: ~ a i e Eyre . -
' 366. Peterson, &la L "The Hqoine as Reader in the Nineteenth-Century kovel: Emha Bovary and MBggie Tulliver," Comparatiye Literature Studies, XW.2.1980.168-83.
Reader. Woman as; ARiEL W o r m y ; Education of Women; Passivity. Female; Fxench Li&rature, women and.
Eliot, George: The Mill on the Ross ; Flaubm, Gustave: Madame b u r y . 6=---
367. - Pfaelzer. 1.ean. "Rebecca Harding Davis: Domesticity, Social Order, and the Industrid Novel." lntermional Jacrnal of Women's Studies. IV.3.1981.234-44.
Woik, Women and; JWorking-Class Women. Writing by and about; ' Technology. Womenand; Class Position. Women's; Family. Women and; Cult of True Womanhood; Crime. Women and. d
-- Davis, Rebecca Harding: Li f i in the Iron ~ M S .
Pichanick. Valerie Kossew. "An Abominable Submission: Harriet Martineau's Views on ttic Role and Place of W ~ r n a n . ~ Women's Spdies . V.1.1977. 13-32.
write& Women - Conditions of (19th Century British);. Friendships. Femalc; Education of Women; Single Women; Work. Women and - as Economic Necessit! - ~rofessional Careers; Marriage - and Male Adthority - and Marriage Law: '
Prostitution; Poverty, Women and; Feminism. Pre-Twentieth Century - influence on Women's Writhg.
Martineau, Hamet: Illustrations of Pditical Economy.
Pickar, Gertrud Bauer. "'Too Manly Is Your Spirit': Annette von Droste-hulshoff." Rlce University Studies , LXIV.l, 1978,Sl-68.
Writers, Women - Conditions of.
Droste-~uls6off. Annette von.
91
Plat& Carolyn V. "HoC ~ e k n i s t is Villette ?," Women and Literature , 111.1, 1975, 16-26.
Love. Romantic; Independence. Female; Male Characters in Women's Writing. b
Bronte. Charlotte: Villette .
Plotz, Judith A. "'Potatoes in a Cellar': Charlotte Bronte's Villette and the Feminized Imagination," Jmrnal of Women's Studies in hterature ,I.1, 1979,74-87.
Writers, Women - Conditions of - Anxiety of Authorship;, Isolation of Women; Renunciation; Role-Models. Female; Independence, Female; Power. Female.
Bronte, Charlotte: Villette .
Pollin, Burton R. "Poe on Margaret Fuller in 1845: An Unknown Caricature and Lampoon." Women and Literature. V.1.1977.47-50.
Phallic Criticism; Writers, Women " Conditions of; Images of Women - Bluestocking/Learned Woman.
m
Discussion of a short untitled essay by Poe in the Broad way Journal --
Poe. Edgar Allan. f\ . .
Poovey, Mary. "My Hideous Progeny: Mary Shelley and the Feminization of Rornanti~ism." - PMLA , XCV.3,1980.332-47.
> f
.- --
e
W n m . Women - ~ $ x i t r ~ of Aulhorship: ,&list. Woman as; Sclf-abnwtion; h l b . Women and; Powcr. Fer"&c - W of.
I
- SWlc). Mary: Frankenstein . , c
. bbute, I&K. 'George Sand and rhc Myth of Femininity." Women and b t e ~ a w e . IV.2.1976. ?-I?.
Sand. G q t : l r P d t 4 ~ ; Vigny. Affred de: Chbrtenwr .
Realism. Theory oC Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Femfslism. PreTwmtittb Century - influtnct on Wmcn's Writing; Images of Women - c
IWired Objtcr - 0th; Narratiw Strategies in Women's Writicing - Subtext - Doublmg; Identity. Frmale; Scxua;jty. Female; Language, Patriarchal - as . In?&qurrtr for E r m n g Women's Erpericnet; Alienation, Ftmale; French ijtcrature. Wmm and
D
Allan. Horfcasc: M a p ; d'Agoult. Narie (pscud. Daniel Stem): Vdenfia ; Balzac. I
H m r c dc: & Lys danr h Vdie ; Chateaubriand, Francois-Rcne de: Rene ; Flauben. G w v e : L'Edrscmrm Scnrrmrtlde ; Tristan. Ftora: Mephis .
t
Marriage - d Equality/Murualic)'; M&erf id ; Androgyny; Fai* Tale 4 I m q q n W m t Writing - Beauty and the Beast; Malt Characters in Women's Wniing; H v a t i v c Strategies in Wpmen's Writing - Educating Hero; French t-tteratwc. Women and
.-,-. t H a p m KaWrinc. 'Women in Thomas Hardy,' CcrtlcnJlial R e v i e w , XIX.4.1975:249-58.
Hard!. Thcms: Tcss of the GUrbcrvilles ; M z the Obsaste ; Retwn ofrhe N a i v e ; For B
Nineteenth Century Yrm -
m ' t h e Moddrng Crowd ; The W d a n d e r s .
& 378. Roman, Christine M. "Henry James and the Surrogate Mother." Amerrcan ~ranscendenrai*
Quruteriy .38.1978.193-205.
Mother/Daughter Relationships; Role-Models. Female; Independence. Female.
James. Henry: The Pwtrait of a M y ; Dasy MiNer ; The Spoils of Poynton ; Washington Square ; "The Aspern
379. Roskies, David G. "Yiddish Popular Literature and the Female Reader," Journal of Popular Culture , X.4; 1977,852-58.
Images of Women - Intellectual Inferior - Terrible Mother - Temptress - Moral Custodian; Work, Women and; Religion. Women and - Judaism; Revision - of Stereotypes; Reader. Woman as; ~Jewish Women. Writing by and about
Abramovitsh. S. Y.; Aleichem sholem; qik. A. M.; Peretz. Y. L.
1 i
380. Rouslin, Virginia Watson. "The Intelligent Woman's Guide to Pioneering in Canada," D a f h m e Review, LVI.2. 1976,319-35.
Forms. Non-Canonical'- DiariedJournals - Letters; Writers. Women - Conditions ok Work, Women and; Independence, Female; Education of Wmnen; Communities of Women.
Jarneson. Anna Brownell: Wmter Studies and Summer Rambles In Canada ; Moodie. Susanna: Roughing It in the Bush ; O'Brien. Mary: The Jwnals of Mary O'Brien. 1828- 1838 ; Traill. Catharine Pan: The Backwds of Canada .
381. Rouslin, Virginia Watson. "Women'~uali ty in Bronte and Elio~" R u m of One's Own , 111.1, 1977.38-52. 4 -
Sexuality. Female; Revision - of Stereotypes; Physical Appearance.
Bronte. Charlotte: Villette ; Eliot. George: Middlemarch .
382. Rowe. Margaret Moan. "Beyond Equalit).: Ideas and lmages in Jane E y e ," Ball State University Fwum . XX1.4.1980.5-9.
Sex Roles - Rejection 06 Independence. Female; Money. women and; MaleIFernale Relationships.
Bronte. Charlotte: Jane E y e .
Nineteenth Century Prose
383. Sadoff, Dianne F. "Endurance. Escapism and Female Energy: The Moral World of Mary Barton ," University of Michigan Papers in Women's Studies. 11.4. 198 , 83-93.
Passivity, Female; Imager'y and Motifs in Women's Writing - Escape; Death, Women and; Class Position, Women's; Work, ~ o m e r i aqd; Sex Roles - Rejectio3 of; Bower. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Political Activism, Women and; @
Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Heroine's Marria"g as Closure.
Gaskell, Elizabeth: Mary Barton.
384. Sand, Cy-Thea "Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eye: A Saga of Maternal Deprivation and Feminist Revolt," Maenad. 1.3.1981.
Narrative Strategm in W men's Writing - Absent Mother; Imagery and Motifs in f Women's Writing - Moo Home; Self-realization; Anger. Female; Mother/Daughter Relationships.
Bronte, Charlotte: Jme E y e .
385. Schriber. M& Suzanne. "Toward Daisy Miller: Cooper's Idea of 'The American Girl'," Studies in the Novel, XIII.3,1981,237-49.
Cult of True Womanhood; Images of Women - American Girl; Feminism. Pre-TwentiethrCentury - Influence on Men's Writing; Madness. Women and.
Cooper, James Fenimore:' Homeward Barnd ; Home as Fmnd ; A w and Ashwe ; Miles Wdlingfbrd ; The Ways of the How.
386. Scon, Marilyn. "Laura Marholm (1854-1928): Germany's Ambivalent Feminist," Wcmen's Studies, VII.3.1980, 87-96.
Writers, Women - Conditiens of (19th Century German); Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Imagcs of Women - Career Woman - Temptress; ,Motherhood; German Literature. Women and.
Hansson. Laura Mohr (pseud Laura Marholm): Zer Psychdogie der Frau.
e , 387. Seidel. Kathryn L "The Southern Belle as an Antebellum Ideal." Smthern &erly. XV.4.
1977.387-401.
Images of Women - Southern Belle - Moral C u s t o d i a u e t t e ; Public and Private. Separation of; Sentimental Fiction; Education of Women; Father/Daughter t
Relationships; Slavery.
Hale. Sarah Josepha: Nwthwood ; Henu. Caroline Lee: Linda, or The Ycung Pilot of the BeNe Crede, a Tale of Sacthern Life ; Edine; w Magndia Vole"; Kennedy, John
Pendleton: Swaflow Bun ; Stowe. Harriet Beecher: U n d e Tom's C d r n .
388. Senf. Carol A. "Jane Eyre : The Prison-House of Victorian Marriapc." Journal ofH'men's Studies in Literature, 1.4, 1979, 353-59.
Marriage - and Equality/Mutuality - as Economic Necessity; Madness. Women and: Sexuality, Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Enclosure; Monc).
7 Women and.
Bronte, Charlotte: June Eyre . -.
389. Shakir, Evelyn. "Ednah Dow Cheney: 'Jack at all trades'," Amencan Transcendental Quanerlp . 47/48.1980,95-115.
Writers, Women - Rediscovered; Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on - Women's Writing; Political Activism. Women and; Role-Models. Female; Sex
~olesd- Rejection of; Education of Women; Biography, Women's: Slavery - and Abolition; Autobiography. Women's.
McotS Louisa May; Cheney - Ednah Dow: Reminiscences of Ednah Dow Cheney ; Nova's I Return ; Faith@ to the Lig t and Other Tales ; Memoir of S q n Dtmock ; Lorusa May Alcott, Her Life, Letters and Journals ; Fuller. Margaret
390. Sharrna, P. P. "The Brontes' Fight against 'Sexism'." Indian Journal of English Studtes . X X , ' 1980.101-06.
Writers, Women - Conditions of (19th Century British) - Use of Pseudonym; . Phallic. Criticism.
, .- ., .
Bronte, Anne; Bronte. Charlotte; Bronte. Emily.
391. Shores, Lucille P. ,"Rosins Bulwer-Lytton: Strong-Minded Woman," Massachusetts Studie~ In English , VI.3/4. 1978, 83-92.
Writers, Women - Rediscovered - Conditions of; Sqx Roles - Rejection o t Power, Female - Lack of; Marriage - and Male Authority - as Enuapment.
392. Showdter, Elaine. "Dinah Mulock Craik and the Tactics of Sentiment: A Case Study in Victorian Female Authorship." Feminist Studies , I1.2/3. 1975. 5-23.
Sentimental Fiction; Cult of &e Womanhood; Writers, Women - Conditions of - Anxiety of Authorship;. Single Women; , Work, Women and - Need for Useful Occupation; Class Position, Women's; Illness. Women and; Passivity. Female;
L - Nineteenth Century Prose
Masochism. Female; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Marriage - and a
Woman's Fulfillment
Craik, Qnah Mulock: John Halifa, Gentleman ; The Little Lame Prince ; Christian's Mistake ; The Head of the Family ; A Woman's Thwghts abooct Women ; Olive ; The Woman3 Kingdom.
0
1
393. Showalter. Elaine. "Desperate Remedies: Sensation Novels of the 1860s," Victwian Newsletter, 49. 1976. 1-5.
Sensation Fiction; Crime, Women and; Publishing. Women and; Sexuality. Female; Anger. Female; Madness, Women and.
Braddon. Mary Elizabeth: Lady Audley's Secret ; Wood. Ellen (Mrs. Henry Wood): Eost Lynne .
394. Showalter, Elaine. "Florence Nightingale's Feminist Complaint: Women, Religion and Suggestions+ Thought ." Signs. VI.3.1981.395-412.
Feminism. re-~wentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Family, Women and; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Sibling Relationships; Religion. Women and - Christianity; Communities of Women; Work, Women and; Anger. Female.
Nightingale, Florence: Suggestions+ Thought to Searchers ajer Religious Truth .
395. Sirnrns. Madeleine. " A Woman- Hnter : A Forgotten Novel on a Feminist Theme." Spate Rib. 85,. 1979. 18-20. ...
Work, Women and; Images of Women - Career Woman.
Reade, Charles: A Woman- Hater.
-396. Siven, Eileen Boyd. "Lelia and Feminism," Yale French Studies. 62,1981.45-66.
Language, Pat$archal- as Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience; Language. Women's Use of - I'Ecriture Feminine; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Subtext; Sexuality. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Sibling Relationships; French Literature, Women and.
Sand, George: Lelia .
397. Skaggs, Peggy. "Three Tragic Figures in Kate Chopin's The Awakening ,", L m i s i a ~ Studies ,- XIII.4. 1976. 345-64.
Identity. Female; Self-realization; Images of Women - Earth Mother - Submissive
Wife; PregnancyXhildbirth; Artist, Woman as: Sexuality. Female.
Chopin, Kate: The Awakening.
398. Smith, LeRoy W. "Charlotte eronte's Flight from Eros," W m e n and bterature ,1V.1,1976,
'7 30-44.
Love. Romantic - Destmctive Power of; Sexuality. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; M a m a g - and Equality/Mutuality; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Maiming Hero; Self-abnegation; Reason vs. Passion.
Bronte, Charlotte: Shirley ; Jane Eyre ; Villette . &
I 399. Smith, Pat "Credit Where'$rc&hsBue,",Mgka ,~11.3.1977.19-22.
Writers, Women - Conditions of; Litmry Tradition - Women's Absence from; Education of Women; Madness. Women and; Forms. Non-Cmonical - DiariWJoumals; Sibling Relationships.
Lamb. Mary: Tales fiom Shakespeare ; "Essay on ~eediework"; Wordsworth. Dorothy.
400. Smith, Susan Harris: "Frankenskin : Mary Sheiley's Psychic Divisiveness." w h e n and Literature , V.2.1977.42-53.
Self. Divided: Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Death - Quest; Writen. Women - Conditions of; Gothic, Female; Motherhood; Artist, Woman as.
P . Shglley. Mary: Frankenstein . <
401. Smylie, James H. "The Woman's Bible and the Spiritual Crisis." Scmndings . LIX.3. 1976. 305-28.
Re-vision - of Myth; Religion. Women and - Christianity; Feminism. Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Deborah - Vashti - Eve; Political Activism. Women and.
Anonymous: The Bible ; Gage. Matilda Joslyn: Woman, church and State ; Stanton, Elizabeth Cady et al.: The Woman's BiMe .
402. Spacks. Pamcia Meyer. "Rebellions of Good Women." Women am' Uera t i re . VI.2.1978. 2 - 1 3 .
Images of Women - Angel in the House - Moral Custodian - Submissive Wife; . Independence, erna ale; Self, Divided; Thought Modes of, Female vs. Male; Masculinity.
Bronte, Charlotte: Villette ; Bronte, Emily: Wuthering Heights.
Century Prose
Strauss. Sylvia. "Women in 'Utopia'." S m h Atlantic Quarterly, LXXV.l. 1976,115-31. *
Utopias; Motherhood; Family. Women and; Chastity, Female; Feminism., Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence oh Men's Writing; Sex Roles; Work, Women and; Self-sacrifice.
Bellmy. Edward: Lmking Bwkwnrd ; Morris, William: News- Nowhere ; ~ e l l s . H. G.: A Madern Utopia.
Srmmingher. Laura S. "L'hge de la Maison: Mothers and Daughters in Nineteenth Century ' , France," International Jwnal of'WomenYs Studies. II.1. 1979.51-61.
Education of Women; Motherhood; Family. Women and - as Woman's Sphere; Class Position. Women's; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Advice Literature; Didactic Literature; French Literature, Abmem and
Caillard. Mme. Paul; d9Altemont, Louis (pseud T. H. Barrau): Des Devairs des enfants vet leurs parents ; Le4"livre de moral pratique,; Fouiller, Mme. (pseud ,@o~ges Bruno): Francinet ; Guermante. Claire: Mathilde et Gabrielle ; Lippens. Mathilde (pseud Mme. Bourdon): Lo Vie Reelle ; Niboyet, Eugene: Le Vrai tivres des Femmes ; Saintes. A E de: L' Ange de la Maison ; Therese ; Les Delassernents de ma jille ; Saunders, Mme. J.: Direction MaterneIle de la jeune flle ; Segalas, Anais: A Ma Fille ; Towanger, Zulma (pseud Mme. Carraud): La Petite Jeanne .
Sulloway. Alison G. "Emma Woodhouse and A Vindication of the Rights of Woman ," The Wordsworth Circle. W.4, 1976.320-32.
Education of Women; Power, Female - Lack of; Class Position, Women's; Work, Women and - Need for Useful Occupation; Power, Male; Feminism, PreTwentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing.
Austen, Jane: Emma ; Wollstonecraft Mary: A Vindication of t.he Rights of W m n .
Swallow, Noreen J. "Portraits: A Feminist Appraisal of Mme. de Stael's Delphine ." Atlantis. VII.1. 1981.65-76.
Marriage - and Male Authority - and Courtship - and Woman's Fulfillment; Single Women; Independence, Female; Power, Female - Lack of; Physical Appearance; lmages of Women - Fallen Woman; Narrative Suategies in Women's Writing - Maiming Hero; French Literature. Women and.
Srael, Mme. de: Delphine .
Tamm, Merike. "~erforrning Heroinism in husten's S e w and SenoiBtttfp & E m m ." Paprs on Language and Literature. XV.4.1979.396-407.
Artist. Woman as; Class Position. Women's; Work, women and; Money, Women and; , Narrative Strategies in Women" Writing --Heroine's Mamage as Closure.
--
Austen. Jane: Sense and ~ensibiliir; ; Mansjeld Park ; Emma .
408. Taylol, Helen. "Class anti Gender in Charlotte Bronte's Shirley ." Fenunisr Review . 1,1979, 83-93.
Class Position, Women's; Power. Female - Lack of; Power. Male; Money. Women and; Work, Women and; Writers. Women - use of Pseudonym - Conditions of.
- Bronte, Charlotte: Shirley . -e.
409. Thomas, Deborah A. "Dickens' Mrs. Lirriper and the Evolution of a Feminine Stereotype." Dickens Studies A n d . VI. 1977.154-66. .
= - -.-5
Images of Women - Gossip - Old Maid - Earth Mother; ' ~ e - v i s ( ~ n - of Stereotypes; Humour, Women as Objects of.
Dickens. Charles: Nichdus NicWeby ; "The Boarding House"; "Miss h i p e r ' s Lodgings" ; "Miss Lirriper's Legacy".
410. b
Thomson, Patricia. "George Sand and Mrs. Ellis," Studies in the Lterary lmaginaflon , X11.2, 1979, 1-17.
Cult of True Womanhood; Advice Literatwe; Marriage - and Male Authority - and Woman's Fulfillment; Family, Women and - as Woman's Sphere; Education of Women; Literary Tradition - Women's; Nationalism, Wnmen and; Forms, Non-Canonical - Letters; Images of Women - Submissive Wife; French Literature. Women and. .)I
Discusses responses of &en Browning, Jewsbury and Carlyle to the work of Sarah Ellis - and George Sand -
Barren Browning, Elizabeth: Aurora Leigh ; Bronte. Charlotte; Carlyle, Jane; Eliot. George; Ellis. Sarah S'ickney: The Women ofEngland ; The Daughters ofEngland ; The Wives ofEngland ; The Mothers of England ; Jewsbury. Geraldine; Sand. George.
411. Thornton. Lawrence. "The Awakening : A Political Romance," American Dterarure , LII.1. 1980.50-66.
Marriage - as Entrapment; Sexuality. Female; Indepkndence, Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Escape - Sea - Music; I m e . Romantic - Desmctivc
- - - - - -b l ineteenthLal t
. -- Power of. -
Chopin, Kate: The Awakening ; Flaubert, Gustave: Madame Bovary .
412. Thorson, Gerald "When Nora Helmer Came to Chiciigo," Melus, V.1.1978,31-37. i
Immigrant Women, Writing by and about; Work. Women and; Prostitution; Education of Women.
-- Some comparison of novel's t hem to Ibsen's A Ddl's Harrse
'Janson Kristofer: Sara .
413. Todd, Janet M. "Frankenstein's Daughter: M a y Shelley and Mary Wollstonecraft," Women and . Literature. IV.2.1976.18-27.
Mother/Daughter Relationships; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Images of Women - Fallen Woman; Revision - of Stereotypes; Family, Women and; Education of Women.
, Godwin, William: Cdeb ~ i i l i a m s ; Shelley, Mary: Frankenstein ; Wollstonecraft Mary: Maria, w the Wrongs of W m n .
414. Toth, Emily. "The Cult of Domesticity and 'A Sentimental Soul'," Kate chopin Newsletter, L2, 1975.9-16.
Cult of True Womanhood; Domestic Fiction; Images of Women - Angel in the, House - Deceiver - Idealized Love Object - Old Maid; -Love, Romantic; Revisiofi - of Stereotypes; Uterary Tradition - Women's. .#
Chopin, Kate: "A Sentimental Souln. . .
I 415. Toth. Emily. "Kate Chopin Remembered," Kate Chopin Newsletter, L3.1976.21-27.
Writers. Women - Conditions of; Sex Roles - Rejection of. /
416d Toth. Emily. "Sr Louis and the Fiction of Kate Chopin" Mis-i Hhoricai Suciety Bulletin. XXXII.l, 1976, 33-50.
Writers, Women - Conditions of; Regionalism in Women's Writing; Phallic Criticism; Alcohol, Women and; Adultery. I $
*
Chopin, Kate: "Story of an Hour"; "%e Maid of Saint Phillippe"; At ~dulr ; "A : r
Nineteenth Century Prose
; Shameful Affair"; "Wiser than a Godw; "A Point at Issuen; "A Poor Girl"; Bapu Fdk ; A Nt& in Acadie ; "YOU and I" ; "Love Everbmg" ; The Awakening; "A V d c m an& a' Voicew; "Miss Witherwell's Mistake" ; "Elizabeth Stock's One Story" ; "Polly"; "Miss McEndersw . I
417. Toth, Emily. "Kate Chopin and Litex 3 Convention: 'Desiree's Baby'." Sacthern Studies: An Interdisciplinary Jtnunal of the Sacth , XX.2.1981,2Ql-08.
Revision - of Critical Tradition; Miscegenation; Slavery; Racism; lmages o Women - Tragic Mulatto.
Chopin. ,Kate: "Desiree's Baby". /
1
418.- Tuchman;Gaye and Nina Fortin. "Edging Women Out: Some Suggestions about the Structure of Opportunities and the Victorian Novel," Signs. VI.2.1980.308-25.
Publishing, Women and; Writers, Women - Conditions of.
Compares manuscripts, fiction and non-fiction, submitted to Macrnillan and Co. publishers by men and women between 1866 and 1887
419. Vicinus. Martha. "'Helpless and Unfriended': Nineteenth Century Domestic Melodrama." New Literary Histwy . XIII.1.1981. 127-43.
j PuSlicjind Private. Separation of; Domestic Fiction; Sensation Fiction; Sentimental Fiction; Industrialization, Women and; Power. Female; Power. Male; Cult of True Womanhood; Family, Women and; Images of Women - Angel in the House - Fallen Woman - Moral Custodian; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Punishing Heroine; Self-sacrifice; Class Position, Women's.
s, Braddon, Mary Elizabeth: Lady Audley's Secret ; Buckstone, John Baldwin: hke the Lobtnuer, or The Last Son ; Dickps. Charles: Oliver Twlst ; The Old Curiosity Shop; Jerrold. Douglas: The Rent Day ; Payne. John Howard: Clari, or the M a d ofMdan ; P
Reynolds. George W. M.: The Mysteries ofLondon ; The Mpterres of the Cowl of London ; Wood. Ellen (Mrs. Henry Waod): East Lynne.
420. Voloshin. Beverly. "A Historical Note on Women's Fiction: A Reply to Annette Kolodny," Critical Inquiry . 11.4, 1976, 817-20.
Sentimental Fiction; Domestic Fiction; Cult of True Womanhood.
Response to: Kolodny, Annette. "Some Notes on Defining a 'Feminist Literary Criticism'." Critical Inquiry. 11.1. 1975. 75-92.
Parton. Sara Willis (pseud. Fanny Fern): Ruth Hall ; Hawthorne, Nathaniel.
- - - Nineteebth Century Prose
-L
42 1. Wade, Sosalind. "George Eliot's Wedding," Co-wy Reuicw . CGXXXVI.1372,19&0, \ 266-69.
Writers, Women - Conditions of; Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment - and Marriage Law.
h B
/-
Eliot George. * *
i
422. Walker. Nancy. "Wit, Sentimenwity and the Image of Women in the Nineteenth Century," American Studies , XXII.2.1981.5-22.
-F
Humour. Women's Use of: Satire, Women's Use of; ~enti&khtal Fiction; Writers. Women - as Subjects of Women'e Writing; Images of Women- Bluestocking/Leamed Woman - Old Maid; 3e-vision - of Stereotypes; Fernixiism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence-on Women's Writing.
Dodge. Mary Abigail (pseud Gail Hamilton): Wad- Gathering ; Holley. Marietta: My Opinions and Betsey Bobbet's ; Kirkland, Caroline M.: A New Home - Who'll F d h ? ; Fwest Life ; Parton, Sara Willis (pseud. Fanny Fern): ~er;"I.L.eavesfiom Fannds PwtjWo ; Whicher, Frances: The Widow Beddt PU&S ; .Widow Spriggins ; Mary Elmer and Other Sketches.
Walters. Anna. "When Women's Reputations Are in m e Hands: Elizabeth Gaskell and the Critics," Women's Studies international Quartefi , EI.4,1980,405-%3.
I
- Phallic Criticism; Writers; Women - Conditions of; Revision - of Critical Traditior~
Reviews critical attitudes toward Elizabeth Gaskell, from her initial publication to the present
Gaskell, Elizabeth.
Waterston. Elizabeth. "The Gap in Henry-Adams' Education," Canadian Review of American Studies. VII.2.1976, 132-38. ,
* .
Images of Women - Career WO- - Fallen Woman - frigid Woman - Moral Custodian 6
- Moral Inferior - Virgin;, , hwer. Female - Male Fear of.
.4dams. Henry: The Edu'cqtion of Henry Adam ; Democracy ; Esther ; Manu T w o ; L p t Queen of Tahiti :.
Weir. Sybil. "Gertrude hert ton: The Limits of Feminism in the 1890's." Sun Jose Studies, 1.1, 1975,24-31. L
Sexuality. Female; New Woman, The; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Autobiography, Women's.
-
Nineteenth Century Prose t - -
. +
, Atherton. Gemude: Patience spurhawk and Her Times ; Adventures of a Novelm" ; - Awhirl Asunder ; h Cerritm ; The Cdifinians .
Weir. Sybil. "The Mwgesons : A Neglected Feminist Bildungsroman." New England - Quarterly. XLIX.3,1976,427-39. i
Bildungsroman, Female; Sexuality, Female; Family. Women and; Self-realization; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Journey. k Stoddard, Elizabeth Drew: The Morgesons .
we&. Sybil B. "Southern Womanhood in the Novels of Constance Fcnimore Woolson." Mississippi Quarterly, XXIX.4.1976.559-68. .
. Regionalism in Women's Writing; Images of Women - Child-Woman - Angel in the House; Re-vision - of Stereotypes; \ Sentimend Fiction; Self-sacrifice; Renunciation.
6-
Woolson, Constance Fenimore: For the M a p ; Earn Angels.
Weissman. Judith. "'Old Maids Have Friends': The Unmamed Heroine of Trollope's Barsetshire Novels," Wor ?n and Literature , V.1. 1977. 15-25.
Single Women; Images of Women - Old Maid; Re-vision - of Stereotypes;. .. Friendships. Female; Love, Romantic; Marriage - and Courtship. . ,
Trollope, Anthony: The Warden ; Barchester Towers : Doctor Thorne ; Framely Parsonage ; The Small House at Allington ; The Lust Chronicle of Barset .
Westwater. Sister A. Martha. "Surrender to Subservience: An Introduction to the Diaries and Journals of Eliza Wilson Bagehot" International Journal of Women's Studies. 1.5, 1978. 517-29.
Forms, Non-Canonical - Di&es/Journals; Writers. Women - Conditions of (19th Century British); Class Position, Women's; Work, Women and - Need for Useful Occupation; Passivity, Female; Self-sacrifice.
Bagehot, Eliza Wilson.
6 Wheeler, Otis B. "The Fixe Awakenings of Edna Pontellier," The Swthern Review (Louisiana), X1.1.1975, 118-28.
- Cult of True Womanhood; Love. Romantic - Destructive Power of; Identity. Female; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Sexuality, Female.
L, Chopin, Kate: "A No-Account Creole" ; " Athenaise ; %r Letters"; "A Respectable
Woman"; At Fault ; "The Storm"; "A Vocation and a Voice"; The Awakening.. -
431. Williams, Patrick. "The Crackerbox Philosopher as Feminist: The Novels of Marietta Nolley," American Humow: An Interdiscijdiwy Newdetter , VII.1, 1980.16-21. 9
Humour. Women's Use of; Re-vision - of Stereotypes;. Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Subtext; Didactic Literature; Feminism. PreTwentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Male Characters in Women's Wmng.
Holley. Marietta: My Opinions and Betsey Bdbet's ; Samantha at the Warl@s Fcrir ; Widder Daxfle's Love A m r ; Jmiah Allen on the W m Question ; Allen's Wife as a P. A. and P. 1. w Samantha at the Centennial ; Samantha at Saratoga ;'Sweet Cicely ; Crane, Stephen: Maggie: A Girl of the Streets.
Wilt Judith. "The Laughter of Maidens, the Cackle of Mauiarchs: Notes on the Collision between Comedy and Feminism,' W m e n and Literature, I (New Series). 1980,173-96.
3
Humour. Women's Use of; Satire, Women's Use of; Language. Women's use of - Irony; Marriage - and Male Authority.
Austen. Jane: Emma ; Eliot, George: Middlemarch ; Daniel Deronda ; Meredith. George: Diana qfthe Crossways.
433. Wilt ~udith. "Jane Austen's Men: Inside/Outside 'ihe Mystery'." Women and Literature. Il (New Series), 1981, 59-76.
Masculinity; Power. Male; Rites of Passage; Male ~haracte; in Women's Writing.
Austen. Jane: Manrfield Park ; Sense and Sensibility ; Persuasion ; Pride and PreMice ; Emma. i
. . I*
434. Wisernan. Adele. "What Price the Heroine?," Internatipnal J w n a l oyWomen's Studies. IV.5, 1981.459-71.
Cult of True Womanhood; Self-sacrifice; Renunciation; Independence. Female; Marriage - and Male Authority; Images of Women - Fallen Woman - Submissive Wife - Victim - Virgin.
James. Henry: The Pmrait of a Lady.
435. Yelin, Louise. "Strategies for Survival: Florence and Edith in 'Dombey and Son'." Victwian Studies. XXII.3. 1979, 297-319.
1
Images of Women - Other - Angel in the House - Hysteric - Frigid Woman; Family.
Nineteenth Century Prose .--- Women and - as Woman's Sphere; Self-sacrifice; Father/Daughrer Kelauonsh~ps; Marriage - and Male Authority - as Economic Necessity.
Dickens, Charles: Dombey and Son .
Yellin, Jean Fagan. "From Success to Experience : Louisa May Alcott's M.'i#k ." Massuchuserr.\ Review . XXI.3. 1980. 572-39.
Work, Women and; Cult of True Womanhood; Independence, Female; Class Position. Women's; Communities of Women; Domestic Fiction; Femin~sm. Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing.
Success was Alcott's first working title for Work A Story of Exprrence ,
Alan, Louisa May: Work A Story ofExperience .
f ,
Zrnrnerman. Bonnie. "Felix Hdt and the True Power of Womanhood," Englrsh hterury History, XLVI.3.1979.432-51.
emi in ism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Cult of True Womanhood; Images of Women - Moral Custodian - Angel in the House; Power. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Political Activism. Women and; Edumuon of Women; Public and Private. Separation of.
Eliot, George: Felix Hdt, The Radical.
Zuckes Catherine H. ".American Women and Democratic Morals: The Barlomans ." femrnrsr Studies. III.3/4. 1976.30-50.
' Feminism, PreTwentieth Cennuy - Influence on Men's Writing; Self-sacrifice; ' Education of Women;, Independence. Female; Family. Women and; Images of Women - Moral Custodian - American Gir!.
James. Henry: The Bmtonians .
Whiman. Walt: 'Song oPMg&lT; Leaves o f G m a . ./
k r d w , . $us. ' Wmen in Viaonan Poetry." Rat# L c l f m . 1 .1975 ,69 . e
Irrmgrli of Women - in the Hortsit: - Vr*n - Subnrrisdrivc Wife - Moral Cwudap; % x q l i t : ; . Fmnalc; Paswit)-. F d e ; Cult sf True W m h o l o d : ,Marriage - and . ~ t y / ~ u i w J ~ t ~ . & L.: I
n 1 .
kmrkw. laulsc. "f2mmmt or. Jannc Fat f)rcklls ' " U e Slowly --Menn: An Exploration c
of W m m Poets a& Thdt Muse'.'' Stpm . IY.1, 197%. 191 -65. a . *
I~tcnr) T n b m - Women's; hagcry mQ Ha& iin W m a ' s Writing - Muse - WltchaWifdicraft ; b c r . Faalc; Writzn, W&en - A&&). of Authenhip.
Ams~ Woman as; Work. Women and: Love. Romanuc - lksuuctivc Powcr of'. *
* .
Eliot George: ,4rrngm.; Daniel Dertmda . n . -
445. Bogen J u d i ~ . -"The New Cross I(JliPfii: The Fixing of a Legend.* Srlrdre~ rn Brmnrng und t11.1 Cirde , VII.1. 1979. 34-42. . ,
a/
Images of Women - Idealized Love Object - Dead Woman; t o v c , Romanuc,
, Banett Browning, Elizabeth; Browning. Roben: The Rmg and the , B d .
4.16. Bul-biclr, J'wn. "Emily Dickinson and the Revenge of thc Nerves," N ' m e n ' ~ Sludre~ . Vll . 1 .'7. 1!%0.95-109.
If
Writers, Women - Conditions of (19th Century American); Maanhs, W6mm a::;?. Mother/Daughcer Relationships; I l l n ~ Women and.
Dickirason, Emily: "The Heart s5 Pleasure - fim" (J 536); "Aficr prcar'pain, a farrnal . . feeling comes -" (J 3%); "Me from Myself - to banish -" (J M2); "Errrpiy M! Hean. of
) - Thce -" (J 587); "Toe Heart 1s the Capital of the I$nd" (J 13.54); 'The Mind 11vm on thc Heart" (J 1355); "?'he golng from a world we knou" (J 1603).
, . 447. Culley, Ann C. -?he Confljct betw-n Tndiuon and Modern Values in Tcnnfsn ' s The ) Princess .* Bucknell Review . XXIV. l , 1978. 37-46.
Educauon of Women; Irnagrss~of Women - Rluestqck~ng/lxamcd Woman - Intcllcc~ital Infenor; Cult of Truc Womanhmd; Eem~n~sm. P r ~ T w e n u c l h Ccnturl, - Influence on Men'a Writing .
Tcnnyson, Alfred. b r d : The Princes3 .
: 448. Dickerria. G$l *Notes on Ninetecnlh-Cenwry ~erninin%'ersc.* Femmrrt St,ycdte~ . 1Y.3. 197b. llh26. ' , 3
! . . ,
~brninism. Pre-Twentierh .&nun - lnnucnrc on Women's Wiiung; Writcln..Wumcn - RedisCbvered; Pdlltical Activism, Women and; Sex Role .
.Y \
Anonymous: 'A young LAdy's Soliloquy'; "Woman's Sphcrc"; "The Difference"; T h c Dgdsion'; ~ r a ~ d < Anha B.: "Si and I"; Brown. Abbie F'aMell: "The Blessed Ynvilcpc"; Homer. Hattie: "T;he Differcne'; bngbur)., E A.: 'An Unreasanablc Woman";
'
Pafrner. Millie Renpuf: 'Woman's Ila):"; Turner, Eliza Sp-r&t: "What LO Do".
\ 449. Dichl. Jagnnc Feit "'Come Sloyly - FAen': An Fsploration of Women Pocn and Tncu Musc."
9 ' ,
Writers, Women - Anxiety o? Authorship; Power, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Power. Male; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Muse - Pain - Father - Male Deity; Identity. F e e e .
Barren Browning. Elizabeth: "A Musical Instrument"; Dickinson, Emily: "Come slowly - Eden!" (J 21 1); "We c;hm it ere it comes" (J 1580): "I would not paint - a picture -" (J 505); "Growth of Man - like Growth of Nature -m (J 750); "My Sod - acdused me -.And I quailed -" (J 753); "A little East of Jordan" (J 59); "Give little Anguish -" (J 310); "I am afraid to own a Botly -" (J 1090); "Of Consciousness, her awful Mate" (J 894); "Tried '
always and Condemned by bhee" (J 1559); "He was my host - he was my guest" (J 1721); Rossetti, Christina: "Goblin Market".
0
450. Diehl. Joanne Felt "Reply to Fadergan and Bernikow," Signs :IV.l, 1978, 195-h. 0%
Power. Male; 1rnage:r-y and Motifs in W q e n ' s Writing - Muse'- Father - Male Deity. * -
- , & s p a ~ LO: Fademm. Ljliian Signs . IV.1.1978,188-91 and krnikow. Louise. Signs . IV.1.1978. 191-95. both responses to Ihehl. Joanne Feit "'Come Slowly - Eden': An, Exploration of Women Paets and Their Muse." Signs. ELI.3.1978.572-87. '7
ic
9 Diclunson. Emily.
L "
Dehl. Joanne Feit "mckinson and the American Self." SQ: A J w d of the American Renuis~ance . XXVI.l. 1980. 1-9.
- Self, Dtvided; knagcr). and Motifs in Women's Writing - !&de Deity - Death - Bridegroom - Muse; Power. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward.
C.
Dickinson, %nily: "1 know thar He exists" (J 338); "! nevg hear that one is dead" (J 1323); "Cs~nferring with myself" (J 1655); "Experience is the Angled Road" (J 910); "The Soul unto itself (J 683); "One need not be a Chamber - to be Haunted -" (J 670); "Weft Thou bur ill - that I might show thee" (J 961).
h e h l . Joanrre Feit "Dickinson and Bloom: An Antithetical Reading of Romanticism." Texar Sfwires i n Literawe and Language . XXIII.3,1981.418-41.
C
Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Revision - of Critical Tradition; lmgery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Muse - Male Deity; Renunciation; Power. Female.
Dicirinson, Emily: "He was my host - he was my guest" (J 1,721); "A little East of Jordan" (J 59); "I heard. as if I had no Ear" (J 1039); "I think? I was enchanted" (J 593); "Sweet
' Mountains - Ye tell Me no lie -" (J 722); "A Word made Flesb is seldom" (J 1651); "Put up my lute!" (J 261j. ,.
Nineteenth €entun Poetry
453. Donaldson, Sandra. "'Motherhood's Advent in Power': Elizabeth Barren Browning's Poems about Motherhood." Victwian Poetry. XVIII.l, 1980.51-66.
E
~ o t h e r h ~ d ; Pregnancy/Childbirth; Death. Women and; imager! and MoGI.5 ~n Women's Writing - Dead Child.
Barren Browning, Elizabeth: "A Child Asleep"; "Sleeping and Watching"; Ist&el's Child , A D r m ofExile ;."A Child's Grave at Florence"; "Only a Curl"; "Mother and Poct"; . "Parting Lovers"; "The Cry of the Children"; "A Song for the Ragged Schools of London"; "The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim's Point"; Aurora Leigh .
454. Donaldson. Sandra M. "Elizabeth Barren's Two Sonnets to George Sand." Studie~ rn Browrung and His Circle , V.1. 1977. 19-22.
-
Literary Tradition - women's; Androgyny; Imagery and Motifs In Women'r Wnuap - Hair - Fire.
Barren ~ r o & n ~ , Elizabeth: "A Desire"; "A Recognition".
455. Faderman, Lillian. "Emily Dickinson's Letters to Sue Gilbert.'? M~arsachuretts Review . XVI11.2, 1977. 197-225..
Lesbianism - Previously Unrecognized; Revision - of Critical Tradition; 9 ~ : Friendships. Fernale.?
456. Faderman," Lillian. "Comment on Joanne Feii hehl's '"Come Slowly - Fxienl': An t x p l o r k m . of Women Poers and Their Muse'." Signs. IV.l , 1978, 188-91.
Lesbianism - Previously Unrecognized; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Wnunp Muse; Literary Tradihon - Women's.
~ & n s e to: Diehl. Joanne Feit "'Come Slowly - Eden': An Exploration of' Women Poets+andTheir Muse." Signs, 111.3. 1978. 572-87.
4
Dickinson. Emily.
457. Fass, Barbara. Xhristina Kossetti and S t Agnes' Eve." Victwian Poetry. XIV.1. 1976, 33-46.
P Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Bridegroom - Male Deity - Journey; Images of Women - Waiting.Woman; Passivity. Female; - Power. Female - Lack .OR Religion, Women and - Christianity.
Keats. John: " m e Eve of St. Agnes"; Rosseni, Christina: "Repining"; "A Royal Princess"; "The Prince's Progress" ; "The Lowest Room" ; "Why"; Tennyson. Alfred.
154
Nineteenth Century Poetry - --
- Lard: "St Agnes' Eve". -- -
458. Friedman. Adele C. "The Broadside Ballad Virago: Emancipated Women in British Working Class Literature. " J w n d of Popular Culture . XIII.3.1979.469-75.
Transvestism; Power, Female; Independence, Female; a Love, Romantic; ,
Popular Culture - Songs; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Militarism. Women and; Working-class Women, Writing by and about
Survey of 19sh Century British broadside ballads
459. gall an^ Christine. "The Archetypal Feminine in Emily '~ront& ~qetry. " W a e n ' r Studies . VI1.1/2. 1980. 79-94.
Writers. Women - Conditions of (19th Century British); Power, Female; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Great Goddess; Imagery and Motifs in
i Women's Writing - Nature. 1 -
Bronte. Emily: "The Linnet in the Rocky Dells"; "Fall. Leaves. F ~ F ; "Cold in the Earth"; "There Shoqld Be No Despair? "Why Seek to Know What Date, What Clime".
X .- /
2 d
-. / .
460. Ge1pi:Albert "Emily Dickinson and the Deerslayer: The Dilerhma bf the Woman Poet in America." Sun Jose Studies. 111.2. 1977. 80-95. t
4 8 !
Writers. Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Self Divided; Power. Male; Artist,
9. 1) ' Woman as; Sex Roles; Power, Female; M ulinity.
Cooper. James Fenimore: The ~ e k r ~ l a ~ v r ; Dickinson. Emily: "My Life had stood - a Loaded Gun -" (J 754); "Rearrange a 'Wife's' affection" (J 1737); "I'm ceded - I've stopped being Theirs -" (J 508); "I'm 'wife' - I've finished that -" (J 199).
461. Gelpi. Barbara Charlesworth. " Awwa Leigh : The Vocatio~! r,i the Woman Poeg" Victwim Poetry. XIX.l. 1981. 35-48.
\\ B t
Writers. Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Artist Woman as; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Doubling - Maiming Hero.
Barren Browning, Elizabeth: Awwa Leigh . I
a 462. Hamson, Anthony H. "The Swinburnian Woman." Phildogical Q~~cuterly. LVIII.1.1979.
90-102.
Images of Women - Sexually Devouring Woman - Terrible Mother.
Overview of Swinburne's poetry
e Nineteenth Century Poetry
Swinburne, Algernon Charles.
" 463. Hayter, Alethea. "'These Men Over-Nice': Elizabeth Barrett Browning's 'Lord Walter's Wife'." Browning Smiety Notes. ~1fI.2.1978.5-7.
Sexuality. Female - Male Fear of; Cult of True Womanhood; Seduction; Adultery; Publishing. Women and. 9
+
Barrett Brownifig. Elizabeth: "Lord Walter's Wife".
464. Hickok, Kathleen. "The Spinster in Victoria's Eogland: Changing Attitudes in Popular Poetr) b\ Women," Journal ojPopular Culture, XV.3,1981,119-31.
Single Women; Writers. women - Rediscovered; Images of Women - Old Maid; Work. Women and; Money, Women and; Independence. Female; Self-sacrifice; Physical Appearance.
Cook. Eliza: "Song of the Ugly Maiden"; Eliot, George: "Agatha"; Landon. Letitia: "The Secret Discov.eredn; Procter, Adelaide Anne: "Three Evenings in a Life"; Robinson, Ma-y: "The Wisewoman"; "The Rothers"; Symons. Arthur: "The Unloved"; Webster, "
Augusta: "B the Looking-Glass"; Wortiey, Lady Ernmeline Stuart: "I Am Came but Your sp i r i t sb Raisew.
465. Hickok. Kathleen K. "'New 'yet ~rihoclox' - The Female Characters in Aurwa. Lagh ." International Jownal of Women's Studtes ,111.5, 1980.479-89.
I
Revision - of Stereotypes; Cult of True Wornanhood; Sex Roles - Rejecuon 6; , '
Prostitution; Writers, Wbmen - as Subjects of Women's Writing; Ijterary Trabuon - Women's.
Barren Brownip, Elizabeth: Aurora Leigh . 3
r 466. Hill, Patricia Liggins. "'Let Me Make the Songs for the People': A Study of Frances Walkins
Harper's Poeny," Black American bterature Fwum . XV.2. 1981.60~65. I
Black Women - Writers. Redimvered - and the F a m i l y bra1 Tradition: PoliucaI Activism, Women and; Slavery; Writers. Wom3n - Rediscovered; Family, Womcn
/J and; 0 m l Tradition, Women and. B
?=. Harper, Frances W,: Poems on Miscellanecnis Subpcts ; Poems (1871) ; M w s : A Stwy of the Nil&Sketches of Southern Lifi ; The Martyr of Alabama and Other Poems ; Atlanta Oflering Poems ; Pwms (1893) ; Lghr beyodothe Darkness ; Ida &Roy, Or Sjladuws Uplijled .
" 467. d
Hill. Patricia Liggins. "Frances W. harper's Aunt Chloe Poems from Sketches ofSoutherh /'
1
Nineteenth Century Poetry - --
bfi : Antithesis to the Plantation Literary Tradition." Mississippi Quarterly , XXXIV.4, 19811 403-13.
Slavery - and Abolition; Black women - and Black Idiom - Motherhood - and the Family - and Black Consciousness - and Education; Regionalism in Women's Writing; Political Activism, Women and; Motherhood; Family. Women a d ; Education of Women.
Harper. Frances W.: Sketches of Sacthern Lijk .
J u h a s ~ . Suzanne. " ' ~ . k v i l e ~ e so Awful': Emily Dickinson as Woman Poet" Sari J s e Studies. 11.2, 1976, 94-107.
Revision - of Critical Tradition; Phallic Criticism; wri tedwomen - Anxiety of Authorship - as Subjects of Women's Writing; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Death - Nature - Paradise - Sea; Sexuality. Female.
Dickinson, Emily: "They shut me up in Prose -" (J 613); "1.would not-paint - a picture -" (J 505); "I dwell in Possibility -" (J 657); "One need nc t be sl Chamber - to be Haunted -" (J 670); "Exhilaration - is withiri -" (3 383); "The Loneliness One dare not sound -" (J 777); "To own the Art within the Soul" (3 855); "'Nature' is what we see -" (J 668); "It might be lonelier" (J 405); "You left me - Sire - two legacies" (J 644); "Wild Nights - Wild Nights!" (J 249); "The Dwp, that wrestles in the Sea" (J 284); "Come slowly - Eden!" (J 211); "As if the Sea should part" (J 695); "A Door just opened on a street -" (J 953); "TQ he alive - is Power -" (J 677).
Juhasr. Suzanne. "'I Dwell in ~ossibility': Emily Dickinson in.the Subjunctive Mood." Emily Dick;ln.son Bulletin . 32.1977. 105-09.
I .
Power. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward
Dickinson. Emily: "1 dwell in Possibility A" (J 657); "If recollecting were forgetting" (J 33); "How happy I was if I could forget" (J 898); "If pain for peace prepares" (J 63); "It might be lonelier" (J 405); "Wild Nights - Wild Nights!" (J 249). 1
Kaplan, Cora. "Rereading Barrett Browning." Spare Rib. 68.1978.30-31. I
Writers. Women - Rediscovered - as Subjects of Women's Writing - Conditions of.
Barrett Browring, Elizabeth: Aurwa Leigh .
Leavy. Barbara Fass "Iseult of Brittany: A New Interpretation of Matthew Arnold's Tristram and lseult ." Victwian Pcetry , XVIII.l, 1980. 1-22.
Sexuality. erna ale- Women's Ambivalence toward; ~ h k t i t y . Female; '- Power, Female; Passivity, Female; Images of Women - Temptre+s - Angel in the House; .
\
Nineteenth Century Poem 0
- -- --
Motherhood.
Arnold, Matthew: Tristram and Iseult ; Keats. John: "La k!le Dame Sans Merci".
Machor. James L "Emily Dickinson and the Feminine Rhetoric." Arizona Quarterly. ~ X X V I . ? . 1980,131-46.
.. Style. Female VS. Male; Speech Patterns, Female vs. Male; Power. Female - lack of; Passivity, Female; Language. Women's Use of - Irony; Sex Roles - Rejecbon of.
Contains additional passing references to nheteenth century American nlale poets
Dickinson. Emily; Guiney, Louise Im%en; Jackson, Helen Hunt; Lazarus, Emma; Keese, Lizette Woodworth; Wilcox, Ella Wheeler.
Melchiori, Barbara. "Some Victorian Assumptions behind 'Porphyria's Lover'." Browrung Society Notes. V.1.1975. 3-8.
Violence against Women; Sexuality. Female; Chastity. Female; Class Position, Women's; Seduction; Images of Women - Dead Woman - Angel in the House.
Browning, Robert: "Porphyria's Lover" ; The Ring and the Bwk
Mermin. Dorothy. "The Female Poet and the Enlbarrassed Reader: Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Sonnetsfiom the Portuguese ." English Lterary History. XLVI11.2, 1981. 351-67
Personae in Women's Poetry; Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Irnagerj and Motifs in Women's Writing - Wooing Woman - Enclosure; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Love. Romantic.
Barren Browning. Elizabeth: Sonnets fiom the Pwtugese ; Aurora Lelgh .
Moms. Adalaide K. "Two Sisters Have I: Emily Dickinson's Vinnie and Suwn." Marsachusett~ Review . XXII.2, 1981. 323-32.
Friendships. Female: riters. Women - Conditions of.
Dickinson. Emily. L
Pollak, Vivian R. "Thirst and Starvation in Emily ~ickinson's Poetry," Arneriian hterature , LI.1.1979. 33-49.
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Thirst - Starvation; Renunciation; Cull of True W,ornanhood; Power, Female - Lack of.
,
Overview discussion of Dickiwn poems containing thirst and starvation imagery
Dickinson, Emily: "Victory comes late -" (J 690); "Who never wanted - maddest Joy" (J , - ' 1430); "Undue Significance a starving man attaches" (J 439); "God gave a Loaf to evgry Bird -" (J 791); "1 had been hungry, 'all the Years -" (J 579); "It would have starved a Gnat -" (J 612); "A Dying Tiger - moaned for Drink.-" (J 566); "I bring an unaccustomed wine$ (J 132).
i
Rich. Adrienne. "Vesuvius at Home: The Power of Emily Dickinson," farmssgr Pwtry in Review , V.1.1976.49-74. ,
Power, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Literary Tradition - Women's; Phallic Criticism; Friendships. Female; Artist., Woman as; Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Male Deity - Muse - Death; Self, Divided.
Dickinson. Emily: "He f q l a at your Soul" (J 315); "He put the Belt aroudd my life -" (J 273); "I would not paint - a picture -" (J 505); "On my volcano grows the Grass" (J 1677); "A still - Volcano - Life -" (J 601); "Myself was formed - a Carpenter -" (J 488); "I'm ceded - I've stopped being ~hkirs -" (J 508); " M ~ Life had stood - a Loaded Gun -" (J 754); "Much Madness is divinest sense -" (J 435); "The first Day's Night had come -" (J 410); "He scanned it - staggered -" (J 1062); "There is a Langour of the Life" (J 396); "After great pain, a formal feeling comes -" (J 341); "Me from Myself - to banish -" (J 642); "This Consciousness that is aware" (J 822); "The Province of the Savedw (J 539); "The Soul's distinct connection" (J 974); "Crumbling is not an instant's Act" (J 997); "I felt a Cleaving in my Mind -" (J 937).
Ehlack. Beverly AM. "The ' ~ d i e s s of Poets': Alice Meynell Rediscovered." Women's Studies. VII.1/2. 1980. 111-26.
%hers. Women - Rediscovered; Nature, Women and; Imagery and ~ o t i f s in Women's Writing - Moon - M w ; Motherhood - Women's Ambivalence toward; Political Activism, Women and; Religion, Women and - Wstiani ty .
Meynell. Alice: Cdlected Poems.
Smith. Philip E. I1 and Susan Hams Smith. "Constance Naden: Late Victorian Feminist Poet and Philosopher," Victwian Poetry, XV.4.1977, 367-70.
Writers. Women - Rediscovered; Feminism. Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing.
L
Naden. Constance.
SpivA, Gayatri Chakravorty. "Sex and History in The Prelude (1805): Books Nine w Thirteen," Texas Studies in Literature and Lnnguage , XXIII.3.1981.324-60.
, Nineteenth Century Yoem --- -
#
Decansau:tid Feminist; Sex l l ; r l i~ . Male; Andmgyny; Naulre, Wmen and
Wordsworth, William: The Prelude.
I *
Steiner, Dorothea. "Emily Ilkkinson: Image Panems and the,Female Im?gination." Arbeuen .
Aus Anglistik Und Amerihnistik . VI.1. 1981. 57-71.
Personae in Women's Poetry; Writers. Women - Conditions of; Fernale/Femtntsr Aesthetic; Literary Tradition - Women's; Power, Female; Power, Male; Sexuality. Female; Religion, Women and - Christianity; Love Poetry. Women's; Death, Women and; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Bees - Birds - Bride - Calvary - m d - Mde Deity - Disguise - Death - Father - Paradise - Home - Housekeeping - Intoxication - Landscape - Mutilation - Muse - Nature - Pain - Resurrection - Sky - Starvation - Water.
Dickinson. Emily.
Taplin, Gardner B. " Aurwa h i g h : A Rehearing." Studies in Browning and His Cirde . VII.1. 1979.7-23.
Revision - of Critical Tradition; Literary Tradition - Women's; Writers. Women - as Subjects of Women's Writing; Independence, Female; .Education of Women; Marriage - and Conflict with Creativity - and Equality/Mutuality.
Barren Browning. Elizabeth: Aurwa Leigh . w
Vincent, Sybil Korff. "Flat Breasted Miracle : Realistic Treatment of the'woman's Problem in
the Poeny of Edward Arlington Robinson." & arkharn Review . V1, Fall. 1976, 1415.
Feminism. Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Men's Writing; Re-visioh - of. Stereotypes; Male/Female Relationships.
Robinson. Edward Arlington.
Woolford, John. "EEB: 'Woman and Poet'," Browning Society Notes. IX.3.1939. 3-= -
Satire, Women's.Use of; Cult of True ~ o n k n h o b d ; Arust, Woman as.
Barren Browning, Elizabeth: Aurwa Leigh .
Wrobel. Arthur. "'Noble American Motherhood': Whitman, Women and the Ideal Democracy," American Studies. XX1.2.1980.7-25.
Cult of True Womanhood; Motherhood; Family. Women and; , Images of Women - Moral Custodian - Angel in the House - Plate - Intellectual Inferior - Earth
Nineteenth Century Poetry
Mother; Education of Women; Advice Literature; Sexuality, Female; Sexuality, Male.
whitman; Walt: Leaves ofGrass ; "Songof Myself".
X W I . NINETEENTH CENTURY DRAMA
Baruch, Elaine Hoffman. "Ibsen's Ddl H m e : A Myth for Our Time," Yale Review . LXli .3. 1980,374-87.
Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment; Images of Women - Child-Woman; Masculinity - and Honour; h v e . Romantic; Motherhood; Divorce; Independence, Female; Scandinavian Literature. Women and.
Ibsen, Henrik: A Ddl's Hoocse .
Belkin, Roslyn. "Prisoners of Convention: Ibsen's 'Other' Women." jmrnal of Women's Studres in Literature. 1.2.1979, 142-58.
Images of Women - Earth Mother - Submissive Wife; Sex Roles; Motherhood; Selfsacrifice; Scandinavian Literature. Women and.
i t
\
Ibsen, Henrik: A Ddl's Hacse ; The Master Builder ; When W e Dead Awaken ; An Enemy of the People ; Ghosts ; The Wild Duck ; The the Sea ; Hedda Gabler ; Rosmershdm ; John Gabriel Borkman .
Borker, David md Olga K. Gamim. "Male and Female Speech in Dramatic Dialogue: A Stylistic Analysis of Chekhovian Character Speecli." Language and Stjde , XIII.4, 1980, 3-28.
a Speeth Patterns, Female vs. Male; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Revision - of Stereotypes; Russian Literature. Women and.
Chekhov, Anton: The Seagull : Three Sisters .
Das, Manini. "The World o I: Ibsen's Nora." Manushi. 2, 1979, 59. I Feminist Process $n the Theatre; Marriage - and Equality/Mutuality; Scandinavian m' Literature. Wo en and.
Ibsen, Henrik: A Ddl's H m e .
Mellick. Margo 1. V. "Mid-Victorian Plays: A Source for ~ i v e r ~ e n i Female Images." Theorre Studies, 23,197U77.31-39. \
Cult of True Womanhood; Revision - of Stereotypes; Sex Roles - Rejection of.
' .I Popovich, Helen. "Shelf of Dolls: A Modem View of lbsen's Emancipated Women." CEA
'
Critic. XXXIX.3. 1977.4-8. . 7
Nineteenth Century -Drama - -- . h e *
Images of Women - Child-Woman - Submissive Wife; Power, Female - Lack of; . Identity, Female; Scandinavian Literature, Women and
Ibsen, Henrik: Nama ; M y Inger of 0str00t ; The Pillurs of Society ; A Ddrs H w e ; An Enemy of the Peciple ; The Wild Duck ; Rmmershdm ; The M y f i o m the Sea ; Hedda Gabler ; The Master Builder ; Little Eydf; hhn Gabriel Bwkman ; When We Dead Awaken . .
Benson. Peter. "No 'Murmured Thanks': Women and Johnson Bri am's Mrdland Monrhl? ," American Studies. XXI.l, 1980, 57-71. S
Popular Culture - Magazines; Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Centun-- Influence on Women's Writing; New Woman. The; Marriage - as Entrapment; Education of Women; Work, Women and. I
Analysis of Midland Monthly / b
Kern. Donna Rose Casella. "Sentimental Short Fiction by Women Writcrs in l d ~ c ' s Popular Monthly," Jaunal of American Cufture . 111.1, 1980, 113-27. '
Papular Culnxe - Magazines; Sentimental Fiction; Love. Romantic; lmages of Women - Virgin - Virtuous Woman; Family, Women and - and Parental Authority - as Woman's Sphere; Father/Da_ughter Relationships; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Absent Mother; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Independence. Female. -
Analysis of sentimental fiction in Leslie's Popular Monthly. an American magazine. from 1876 to 1900 and changes in it as women moved out of the home
Masel-Walters. Lynne. "To Hustle with the Rowdies: The Organization and Functions of b e American Woman Suffrage Press." Jwnal ~f American Culture. 111.1. 1980, 167-83.
Popular Culture - Magazines; Feminism. Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence or. Women's Writing; Publishing. Women and; Money. Women and; Class Posiuon. Women's;, Reader. Woman as; Black Women - Relation to White Feminism. ..
Discussion of the publishing history'of American women's suffrage publications before and around the turn of the century. Includes: The Revdution . Woman's h r n a l . New Nwth west , Wonm's Standard . The Suflagist . Woman's Tribune . and The Agi f atcr
Thomas. Samuel J. "Catholic Journalists and the Ideal Woman in Late Victorian America." , International Journal of Women's Studies . IV.1. 1981,89-100.
Didactic Literature; Religion. Women and - Christianity; Images of Women - Angcl in the H o w - Madonna - Moral Custodian - Virgin; Cult of True Womanhood; Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing - Influence on Men'\ Writing; Popular Culture - Magazines.
, Analysis of a n-mberzf Catholic magazines: Ave Mwra ; The Cathdrc Mind ; The +. Cathdic Wwld ; Chwch Progress ; New Y ark Freeman's /arrnal. N wth western
Chronic1e;TheSacredHearlReview 9 ..
496. ' Craig, Caroline. "Colonial Women Writers." Refiactwy Gul , 17, 1979, 3i-34.
b
*
Writers, Women - Conditions of - Re&scbvercd; Colonialism: Women and; Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment
Prose and Poew
dynton . Barbara: Bush Studies ; Human T d l ; Cambridge. Ada: T h m y Years m %
Arrstrolta ; "Up the Murray"; Unspoken Tharghts ;,Hand in the D@k and Other Pwm~ ; A Marked Man. . : US
I Donovan. ~ o s c p h h e . 'The Unpublished Love Poem"s of ~ a r a h Omc J e w e t ~ " J r o n t i ~ n . 1\'.3. 1979. 26-31.
1
Lesbianism - ~ e v l o u s l y &kopired - Definitions of; L*rbian(s) - Love ~ocu-f- ~clatiomhips'; Friendships. Femalt; ~ i o ~ r a p h ~ . Women's; Forms. Non-Canonlcal - Diarits/Journals; Love Poetry. Women's. +
Rox and ~ktn.. l n d u d n d e k l e d discussion of Jewctt's unpublished love $xu,
a t h e r . ~ i l i a i hy Anroiira ; Jewe? Sarah Omc: Deephaven : The Cm%oj,hr Punted firs ; A Country Doctor.
Durn. Margo. "Valancy Crawford: The Llfc-Style of a Canadan PWL" Room o/One'~ Own . 11.1, 1576, 11-19.
i
Writers. Women - Conditions of. I 9
* Prose and Poem
Crawford, Isabella Valancy. - -
499. . Garbokky. Maryanne M. " A Maternal Muse for Emily Ihcklnson," D~cktnson S t u d l r ~ , 41. 1981. 12-17.
Literan Tradition - Women's.
Prose and Poetq ' 5
Diekinson. Emily: "Twas like a Maclsuom. with a nokh: (J 414); Rescort, Harr~ct: "Cira.imstance ' .
Niheteenth Century Cross-Genre
Hdfloway. Julia Boltori. " ' ~ u r o r a Leigh' and ' h e Eyre'," Bronte Society Transactions, XVII.2, - 1977,126-32.
Literary Tradition - Women's; Writers. Women - Conditions of; Narrative Sugegies in Wgsnen's-Writing - Maiming Hero;
c;
k* Prose and Poetry
3 Barrett Browning. Elizabeth: Aurora Leigh ; Bronte. Charlotte: Jane E y e .
*
MqMaster. Juliet "Bluebeard: A Tale of Matrimony," Room of One's Own. II.2/3, 1976. 10-19.
Fairy Tale Imagery in- omen's Writing - Bluebeard; Marriage - as Entrapment; Violence against Women; Masochism. Female; Gothic, Female.
i
Prose and Poem
I Austen, Jane: Nwthanger Abbey ; Bronte. Charlotte: Jane Eyre ; Browning. Robert: "My Last Duchess" ; The Ring and the Book ; Dickens, Charles: The Old Curiosity Shop ;
b
David Copperfield ; Perrault Chailes: "Bluebeard"; Radcliffe, Ann: The Mysteries of Uddpho ; Thackeray, ~ i l l i h : Vanity Fair ; Pendennis ; Barry Lyndon ; "La Barbe
'. Bleue" ; "Bluebeard's Ghost".
502. Scanlon. Leone. "The New Woman in the Literature of 1883 - 1909," University of Michigan Papers in Women's Studies ; II.2. 1976,133-59.
,--- Sex Roles - Rejection of; Self-sacrifice; Self-realization; Sexuality. Female; Independence, Female; Marriage - as Erluapment - and Equality/Mutuality; Feminism. Pre-Twentiethcentury - Influence on Men's Writing - Influerice on Women's Writing; Images of Women - Suffragette - Moral Custodian; New Woman. The; Work. Women and; Physical Appqrance.
..= - Prose and Drama
Allen. Grant: The W m n Who Did ; Gissing. George: New Grub Street ; The Odd Women ; The Emancipated ; HardkThomas: M e the Obscure ; Schreiner. Olive: The Stwy of an Afiican Form ; Shaw, ~ e o r g e Bernard: Man and Superman ; Mrs. Warren's Profession ; WeHs. H . G.: Ann Veroruca ; Wilde. Oscar: The Picture of Dorian G@y .
503 Tull y. Sheila A. "Heroic Failures and the Literary Career of Louise Imogen Guiney," American Transcendental Quarterly. 47/48.1980.17 1-86.
Writers. Women - Rediscovered - Conditions of; FatherDaughter Relationships;. Militarism. Women and; Renunciation; Cult of True Womanhood; Self-sacrifice.
Prose and Poem
Nineteenth Century Cross- Cenrr!
Guiney, Louise Imogen: G m e Quill Papers ; Songs at the Start ; Happy Endmg ; A Raadside Harp ; The Martyr's hi$ and Shwter Poems ; oLovers' St. Rurh's and. Three -- Other Tales ; The White Sail and Other Poems.
Warnken, William P. '"Kate Chopin and-Henrik Ibsen: A Study of The Awakening and A .
Ddl's House ." Marsachusets Studies in English , V.1.1975.43-49.
Independence, Female; Self-realization; -Scandinavian Literature. Wown and. . -rr
Prose and Drama
Chopin, Kate: The Awakening ; Ibsen, Henrik: A Ddl's H w e .
-
Whinidge. ~zkgare t Coulby. "The Distaff Side of the Confederation Group: Women's Contribution to Early Nationalist Canadian Literature," Atlantis. IV.1. 1978. 30-39.
Writers, Women -'~ediscovered; Nationalism. Women and.
Prose and Poetry
Hairison. Susan Frances (pseud Sefanus, Medusa and Gilbert King): Pine, Rare and Flew ae lis ; Crowded Out and Other Sketches ; Canadian Birthday Book ; The Forest o/ B a u e Marie ; Ringtieid ; In Nonhern Skies and Orher Poems ; Memll, Helen: Picturesque Prince Edward Catnty ; W etherald, Agnes Ethelwyn (pseud. Eel . Thistlewaite): The H w e ofthe Trees and Other Poems ; Tangled in Stars ; T h e Radianr Road ; The Lasr Robin. Lyrics and Sonnets ; Lyrics and Sonnets.
5
Wilson. James D. "The Romantic Love Object: The Woman as Narcissishc Projection." Cmpnrative Literature Studies. XV.4. 1978. 388-402. .
Images of WomerP. Theory of; Images of Women - Castrating Bitch - Frigid Woman - Idealized ve Object - Other - Temptress; Love. Romantic; Sexualit). Female; Sexuality.&e.
Prose apd Poeny
~yron . George Gordon. Lord: Don luan ; Chateaubriand. Francois-Rene de: Rene ; Hardy, Thomas: M e the 0bs& ; Hawthorne. Nathaniel: The Blrthedale Romance ; The Scarlet Letter ; "The Birthmark "; "Young Goodman Brown " ; Kxats, John: "Endyrnion" ; "The Eve of St Agnes"; "Cold Pastoral"; "La Belle Dame Sans Merci"; "Lamia "; Kempis, Thomas a: Imitation of Christ ; Shelley. Percy Bysshe: Epips~hidion .
l
- - --- - . , 5 4,
XXI. TWENTIETH PNTURY PROSE - 9 : ' a ---
ji I*
. I
Abel, ~lizabeth. 'women and Schizophrenia: Tde Fiction of Jean Rhys," Conzempwaiy - Literature, XX.2.1979. 155-77. ,
Madness: Women and; passivity. Female; Self, Divided; Power, Female - Lack of; FriendshipsJemale. \
s
Bronte, Charlotte: Jane Eyre ; Rh ys, Jean: V opge in the Dmk ; G a d Mwningi- - -
' Midnighr ; Quartet ; Wide Sargasio Sea ; Ajer Leaving Mr. MacKeruie . L
, 508. Abel. Elizabeth. "(E)Mgrging Identities: Dy&mics of Female ~ r i e n d s h i ~ in Contemporary Ficgon by Women," Signs, VI.3,1981,41335.
'
Friendships. Female; Identity. Female; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Freudian Thary. Relation to Women's Writing; Literary Tradition - ,Women's; Critical Schools. Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism - Freudian/Psychoanalytic Criticism;
- Lndian 'terature, Women and; German Literature, Women and. k -- Jhabvali, Ruth Prawer: Heat and Dust ; k i n g . Doris: The Gdden Ndebwk ; The
-
Fau- Gated City ; Morrison, Tmi: Sda ; Wolf. Christa: The Quest fi Christa T . (Nachdenken uber Christa T.) .
n -
t P
509. Abel, Elizabeth. "Reply to Gardiner," Signs, VI.3, 1981, 442-44. e
Friendships. Female; Identity. Female; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Critical Schools. Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - Freudian/Psychoanalytic Criticism .
Response to: Gardiner. Judith Kegan. "The (US)es of (1)dentity: A ~ e s p o w ' t o Abel on '(E)Merging Identities'." Signs, VI3.1981.43642. Original article: Abel. Elizabeth. "(E)Merging Identities: The Dynarmcs of Female Friendship in Contemporary Fiction by
\ Women," Signs. VI.3.1981.413-35. A-
*
510. Allentuck. Marcia "Resolution and Independence in the Work sf Alice Munro." World Lrterature Written in English , XVI.2, 1977,34&43.
f . Independence. ~ e h e ; ~ r i t e t s . Women - Conditions of.
Munro, Allce: Lives ofGirls and Women."The Officen; "Materialw. "
P - - 51 1. Ammons. Elizabeth. "Fairy-Tale Love an The Reef ," American ~ l t e & b e . XLVII.4.1976.
615-28. -. f Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment - Economic Necessity; e. Love, Romantic - .
0 *3+ s- -
C * - - - - - - - - - --
t b . . 4 - Destructive Power of; Fairy Tale lmagery in Women's Writing - Cinderella - Sleeping
-
Beauty;. Self-abnegation; Sexuality, Female - Repressed.
Wharton, Edith: The Reef. %
F L " 512. Arnrnons, Elizabeth.- "Edim Whanop's Ethan grme and the Question of ~ e a n i n ~ . " Srvdies m . . American Fiction, \E9,1979,127-40. . -+ . ,
Fairy Tale Imagery in Women's Writing - Snow white; Isolation of Women; A?' Poverty, Women and; Illness. Women and; Power. Female - Male Fear of;
Images of Women - Witch - Idealized Love Object
- Wharton.-Bhth: Ethan Frme .
513. Ap'rheker, Bettina. "W. E B. Du Bois and the Struggle for Women's Rights: 1910-1920." San Jare Studies .I.2, 1975, 7-16.
Black Women - Relation to White Feminism; pacikm; A Feminism, ~werkieth Century - Influence on Men's Writing.
Du h i s , W. E B.: Durkwater ; "The Damnation of Women". . 514. A r i d , Jacqueline Ann. "Cold Comfort from Stella Gibbons," Anel. IX.3. 1978. 63-73.
1- Humour, Women's Use of; Regionalism in Women's Writing; Sex Roles.
Eliot, George: Adam Bede ; Gibbons, Stella: Cdd Cmfm Farm ; Hard), Thomas; Lawrence. D.- H.. ". .'
I >&
515. Arkin, Marian. "Qterary Transvestism in Eve Langley's The P e e Prckers ." ~ d e r n fiction Studies, XXW.l, 1981,109-16.
\ Transvestism; Sex Roles; Identity, Female; Images of Women - Earth Mother - Temptress; Australian Literature, Women and.
Franklin, Stella Maria Miles (Miles Franklin): My Brilliant Career ; Lanpley. Eve: The Pea- Pickers .
516. Armatage, Kay. "'If Men Have Not Changed, Women and Children Have': Gertrude Stein's Lucy Church Amiably ," Atlantis , 111.1, 1977,49-65.
Forms.-frmovative, in Women's Writing; Language, Women's Use of - Subjective Voice; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - W a t a - Transformation - Sculpture; Vature, Women and; - Spifituality, Women v d ; Mysticism. Women and; Passwit). Female; Motherhood; Identity, Female.
- L p - d
Chwch Amiably. k
Atlas. Marilyn Judith. "'A Woman Both Shiny and ~rown':*erninine Strength in Toni - ,
Morrison's Song of Sdmon ," Societyfbr the Study ojfMidwestern Literatwe Newsletter, R.3, 1979.8-12.
B 'a
Male Characters in women's Writing; Role-Models, Female; lmages of Women - Black Woman as Bearer of Culture; Revision - of Stereotypes.
Morrison, Toni: Song of Sdomon . - *
Atwood, Margaret "A Reply." Signs, II.2,1976,340-41. - -
0
' Prescriptive Criticism; Abortion.
Response to: Christ, Carol P. "Margaret ~ t w o o d h h e Surfacing of Women's Spiritual c Quest and Vision, " Signs , II.2.1976.316-30 and Plaskow. Judith. "On Carol Christ on
-
Margaret Atwood: Some Theological Reflections," Signs. 11.2.1976, 331-39.
~&ood.Margaret
4 519. Auerbach, Nina. "Dorothy Sa!ers and the Amazons." Feminist Studies, IIl.1/2.1975,54-62. . - -
1- --'
Communities of women; Single Women; Education of worn&; Popular Culture - Detective Fiction; Images of Women - Bluestocking/L,earDed Woman - Lesbian as Freak; Passivity, Female.
b
Sayers. Dorothy L: Gaudy Night ; Strong Poison ; ~ n n a t b d : ~ e a t h ; Busman's Honeymoon.
520. Avery. Evelyn Gross. "Tradition and Independence in Jewish Feminist Novels." Melk . W.4. .
1980.49-55.
Jewish Women. Writing by and about; ~ihnicity in Women's Writing; Independence. Female; Identity, Female; MaleIFemale Relationships.
*
Jong, Erica: Fear of RHng ; Roiphe, Anne Richardson: Long Division ; Schaeffer, Susan Fromberg: Falling ; Yezierska, Anzia: Bread Givers.
*
, 521. Badarni. Mary Kemy. "A Feminist Critique of Science Fiction," Enrapdation . XVIII.1. 1976,
6-19. o
. Speculative Fiction; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence fiom; Images of Women - Sex Object - intellectual Inferior. , e
- - 522. Bailey. Nancy. "Fiction and the New Androgyne: Problems and Possibilities in The Diviners ."
Atlantis. IV.1,1978. 10-17. *
e
Androgyny; Writers, Women - as Subjects of Women's Writing; Self-realization; Artist, Woman as.
\
Laurence, Margaret: The Diviners .
Bailey, &ancy?~~e Masculine Image in Lives of Girls and Women ." C a w a n Llernrure . 80,1979,113-20. 1
Male Characters in Women's Writing; Masculinity; M o g y n y ; Artist, Woman as; MotherIDaugh ter Relationships.
Munro, Alice: Lives of Girls a n d ~ h e n .
Bakerman, Jane S. "Women and Wall Sueet: Portraits of Women in Novels by - Lathen," Armchair Detective , 8.75-76. [Citation Inc.]
Q 0 - it
Revision - of Stereotypes; Hurnou~;. Women's Use of; Crime. Women and; Popular Culture - Detective Fiction. .
Lathen. Emma (pseud. Martha Hennisart and Mary J. Lards): .A Place fov Murder ; Murder against the Grain ; A stitch in Time ; Murder to Go ; The hnger rhe Thread.
&,
Bakerman, Jane S. "Failures of Love: Female Initiation in the Novels of Toni Momson." American Literature, LIL4,1981,541-63.
Black Women - Identity - Relationships with Men - and the Family - Mother/Daughter Relationships - Sexuality - Phys id Appearange; h tes of Passage; * Adolescg~ce; Racism; Isolation of Women; Friendships, Female; Sexuality, Female; MotherIDaughter Relationships; Family, Women and; Male/Female Relationships; Identity, FCmale; Physical Appearape.
Morrison, Toni: The Bluen E p ; SAa ; Song ofSdmon .
Ballorain, Rollande. "From Childhod to Wornanhood (or from Fusion to Frag entation): A Study of the Growing up Process in XXth Century American Women's Fiction." Revue Francaise &Etudes Americaines . VI.11,1981,97-112.
P Identiiy, Female; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Independence, Female; Sexuality, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; 1
d
Adolescence; . Images of women - Victim; Self-realization; " -political Activism, . 9 -
Women and; Ethaicity in Women's Writing. +
Dorothy: The Bent Twig ; Rmgh Hewn.; Carson, Josephine: Drives My Green Age ; Cather, Willa: The Song of the Lork ; Chamberlain, Anne: The Tcrll Dark Man ; _ French, Marilyn: The Women's Room ; Frost, Frances: Inwent Summer ; Gale. Zona: Friendship Village ; When I Was a Little Girl ; Garrett, Zena: The Mulberry Tree ; Glasgow. Ellen: The Sheltered Life ; Jackson, Shirley: Hangsawn ; Johnson, Josephine Winslow: Wild Woad : Lynn. Margaret: A Stepdaughter of the Prairie ; McCarthy, Mary: The Gratp ; McCullers, Carson: The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter ; The Member of the Wedding ; Miller, Heath,er Ross: The Edge of the W d s ; Millett, Kate: HHng ; Plath, Sylvia: The Bell JIV ; Porter. Gene Straw: 4 Girl of the Limberlost ; A Daughter of the Land ; Porter, Katherine Anne: Pale Horse, Pde Rider ; 'Nin, Anais The Diary of Anais Nin ; Smedley, Agnes: Daughter of Ebrth ; Stafiord, Jean: The MountainLion ; Stead, Christina: The Man Who Loved Children ; West, Jessamyn: Cress Delahanty ; Wilkinson, Sylvia: Mars on the Nwth Side.
L i
527. Bannan, Helen M. "Warrior Women: Immigrant Mothers in the Work of Their Daughters," Women's Studies. V1.2.1979.165-77. b
Immigrant Women, Writing by and about; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Work, Women and - as Economic Necessity; Jewish Women, Writing by and about; Chinese-American Women, Writing by and about; Education of Women; Mmiage .- and Wornam's Fulfillment - and Male Authority; Role-Models. Female; Poverty.
* Women and.
Ar~Lin, Mary: The Prmised Land ; Bjorn, Thyra Ferre: Pap's Wife ; Forbes, Kath ym: Mama's Bank Accatnt ; Hasanovich. Elizabeth: One of T h e m Chapters Rcwn a Passionate Autobiography ; Kingston, Maxine Hong: The Woman Warrior: Memdrs of a G i r l h d among Ghosts ; Lang, Lucy Robins: T o m m fs Beautijkl; Sandoz, Mari: Old Mes ; Schneidennan, Rose: All fw One ; Shaw, Anna Howard: The Stwy of a Pioneer ; Sheklow. Edna: So Tdently My Children ; Stem, Elizabeth: My Maher and I . -
528. Bargainniet, Earl F. "I Disagree!," J w n a l of Communication , XXV.2,1975,113-19. . u.
Popular Culture - Detective Fiction; Single Women; ~ntuitioq-&male. i
Oveniew of Christie's "Miss Marple" novels. Response to: Jones, Mary Jane. "_The Spinster Detective," J w n a l of Communication , XXV.2.1975.106-12. ., L. - Christie, Agatha - -
529. Batsleer. Janet "Pulp in the Pink: The Fiction of Rommtic Fiction." Spare Rib ,109,19811 52-55.
Populk Culture - Modem Roriunces; Public q ~ d Pdvate, Separation of; F L u 'ly, Women and; Sexuahty. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; b v $ , Romantic.
Overview of modem romance fiction, withparticular anention t w h e work ~~~m -- Cartland
.. ' Q s - Cartland, Barbara. , . a
r
Bazin, Nancy Topping. " Androgyny or Catastrophe: The Vision of Doris Lessing's Later Novels," &ontiers , V:3, 1980, 10-15.
Androgyny; Masculinity - as &tructive Force; Thought. Modes of. Female vs. Male; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Madness, Women and; Nature. Women and; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Quest - Dreams - Paradise. B
Beck, Evelyn T. "A Feminist Critique of Boll's Ansichten eines Clowns ," University ofdapcn Zeview . XII.2.1976. 1!+23.
Lessin. g, Doris: Briefing for a Descent into Hell ; The Summer befhre the Dark ; The Memoirs $a Survivor.
0
0
-
Power, Male; self-fice? Sexuality. Female - and the Double Standard; rower. Female - Lack of.
Boll. Heinrich: The Clown (Ansichten eines Clowns) . 4
J '
Beck, ~ t e l y n Torton. "Sexism. Racism and Class Bias in German Utopias of the Twentieth Century," Soundings, LVIIL1,1975.112-29.
Utopias; Sex Roles; Racism; Class Position. Women's; Images of Women - Intellectual Inferior - Sex Object - Earth Mother; Germin Literature, Wom'en and.
Hauptmann, Gerhart: Island of the Great Mother ; Herzl, Theodor: Old- New Lnnd ; Hesse. Herman: Glass Bead Game ; Junger, Ernest: Heliopdis; Glass Bees ; Kellermann. Bemhard: The Tunnel ; Lasswitz, Kurt: Two Planets ; Ruedebusch. Emil F.: Die Eigenen ; Schmidt, Arno: Republic of the Learned ; W erfkl, Franz: Star oft he U nbwn .
Beck, Evelyn Tonox "1. B. Singer's Misogyny," Lilith , 6, 1979, 34-36.
Jewish Women, Writing by and about; Images of Women - Shrew - Submissive Wife - Temptress; Sexuality. Female - Male F e a ~ of; Violence against Women.
Overview discussion of Singer's recent short stories
Singer, Isaac Bashevis. *
Be'lkin. Rdslyn. "The Unrecorded," Canadian Newsletter of Research on Women. VII.2. 1978, 117.
Twentieth Century Prose .
- -
Literary Tradition - Women's.
"One response t.o.editor's qoestion about the specif& of bornen's writing L
2
Benert, Annette h n . "Women and the City." Centerpoint: A Jwnal of lnterdiscipliiuzry Studies, 1980,151-63. [Citation Inc.] , ,
*
Regionalism in Women's Writing; New Woman, The; Images of Women -.American 1 Nature. Women and; Isolation of Women; Work, Women and; Fower, Female; ~nhependence. Female; Technology. Women and; Revision - of Myth.
Refers in passing to a number of twentieth century American writers not cited here.
Anderson. Sherwood: "Out of the Nowhere hto Noihing"; "Unlighted Lamps"; Perhaps Women ; Cather, Willa: 0 Pioneers! ; M y Antonia ; The Song of the LElrk ; Davis, Rebecca Harding: f i f i in the Iron Mills.; Dreiser, Theodore: Siger Ccwrie ; Garland, Hamlin: Rase of Dutcher's Codly ; Glasgcrw, Ellen: Virginia ; Barren Gratnd ; Lifi and Gabriella ; Lewis, Sinclair: The J d ; Main Street ; Ann Vickers ; Peattiq Elia: The Precipice ; Porter, Katherine Anne: "The Jilting of Granny Weatherall "; Rolvaag, 0. E:\ Giants in the Eorth . i
I
Bennett Donna A. "The Failures of Sisterhood in Margaret Laurence"~ Manawaka Novels," Atlanfis . IV.1.1978.103-09.
Isolation of Women; Rivalry. Female; Friendships. Female; ~ o t h e r & a u ~ h t e r . Relationships; Regionalism in Women's Writing.
Laurence, Margaret: The Stone Angel ; The Fire- Dwellers ; A Jesr of Gad . a .
Benns, Susanna. "Sappho in Soft Cover: Notes on Lesbian"Pulps," Fireweed, 11,1981,3643. +
Popular Culture - Lesbian. Mps; ksbian(s)- Relationships - Snbculnire; : Lesbianism - and Punishment as Narrative Strategy; Subculture, Femalesa -- -
Includes short bibliographies of authbrs cited here and of reference works on lesbian fiction - Aldrich, Ann; Bannon. Ann; Christian. Paula (pseud); Sharon, Sylvia; Taylor, Valerie.
-. . . , A** A,. - Indian Literature, Women and; Mother/Daughter Relationships. e
" .
Bhattacharya. hib bani: "Music for Mohini"; "Shadow from Lads+"; "A Goddess Named Gold"; "He Who Rides a Tiger"; "So Many Hungers".
3
174 9 v
-
Twentieth Century 'Prose . - -
- -
539. Blicksilver. Edith. "The Image of Women in Selected Short Stories by James Alan McPherson." .
CLA Jwnal , XXI1.41979.390-401. - t
Aging, Women and; Black Women - Relationships kith Men - and the Family - Sexuality; Racism; Class Position, Women's; Sexuality, Ferhale; Family, Women and; Male/Female Relationships.
McPherson, James Alan: Efbow R m ; Hue and Cry.
540. Blinde, Patricia Lin. "The Icicle in the Desert: Perspective and Form in the Works of Two . Chinese-American Women Writers," Melus , VI.3.) 1979.51-1 1.
J B
L* ChinewAmerican Women, Writing by and about; Ethnicity in Woinen's Writingk -- Immigrant Women, Writing bx and about; Autobiography, Women's; Forms.
I Innovative, in Women's Writing; Family, Womn and; Identity, Female. 'L
A - Kingston. Maxine Hong : The Woman Warrior: Memoirs of a Girlhood among Ghosts ; *;%=
Wong, Jade Snow: Rjlh Chinese Daughter ; No Chinese Stranger. $*
541. Blodgett, Hamet "The Real Lives of Margaret Laurence's Women," Critique . XXIII.l. 1981.' . ' 5-17.
" . - . ldentiiy, em ale; Self-realizaiion; Sexuality, Female; . Marriage - as Entrapment
e
Laurence, Margaret: A Jest of God ; The Stone Angel ; The fire- ~ w e ~ e r i ; The -- -
Diviners.
-- 542. Blodgett, Harriet "Enduring Ties: Daughters and Mothers in Contemporary English Fiction by
Women," Sarth Atlantic Quarterly, LXXX.4,1.981,441-53: 4' Mother/Daughter Re!ationships; Independence, Female; Identity.. Female.
Boyen, Elizabeth: The H w e in Paris ; Drabble. Margaret: Jerusalem the Gdden ; Laurence, Margaret: A Jest of God ; Lessing, Doris: Martha Quest ; Mansfield. Katherine: "Prelude"; "At the Bay"; O'Brien, Edna: A Pagan Place ; Rh ys. Jean: Wide Sargasso Sea ; Woolf, Virginia: Night and Day.
. 543.- Blom. T. E "Anita bas and Sexual Econ6min: Gentlemen Prefer Blondes ," CaMdran Revlew of American Studies , VII.1.1976.39-9.
7 Images of Women - Adventuress - American Girl - Career Woman - Child-Woman - Dumb Blonde - Gold Digger - Intellectual Inferior - M o d Inferior - Sex Object; Satire, Women's Use of; Money. Women and; Passivity. Female; Power. Female.
Laos. Anita: ~ e k l e m e n Prefer Blondes .
Balsterli, Margaret. "'Bound' Characten in Porter. We@, Mc€ttllers: The PrerevoMonary Status of Women in .Amerih Fiction," Bucknell Review , XXIV.I,1978.95-105.
Power, Female - Lack of; Sex Roles; Independence, Female; Physical Appearance. ,
\ r.
McCullers, Carson: ~ h ; Balld of the Sad Cafi ; Porter. Katherine Anne: Old Mortality ; -
"The Journey"; Pale Horse, Pale Rider ; Welty, Eudora: Delta Weddin $;: a*
Bond, Jean Carey. "Reader's Forum: The Media Image of Black Women," Freedomways, XV.1, 1975.34-37.
Ima of Women - Black Mankuch - Moral Custodian - Whore; Racism - Relation to Qe T 'sm. V, . -- .
Gaines. Ernest: The Autdiography of Miss h e A ' tmn . I
546. Boring, Phyllis Zatlin. "Maria Alice Barroso: A Study in Point of View." Lam- Braziiian Review, XIV.l, 1977, 2P-39.
0
7 Latin-American Literature, Women and; Sex Roles; Revision - of Stereotypes; Power. Female - Lack of.
Overview
Barroso, Maria Alice.
547. Brady. Maureen and Judith McDamel. "Lesbians in the Mainstream: Images of Lesbians in Recent Commercial Fiction," Conditions, 11.3.1980.32-105.
B -
Heterosexism; Lksbian(s) - Sexuality; Lesbianism - and Punisbefit as ~ & a t i v e Strategy; Power. Female - Lack of; Money, Women and; Class Position, Women's; Racism; Sexuality, Female.
Alther. Lisa: Kinjicks ; Boyd, Blanche: Mauning the Deafh of Magic ; &wa Rita ' . Mae: Six of One ; Delynn, Jane: Some Do ; French. Madlyn: The Women's R m n ; Gordon. Mary: Final Papnenfs ; Gould, Lois: A S e e Change ; Gnunbath. Doris: Chamber Music ; Guy, Rosa: ~ u b y ; Jon& to Save Yarr Own Lifi ; Piercy. Marge: The High Cmz of Living ; ; Shockley. Ann Allen: h i n g Her ; Shulmaq Alix Kate: Class Nbes ; Yankoyitz, Susan: Sileni, Witness.
548. BraendliO Bonnie Hoover. "Alther, Atwood, Ballantyne. and Gray: Secular Salvation in the Contemporary Feminist Bildungsroman," Frontiers , IV.1.1979.18-22.
Bildungsroman. Female; Self-realization; Self. Divided; Mamage - as , -r * -
Entrapment; Self-sacrifice; Imagery andMotifs in Women's W*&- Quai - I- - A-p
Rebirth. n
r . :, Alther. Lisa: Kinpicks ; A T Mkgaret: ~~ ; Balianryne. She@: N& k o n the Termite Queen ; Gray, rancine du Pfessis: Lovers and Tyants . - ".
549. . Braencilin, Bonnie Hoover. "New Directions in &e Contempomy Bildungsronian: L~sa Althcr's . Kinpicks ," Women and hteratwe . I (New Series), 1980.160-71. *
Bildungsroman, Female; Identity, Female; Nature. Women and; Alienation. Female; MotherIDaughter Relationships.
a . , \
Alther. Lisa: KinjPicks .
550. Breq Sally Alexander. "No, M n Rmsay: Feminist Dilemma in To the Lghrharrr,' lbl l State University F m m , XIX.l. 1'378.48-56. 5 4
- Artis4 Woman a ~ ; 1&iges of women - Angel in the H ; ~ ; Sex Ro l s - Kejedon of; Self-sacrifice; Marriage - and Conflict with Creativity; Eemintsm, Twentieth . Cenhiry - Influence on Women's Writing.
I
Wmlf, Virginia: To the Lighthouse.
t
(551. ~ r o n i r , E. M. "The Dirty La Women - Pale). a Jong, Schor and Lerman,"
?
Humour, Women's Use 6~ Erotic Writing. Women's; Sexualitj.. Female; , t
Language., Women's Use of - Obscenity; Imagery and Motifs tn Women's Writing - Food - Genitals; Money, Women and
Jong. Erica: ~ e & of HHng ; L e r n a ~ Rhoda: Call Me Ishtar : pale).. Graa: Enukcnr ' Changes at the Lust Minute ; Ttie Little Disturbances ofMan ; Schor. Lynda: A p p e ~ ~ l e s .
552. B r o w Barbaa "The Left Hand of &kness: Androgyny. Future. Resenk and Pas[.* '
Extrapdation , XXI.3.1980.227-35. P
Speculative Fiction; Aildrogyny; Sex Roles - Rejection of. r Le Guin. Uqula K.: Th'e LejY Hand pfDarkness .
/ d
553. Brown, Lloyd W. 'The Shape of Things: Sexual Images and me Send of,Form in Dons Lessing's Fiction," W d d hieratwe Written in Engfish . XIV.1. 1975, 176-86.
, . " Identity, Feniale; Seruality. Female; Sex Roles; Physical Appearance; ArusL Woman as.
b
177
lUmng. E h s . A Prwf Msfr"lirg.e ; The Gddcn")I?cptim& ; The Summer b#jm ik6 - - - i .
-. / -
Hums. bnc. g A ~ and b i t ) - : L M.' MmyORiqls Child& R a m o/qne.s (hun ,111.3. i97-. 3 7 - a .
6 5
7 _- Aw&. Margaret: The Edible Womcul; Sw&4ng ; Wesford-Hawe. Consta~cc: T k * ' B a d ofEve ; Enpel. Marian: The Honeymcln Jesirval ; Joanne ; Iaurencc, Margaret: Thc
- f i re Dweffers ; ?'hr Drvtners .," . k - C a w . Ann. "Mian Feminism and the Novel: Sibilla Aleramo's A Woman .* I.Prnrrusr Revtew .5.1980.?9-87.
Writers, W o m m - Chnditions of (20th Century Iralian); Italian hreraturc, Women and: ' Fcminimr Twmtieth Cen tu r ) ' ~ Influence on Women's Writing; Flit ical ~ c u v i s m i Women %nd; Motherhood; Family. Women and - as Agent of Women's Oppression: Marriage - as E .nmpmcn~ f A v o m ; Confessional Mode in Women's Writlnp
A le r am. Sibilla: 'The Feminist Movemenr in iral) ";, A W m n . .- *
560. Campbell. Sheih. 'Wes Wakeham and the M k u l i n e Mystique." R a m of One's Own . 1.4. 1976. 24-32.
Masculinity; Rationality. Male; , lmkger of Women - Caslraung ~ i k h - Scr O b ~ e c ~ -- -
W t i g k Richard Bnre: The drkend M a n .
4
561. Carroll, Berenice A "To Crush Him in Our Own Counu)': Thc Poliuml Thoughr o i Virginla Woolf.* Feminrsr S t d i e s . lV.1. 1970.99-131.
Revision - of Critical Tradition; Politicgl Activism, Women and; Feminism. Twm3tt.h Cenm - Influence on Women's Writing; Power, Male; Work. Women and; Class Position. Women's; Father/Daugh ter Relationships; Writers. Women -
P . Addressing Male Readers; Pacifism, Women and; Mili~arism, Women and:
Socialism. Women and e
WWK Virginia: The'Yopge Our ; Mrs. Dalluway ;-TQ the Dghthouse ; The Year3 ; A R m of One's Olvn ; Three Gurnem.
562. Can. Helen. "Vlrpirua Woolfs Three Guneas ." Spre Rib .69. 1978. 33. O
k . Power. Male; Militarism. Women and; Class Pos~uon, Women's. * .* , -
Woolf, ~ i rp in i a : Three Gutnear. - 5 ..
Chew..Marthk 'Flamer)' @Connor's Doubie-Edged ahr re: The Idiot Daughter versus the L a d Ph.D.." S d h e r n m e r l y . XJX.2.1981.l7-25.
I
Mother/Daughter Relationships; Passiviv. Female; Anger. Fernalc; Saurc. . Women's Use of; Regionalism in Women's Writing. ' /
179
O'Comor. Rannery: "The Life You Save May Be Your Own"; @"Good Country Peoplew. -
564. C h n s ~ b o l P. "Margaret Atwmd: The Surfacing of Women's Spiritual Qukt and Vision," Slgm . 11.2. 1976. 316-30.
* * -
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Quest; Mpsticism. Women and; Power. ~ e m d e ; Nature, Women and; Alienation, Female; Abonjon; Religion, Women and -North Amencap Indian.
Atwood. Margaret: Sur-cing .
1
Clark. J. Michael. "Frustrated Rqdemption: Jean Twmer's Women in Cane . Part One," CLA Jarrnaf , XX11.4. 1979. 319-34.
1
lmaga of Wbrnen - Moral Custodian - Child-Woman - sex Object - Virgin - Madonna - Other; Black Women - Relationships with Men - Sexdity; Religion. Women and .
- Christianity; Passivity. Female; Miscegenation; e u a l i ~ ) . . Female; MaleIFemaie Relationships.
- 4 -, Toomer. Jean: Cane.
e
Coffey. Marilyn. "Dorothy Who?." The Feminisr Art h n a l , IV.2.1975.17-20.
Writers. Women - Conditions of - Rediscovered; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Wfiting; Fernale/Feminist Aesthetic; Thought, Modes of, Female vs. ~ d e .
Richardson, Dorothy:'Pilgrimage ; "Women and the Futurew; "women in the Arts". I
>
Cohan. Steven. "From Subtext to Dream Text: The Brutal Egoism of Iris Murdoch's Male Narrators." Women and Literawe . I1 (New Series). 1981.222-42.
Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Male Narratori Male Characters in Women's Writing; Masculinity; Satire. Women's Use of; Love, Romantic -
. Desnuajve Power of; Humour, Women's Use of; Images of Women - Sexually Devouiing Woman - Other - Idealized Love Object
Murdach, Iris: Under the Net ; A Severed Head ; The Itahan Girl ; The Black trince ; A Ward Child ; The Sea, the Sea.
Cornsuck, Margaret "The Loudspeaker and the Human Voice: Politics and the Form of The o Years ." Bulletin of the New Ywk M i i c Librury , LXXX.2,1977,252-275.
Collectivi~ in Women's Writing; Forms. Innovative, in Women's Writing; Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Money, Women and; Class Position, Women's;
, 1
-- t
- -- . Twentieth Century Prose .
Masculini~; Pacifism. Women and; Writers. Women - and ?hence; Imagery and A
Motifs in Wohen's Writing - Birds.
Woolf, Virginia: The Y e m .
569. Comstock. Margaret "'The Current Ans rs Don't Do': The Comic Form of Nght and Day," Y Women's Studies . IV.2/3.1977,153-71.
Humour. women's Use of; Sex Roles - Rejection of: Mamage - and ~ q u a l i h l ~ u m i t y ; - Love. Romantic; Political Activism. Women and.
D
Woolf, Virginia: Night and Day.
4
570. Conde. Maryse. "Man. w o k and Love in French Caribbean Writing," Caribbean Quarterl)~;' XXVTI.4,1981,31-36.
~ u i ~ e a n ' ~ t e r a t & e . Wbmen and: Black Women - Relalionships with Men; Slavery; Racism; .Male Characters in Women's Writing; Images of Women -
, Native Exotic; Ethnidty in Women's Writing; Male/Female Relationships.
Capecia. Mayotte: /e Suis Martiniquaise ; Lamsmde. Suzanne: Claire Sdange. Arne - A,+icaine ; Lacrosil, Michele: Sapotille'er le Serin d' Argile ; Schwarz-Bart. Simone: Bridge of Beyond .
571. Conley. Verena. isse sexual Misstery," Diocritlcs . VI1.2. 1977. 70-82.
Forms. Innovative, in Women's Writing; Lang Women's Use of - creating a New isc course'- 1'Ecriture Feminine; Language, - as Inadequate for ,E,xpressing
Theft; F~ench Literature. Women and., Women's Experience - Dualism; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Flying -
Cixaus, Helene a d Catherine Clement: La Jane ~ i e .
- 572. Core. Debor&. "'Thehosed Door': Love b z e e n Women in the Works of D. H. S a w r e n ~ e . ~
D. H. Lawrence Review, XI.2,197$,114-31. 1 8 " .
Male Bonding; Homosexuality, Male; images of Women - hsblan as Woman In F.
* Need of a Man. & & -
Overview
- - Lawrence. D. H.. \
t
573. Cothran, Ann. "The Pure and the Impure : Codes 'and Consuucts," Women's Studles . V111.3, 1981.335-57.
- - Twentieth Giitury Prose
Sexuality. Female - as Superior to Male; Sexuality, Male; LRshian(s) - SeKualily; Homosexuality. Male; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Disguise - Enclosure - Light - Nature - Water; Thought. Modes of. Femde vs. Male; French ~itiranue, Women and.
, Colette. ~idonie-babrielle: The &re and the impwe.
* Creigh'ton, J m e V. "Unliberated Women in Joyce Carol Oates's Fiction," Wwld Literature Written id English , XVII.1, 1978. '165-75.
t
Passivity, Female; Identity, Female; Sexuality, Female - Women's Ambivdence toward; Sex Roles; Self-abnegation
Oates. Joyce Carol: Do with Me What Yac Will ; The Gcxidess'and Other Women. r,
Dandrige, Rita B. "From Economic Insecurity to Disintegration: A Study of Character in Louise MeriwetQer's Daddy Was a Number Runner ," Negro American Literature Fwwn , IX.3.1975. 82-85. I o
Black Women - and the Family; Images of Women - Black Matriarch; Racism; * Masculinity; poverty, Women and; Family, Women and.
Meriwether. Louise: Daddy War a Number Aunner .
Davidson, Cathy N. "Oedipa as Androgyne inrhomas Pynchon's The Crying of La! 49 ." Contemporary Literature , XVIII.l, 1977.38-50.
Androgyny; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Identity, Female; Self-realistion; Power. Female. 1 .
Pynchon, Thomas: The Crying of La! 49.
Davidson. Cathy N. "Canadian Wry: COmk Vision in Atwood's M y &cle and Iaurence's' he ' ~ i v i n e k ." Regionalism and the Female Imagination . III.2/3.1977/78.50-56. - . -
Humour, Women's Use of; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Self-abnegation .
Atwood. Margaret: Lady Oracle ; Laurence. Margaret: The Diviners .
Davidson. Cathy N. "Kept Women in-The H- of ~ i r z h . ' hfarkham Review . M. Fall. 1979. .1&13.
Marriage - as Economic Necessity; Physical Appearance; Class Position. Women's; Money. Women and; Rivalry, Female. -
Twentieth 'Century h e '
t -- .
- Wharton, h t h : The Harse ofMirth . 1 t
0 >
579. Davis, Angela "Black Writers' Views of America." Freedomways. XIX.3.1979.158-60.
Political Activism, Women and; Black Women - and B1 Feminism - Relation to k~ Ir White Feminism - Relationships with Men; Male/Fernale elationships.
Wallace. Michele: Black Macho and the M@h of the Superwoman .
380. Davis, Cynthia "Heroes, Earth Mothers and Muses: Gender Identity Centennial Review . XXIV.3.1980.309-21.
-
Images of Women - Earth Mother - Other - Muse; Power, Male; Male/Femalc Relationships.
Barth, John: The Floating Opera ; The Epd of the R d . ; The Sot- Weed Facfor ; Gi!e~ Gwt- Boy ; Chimera .
581. DeKoven, Marianne. "Valentine Wannop and Thematic h c t u r e in Ford Madox Ford's Parade's End ." English Literature in Transition , XX.2.1977, 56-68.
* New Woman, The; Independence, Female; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence on Men's writing; Education of Women; Sexuality. Female - Women's
T O
Ambivalence toward. , @ 9 V
Ford. Foid Madox: Parade's End. \
--
582. De Lauretis. Teresa "Rebirth in The Bell Jar ." Women's Studies. 111.2.1976. 173-83. -
Madness, Women and; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Birth - Enclosare - Water - Rebirth; Self. Divided; Suicide. Women and.
Plath. ~ ~ 1 v i a : : ~ h e Bell Jar. .?-- sc
583. De Salvo, Louise A. "Virginia Woolfs Revisions for the 1920 American and English Editions.of The Voyage Ow ," Bulletin of the New York Public Library, LXXXII.3.1979, 338-66.
Autobiography, Women's; Confessional Mode in Wdmen's Writing; Mother/Daughter Relationships.
. Meredith, George: Diana ofthe Crossways ; Woolf. Virginia: The Vojuge Out .
584. De Weever, Jacqueline. "The Tnvenkd World of Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eje and Sula ," CLA Jaunal . XXIII.4.1979.402-14.
b
-
Twentieth Century &me , - /"
Black Women - Identify - and the Family - Physical Appearance - Suppressed Artist; - z -- Narrative Straregies in Women's Writing - Circularity; ,, iViolence against Women;
'Friendship. Female; Childhood; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - .Witches/Witchcraft; Madness. Women and; Identity, Female; Family. Women . and; Physical Appearance. .-.. ,
Momson. Toni: The Bluest EN ; Syla . - -
J 585. Diamond, Arlyn. from Work," Frontiers, II.3.1977.18-23.
Work. Women and; Sexuality, Female; Independence, Female; Love, Romantic - . Destructive Power of.
Jong, Erica: Fear of RHng ; Roiphe, Anne Richardson: Up the Sandbox.
586. Dowling. David. "Aunt &ryl's Doll's H o u r e . ~ I . XXXIV.2. 1980, 148-58.
Single Women; Family, Women and; Sexualit;., Female; Class Position, Women's.
587. Downey, Linda K. "Woman on the Trail: Hough's Nwth of 36 ." Western Americ Literature . XIV.3.1979. ,217-20.
Popular ~ k t u r e 7 Westerns; Images of Women - Advemuress - Moral Custodian; Independence, Female.
.e
Hough. Emerson: Nwth of 36 .
588. Dresner. Zita Zatkin "The Housewife as Humourist" Regionalism and rhe Female Imagination ,III.2/3,1977/78, 29-38.
Humour. Women's Use of; Satire. Women's Use of; Domestic Fiction; Images of Women - Happy Housewife - Earth Mother; Revision - of Stereotypes; Isolktion of Women.
- -
- Bombeck. Erma: At Wit's End ; hz Wait Till Y& Have Children of Y a v OW;; I Lmt EverHhing in the Post- Natd Depression ; The drm Is Always Greener over the Septic Tank ; Jackson, Shirl-. : Life among the Savages ; Ken, Jean: The Snake Hm All the Lnes ; MacDonald I# try: The Egg and I ; Who Me? ; Viorst., Judith: It's Hard to Be Hip Over Thirty ; People and Other Aggravations ; Yes, Married: A Saga of Lave and Complaint ; How Did I Get to Be 40 & Other ~ t r ~ i t i e s .
I
\
, 589. DuPlessis. Rachel Blau. "The Feminist Apologues oflessing, Piercy, and Russ." Frontiers. IV.1, - 1979.1-8. - .
.. Speculative Fiction; Didactic Literature; Utopias; Narrative Strategies in
I '
Women's Writing - Composite Protagonist; Technology. Women and; -Madness, Women and; Anger. Female; Violence against Warnen; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influencedon Women's Writing.
Lessiig. Doris: The Memoirs of a Survivw ; Piercy , Marge: Woman on the Edge of Time ; Russ, Joanna: The Female Man.
.%
- -
DuPlessis, Rachel Blau and Susan Stanford Friedman. "'Woman is Perfect': H.D.'s Debate with -Freud," ~eminis t Studies. VII.3.1981.417-30.
Power, Male; Power, Female; Rationality. Male; Intuition, Female; Mysticism.. . .Women and; Lesbian(s) - Sexuality; Writers. Women - and Silence; Sexuality, Female.
Doolittle, Hilda (H. D.): "The Master"; Tribute to Freud. - - '.
Durbin. Karen. "Rescued from Elite Obscurity: The Works of ~ a & e e n Howard." Ms. . Vll.8. 1979,36-40.
Writers, Women ; Rediscovered; Autobiography, Women's; Religion. Women and - Christianity. I
Howard. Maureen: Facts of life ; Not a Word abmt Nightingales ; Befwe M y Time ; Bridgeport #us.
- Eber, Irene. "Images of Women in Recent Chinese Fiction: Do Women Hold up Half the Sky?," I'
Signs. II.1, 1976, 24-34. - Chinese Literature. women and; Money, Women and; Work. Women and; Political Activism, Women and; Independence. Female; Family, Women and;. Marriage - and Marriage Law; Education of Womeh.
Survey of recent Chinese fiction -
Chang Yu-Hua; Chao Shu-li; Hao Jan; Ju dhih-chuan; Kuan Hua; Li Chun; Ci Fang-Ling; Li Yu; Lo nn-chi; Lu Hsun; Ma Feng; Mao Tun; Mien Ying; Peng ' Lun-Hu; Shih Min; Tsung Ching.
'* 4
Eder, "Doris L "Woman Writer: May Sarton's Mrs. Qevens Hears the Mermaids Singing ." International Jwnal of Women's Studies ~~~~~~~~~~~~~58.
9
Writers. Women - as subjects of Women's Writing - Anxiety of Authorship; Thought. - h i e s of, Female vs. Male; Androgyny; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing -
Muse. - Sarton, May: Mrs. Stevens Hears the Mermaids Singing.
c A Twentieth Century Prose ---- -- - - - -- - -
594. Edgington, K. "Victims, Surfivors and Modem Literanhe," Women , W.1, 1980.44-46. Q
Self, Divided; Madness, Women axid; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Doubling; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Time.
Atwood. Margaret: Surfacing ; Didion, Joan: A Book.of Common R a p r ; French. Marilyn: The Women's R h ; Piercy. Marge: W m n on the Edge ofTime .
595. Edwards, Lee. "Love and Work: Fantasies of Resolution," Frontiers, II.3.1977.31-38.
Work, Women and; Love. Romantic - Destructive Power of; Popular Culture - Detective Fiction. i
Sayers, Dorothy L: Gaudy Night .
596. Edwards, Lee R. " J e d e m the Gdden : A Fable for Our Times," Women's Studies, VI.3, 1979,321-34.
Independence. Female; Identity, Female; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Punishing Heroine; Self-realization; Family, Women and; . Sexuality, Female; Male/Fernale Relationships.
Diabble. Margaret: J e d e m the Gdden . Fi
F d 597. Eichler: Margrit "Science Fiction as Desirable Feminist Scermios. " Women's Studies M
International Q h e r l y , IV.l. 1981. 51-64. - %- 9- .
Speculative Fiction; Utopias; Family, Women and; Class Position, Women's; Male/Female Relationships; Sex Roles : Rejection of.
3-
7 9
-- Bellarny. Edward: Looking Backward ; Bryant, Dorothy: The Kin of Ata Are Waiting fbt - Y ar ; Callenback, Ernest: Ectopia ; Le Guin, Ursula K.: The Dispssessed ; Piercy, Marge: Woiman on the Edge ofTime .
598. hsinger. Erica M. "Maigret and Women: La Maman and La m a i n ," J i n a l ofPoplcrcu Culture. XII.l.1978.52-60.
Popular Culture - Detective Fiction; images bf women - Whore - Submissive Wife - Earth Mother; Male Bonding; Thought Modes of, Female vs. Male; French Literature, Women and.
Overview of the "Maigret" series.
Simenon, Georges.
- - - ~wentieih Century Prose
1
599. Evans, J. A. S. "The Woxld of Mabel Dunham," Room &One's Qwn . Y.4.198Q.41-47.
Writers. Women*- Rediscovered; Regionaljsm in Women's Writing.
Dunham, Mabel: Toward Sadom ; The Trail of the Conestoga ; The Trail of the King's Men ; Grand R i v e ; Kristlfs Trees.
600. Evans, Mary. "Views of Women and M e n h the Work of Simone de Beauvoir," Women's\ . Studies ~nternationaf Quarterly, III.4.1980.395-404.
r( Reason vs. Passion; T h o a t , Modes of, Female vs. Male; Male/Female Relationships; Sexuality, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Mascdinity; Rationality, Male; French Literature. Women and.
Beauvoir, Simone de: She Came to Stay ; The B l d of Others ; All Men Are Mwtal ; - The Second Sex ; The Mandarins ; The Woman Destropd ; A Very Easy Death, . ,
601. Faderman, Lillian. "Lesbian Magazine Fiction in the Early Twentieth Century," ~ m r d of Popular Culture , XI.4.1978.800-17.
Lesbian(s) - Positive Images of - Relationships; Lesbianism - ~efinhions of - and Punishment as Narrative Strategy; Popular Culture - Magazines; Independence, Female; Role-Models, Female; Single Women.
I DuBois, Margaret Constance: "The Lass of the Silver Sword"; Hull, Helen R.: "The Firew; Lawrence. D. H.: "The Fox"; Lee. Jeanette: "The Cat and the King"; MacLane Mary: The Story of Mary MacLune ; O'Higgins. Haiiey: Julie Cane ; 0s-Anders: "Karen: A Novel"; Porter. William Sydney (pseud. 0. Henry): "The Last Leaf"; Stein. Gertrude: "Miss Fun and Miss Skeene"; Wlls. Catherine: "The Beautiful House".
602. Faderman. Lillian and Ann Williams. "Radclyffe Hall and the Lesbian Image." Conditions. 1.1, 1977.31-41.
B
E
Lesbian(s) - Relationships - Writers, Conditions of - Identity; Heterosexism; Images of Women - Lesbian as Freak - Lesbian as PseudwMale; Identity, Female; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Masochism, Female.
Hall. ~ad$;ffe: T& Well of loneliness ; The Unlit Lump .
603. Farnham, Margot "Grcswing Eighty Feet Tall." Spnre Rib .84.1979.34-35. '
Political Activism, Women and.
Piercy, Marge: W m n on the Edge o f ~ l m e ; The High Cm of Living .
. . . ,
T 6 o b i h ~i=entury Prose --
- --
Farwell, Marilyn R "Yirginia Woolf and Androgyny," Contempary Literatwe . XVI.4,1975. 433-51.
%&a
0
X d r o g y n y ; Writers. women - Anxiety d. Authorship; Intuition, Female; tionality, Male; Literary Tradition - Women's; Female/Feminist Aesthetic.
Woolf. Virginia: A Room of One's Own .
605. Feder, A&on "Margaret Duley : Still 'Unknown NoveIist " Room of One's bwn , V.3.1980, 60-69.
Writers. Women - Rediscovered; Regionalism in Women's Writing. 1
I Duley. Margaret: The E p s of the Gull ; C oral ; Highway to V a l w ; "Mother Boggan"; Novelty on Eorth . a
606. Ferguson. Moira. "Feminist Manicheanism: Rebecca West's Unique Fusion," Minnesota Review. 15.1980.53-60.
Masculinity; "Male Characters in Women's Writing; Religion, Women and 7 Christianity; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Political Activism, Women and
West, Rebecca: The Jvdge ; The Meaning of Treason ; The New Meaning of Treason. B
607. Femer, Carole, "'Lives in Conflict': Doris Lessing's Children of Violence Novels." Hecate, 1.1. 1975.31-46.
Z \ . Public and Private, Separation of; Political Activism, Women and; Madness, Women and; Mysticism, Women and; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Houses - Cities - Rooms - Quest
Heweff Dorothy: The Chapel Per i lw ; Lessing, Doris: Children ofvidence .
608. Ferrier, Carole. "The Death of the Family in Some Novels by Women of the Forties and Fifties." Hecnte. 11.2.1976.48-61.
i
Family. Women and; ~ o l t ~ o d e l ~ ~ e r n a l e ; Love, Romantic - ~es tkc t ive Power of; Madness, Wamen and; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Enclosure - Food - Housekeeping; Australian Literature, Women and - Frame, Janet: Owls Do Cry ; Lessing, Doris: Mortha Quest ; A Proper Marriage ; Stead, Christina: The Man Who Loved Children ; Fw Love Alone.
609. ~ e m e r . Carole. "Jean Devanny's New Zealand Novels." Hecate, VI.1,1980.37-47.
Twentieth Century Prose - - -
- - Socialism, Women and; . Political Activism. Women and; Power. Female - l.&k OR Sexuality, Female; Austdian Literature, Women and.
4' Devanny, Jean: The Butcher Shop ; dawn Beloved ; Poor Swine ; Ipnore D~vrne ; Riven ; Devil Made Saint ; "The Springs of Human Action".
Ferrier. Carole. "Jean Devanny's Queensland Novels." hterature in Nonh Queensland . VIII:). 1980.11-30.
*
Polifical Activism, Women and; Sodalism. Women and; writers. Women - Conditions of; Racism; Australian Literature. Women and. ,
Devanny. Jean: CiFie ; Paradise Flow ; Sugar Heaven ; Wwhng ~ & x k s .
Femrley. Judith. "Beauty as thg Beast: Fantasy and Fear in I. the Jury ." J w o l of Popuiw Cultwe, VIH.4.1975.775-82. ' zk
Popular Culture - Detective Fiction; Images of Women - Sex Object - Career ~ o ; i $ n - Submissive Wife - Temptress; Sexuality, Female - ~ a l e ' ~ e a r of,
Spillane, Mickey: I, the Jluy . -
L
Fetterley. Judith. " A Farewell to h r m : Hemingway's 'Resentful Cryptogram'." J w o l of Popular Culture, X.1.1976,203-14.
Sexuality, Female - Male Fear of; Power, Female - Male Fear of; Images of Women - Sex Object - Idealized Love Object - Old Maid - Dead Worn*.
Hemingway, Ernest: A Farewell to Arms. --
Fetterley, Judith. "'The Temptation to Be a Beautiful Object'.: Double Standard and Double Bind in The H u e of Mirth ," Studies in American Fiction , V.2, 1977, 199-21 1.
Physical Appearance; Money, Women h d ; Class Position. Women's; Marriage - as Economic Necessity; Sexuality, Female - and the Double Standard; Power. Female - Lack of; Masochism, Female.
Wharton, Edith: The H u e of Mirth .
a
Fido, Elaine. " A Guest of H o m : A Feminine View of Masculinity, " World Lleratwe Written in English , XW.1.1978.30-37. ,
/
Male (Xaamers in Women's Writing; Masculinity; Power, Male; African Literature, Women and -&
Fi fer, Elizabeth. "Guardians and Witnesses: Narrative Technique in Gertrude Stein's UseM d
Knowledge ," J a u d of Narrative ~ e c h h i ~ t t e , X.2,1980,115127. * .
Language. Women's Use of - Encoding - Punning; Lesbianism - Encoded; - Lesbian(s) - Sexuality; Narrative Strategies in Women's w&ng - Cirdarity ; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Landscape - Cows; Sexuality, Female. -
* - - i-f-
\ m i G e m u d e : Use@ Knowledge . + < ' .. ' .
* . Filstrup, Jane Merrill. " h e ~ofofssor Who Writes Detective Stories,' Gradwe W m n . LXXIV. 1980; 14-21.
. L -- Writers, Women - Conditions of; Popular Culhke - Detective Fiction ' '
Heilbrun, Carolyn (pseud Amanda Cross). I
Fishbein. Leslie. " L d i n j~ Mr. Gadbar : Mbrder for the Masses," International Jaunal of yomen's Studies ,111.2 n%B 0: 173-82. :
Violence against Women; Images of Women - Victim - Sexually Devouring Woman; Sexuality, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward - Male, Fear of; Motherhod - Women's Ambivalence toward.
Rossner. Judith: W n g fw Mr. Gadbar ; Twain. Mark: Lt&ers&z the Eivth ; Mailer. Norman: The
4 Fisher, Jerilyn. "From under the Y ke of Race and Sex: Black and Chicano Women's Fiction of the Seventies," MiMitp Voices q Interdisciplinary J w n a l ofliterature and the Arts . II.2. 1979.1-12.
Chicanas. Writing by and about; Ethnicity in Women's Writing; Family. Women and; identity. Female; MaleLFemale Relationships; Black WEhen - and the Family - Identity - and Black Consciousness - and Black Community - Motherhood; Power. Female; Independence, Female; a Subculture, Female; Racism; Motherhood. -
Bambara, Toni bide: "My Bovanne"; Jones. Gayl: Eva's Man ; Cmegzdm-a ; "The Woman"; Morrison, Toni: of Sdmon ; Sula ; The Bluesz Eye ; Trambhy, Estela
- Portillo: '"The Paris Day of the Swdlows ; Peralta, Rosalie Otero: "La Dos
opeland ; Mendian . Walker, Ali& "Roselily"; "Everyday Use"; The Third Lfi of Grange
a b -
Randen. Jane. "Katherine Anne Porter's Feminist Criticism: Book Reviews from the 1920's."
. L >
- P f
- . - -
Tweatiets CsnNrg Pr- ..
Frontiers, IV.2,1979.44-48. - - - - -
Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing: -
Discusses strong feminist convictions of the many reviews Porter contributed to theSh.'en Y ork Herald Tribune Bodrs , New Republic . Survey, Ckntrrry. Free- , and N atun . . Reviews written under the pseudonym Nancy Boyd
Porter, ~a ther ihe Anne. 1 -
620. Fleenor, Juliann E "Rape Fantasies as Initiation Rite: Female Irnag@ation in h e s ofG1r1~ a m Women ," R m ofone's Own . IV.4.1979.35-49.
I
~ i t e s of Passage; Sexuality. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Vioieke - against Women; MothenDaughter ~elatkxkhips; . Power, Female - Lack of; F:
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Rebirth; Narrative Strategies in Womin's Writing - Subtext - - I,
. s 0
Munm, Alice: Lives of Girls and W m e n .
621. Flood, Cynthia. "Images of Women in Modern Japanese Fiction." Raom done's Own . I. 1. 1975.18-25.
Images of Women - Other - Undean Woman: Sexuality. Female - Male Fear ok
0 Independence, Female; Japanese Literature. Women and.
Mish-ima, Yukio: The Tempie ofthe Gddm Pavilion ;Osaragi. Jim: TlraJauney ; Tanazalri. Junichiro: The Makioku Sisters .
- - 622. Fontana, h i s t L "Sexual Alienation in George Moore's 'Alben Nobbs'," I a ~ g r m r d h c t r m ~ '
Review, IV.2,1977, 183-85. a
Transvestism; Alienation. Female; Work. Women and; Poverty. Women and:- Independence. Female; Money, Women and; Sexuality. Female - Women's
, Ambivalence toward. ) -
Moore, George: "Albert Nobbs",
Forrey. Robert. "Ken Kesey's Psychopathic Saviour: A Rejoinder." Modern F~ctron Srudre~ . "
XXI.2, 1975,222-30.
Masculinity; Images of Women - fenible Mo&z; Castrating Bitch.
-Pd I H
fh D
i
Eox-Gcmvsc. f.Ilizakth. 'Scariert O ' h : The Southern Lady as New Woman." American Qwnerly . SXXIII.4. 1981. 391-411.
. . Identit). Female: Sexuality. Fcmale; Indqmd#lce. Female; Sex Roles; Class - P w W . Wmcn's; Mcmcy. Women and: Povclt)., Women and; Mother/Da,ughter RchtiWtps: Slavery; Raciffn: Pubitc and private. Separation of; New Woman. The.
Mrtchctf. Margaret G m wfth rhe Wrnd.
% ?nncz&m. Martha Wcy. T h e New Man (&I Not Be New w&).' B m t r A b d . b,' 1%. 589-95.
Images of Women - Object - Casnatinp Bilch - Intellectud hferior - Sex Object LO.'
Gmazar. Julio: 62: A Made1 Ktr ; L i b r ~ d e Manuel ; "Homage ru a Young Witch". . ,
629. Friu. Kathlyn Ann and Nad-ie Kaufman Hevener. "An Unsuitable Job far a Woman: Female Protagonists in the Detective Novel." International Jmrna(.of H'men's S td les . 11.2. 1979. 105-28.
Popular Culme - tio6; Images of Women - Career w'~man - Old Mad: ' RoleModels. Female; oles; Work,Womenand. - Data analysis of 52 female detectives in novels dating from the 1920s,ro the 197a
- -
630. F r o m , Gloria G. "What Are Men to Dorothy Richardson," women and I-lterarure . I1 (New . . Series). 1981, 168-87.
hiale Chara&rs in Women's Writing; Father/Daughter Relauonshipr: sexualit).. Female; Masculinity; Male/FemaleRelationships.
4 - _ Richardson, Dorothy: PiLgri&e . . .
631. Frye. Joanne S. "I Stan4 Here Ironing': Motherhood as ~ x ~ e r i e n i e and Meraphor." Std ies in Shm. Fiction . XWI.3.1981.287-92.
1
Motherhood; Mother/Daughter ~elationshik; Identity. Ferndc . x c -
O i ~ n , Tillie: "I Stand Here Ironing".
4 %
632. Gardiner, Judith K. "'A Sorrowful Woman': Gail ~ i w i n ' s Feminist Parable," st die^ ~n ~ h w t Fiction, X11.3, 1975. 286-90. -,
Motherhood; Marriage - as Entrapment - and Woman's Fulfillment; Family, -- Women and; Self-abnegation; Self-sacrifice; Sex Roles.
Godwin, Gail: "A Sbrrowful Woman ". -
633. Gardiner, Judith Ke&. ".Three Women's Parables," Uruversity of Mlchigan Paper3 in Women's Studies, 1.4, 1975. 22-29.
Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on women's Wnung; Marriage - and -3 Woman's FulfilLment - as Entrapment; Adulterq.
" - --\ Drabble. ~ a r ~ a r e t ? "A Success ~ t u ~ " ~ ~ in. Gail: " A SorrowfuT y W o r n " ; Less~ng,
/f Doris: "Not a Very Nice Stor)> -
6M2 Gardinel. Judith Kegan. "Wake for Mother: The M a t e d Deathbed in Women's Fietion," Feminisr Studies , IV.2.1978.146-65.
Mother/Daughter Relationsh~ps; Anger, Ferndeb, Identity, Female; Sex Roles; Death. Women and; Illness. Women and; Independence, Female; Sexuality, Female; Passivity, Female; Poverty, Women and.
* '
Ather. Lisa: Kinpicks ; Babble, Margaret: Jerusalem the Gdden Olsen, TilIie: "Tell Me a I&T3eU; PiewMarge: Small Changes ; Rhys, Jean: Ajter Leaving Mr. MacKenzie ; Smedley, Agnes: Daughter of Earth .
- .
635. Gardiner, Judith ~ e ~ a n . "The (US)es of (1)dentity: A Response to AbeI on '(E)~e$ng Identities'." Signs, VI.3.1981,436-42.
Friendships. Female; Identity, Female; Artist Woman as; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Indian Literature, Women and.
Response to: Abel. Elizabeth. "(E)Gerging Identities: The Dynamics of Female Friendship in Contemporary Fiction by Women," Signs, VI.3.1981.413-35.
Jhabvala, Ruth Prawer: Hear and DtcSt ; Lessing, Doris: The Gdden Ndebwk ; The Fau- Gated City ; Mqrrison, Toni: Sula ; Wolf, Christa: The Quest 1Gp. Chris~a T . (Nachdenken uber Christa T.) . .,
636. Ghdner, Susan. "Dora and Nadja: Two Women in the Early Days of Psychoanalysis and Surrealism." Hecafe , d.1, 1976.23-40.
Madness. Women and; . Revision - of Freudian Theory; Images of Women - - ,- + . Hysteric - Madwoman - Child-Woman - Muse; Surrealism, W o m d ; French . -
Literature, Women and
Breton, Andre: Nadp ; Freud. Sigmupd: Studies in Hysteria ; Dora Fragment of an Analysis of a Case of Hysteria ; The Interpretation 0jDream.s.
637. Gastor,, Karen C. "Women in the Lives of Grange Copeland," CLA J w n a l , XXIV.3.1981, -276-86.
Nanative Suategies in Women's Writing - Educating Hero; Black Women - Relationships with Men; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Masculinity - and Violence; Mother/Son Relationships; Marriage - and~Wornan's.FulfilIment; - e Selfsacrifice; Violence against Women; Racism - Relation to Sexism; Independence. Female; Suicide. Women and; Male/Female Relationships.
Walker, Alice: The Third Life of Grange Copeland. *
638. Gaston. Kay Baker. "The MacGowan Girls," Cdihnia History. LK.2.1980,116-25.
Collectivity in Women's Writing; Writers. Women - Conditions of - Kediscokered. -. Cooke. Grace MacGowan: A G w d Fiddle ; Therr Firsr Fannal Call ; The Joy Brrnper ; Cooke, rack MacGowan and Annie Booth McKimey: Mimess 20), ; Cooke. Gracc MacGowan and Caroline Wood Momson: William and Bill ; Cooke. Grace MacGowan and Alice MacC%wan: The Straight Rmd ; Wild Apples !7he Trail of thi h t t k H'agon : MacGowan Nice and Emma Bell Mile: M i t h of the Cumberlands ; The Wivrng of Lance Cleaverage ; The S w d rn the Matntains ; MacGowan Alice and Perry Newbem -
The Million Ddlar Suitcnse ; The Mystery Woman ; Shaken Down ; The Seventh Passenger ; Who Is This Man. s ..
*
639. Gelfant, Blanche. "Sister to Faust: The City's 'Hungry Woman' as ~eroine ." Novel . XV. 1. 1% 1, 23-38.
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Hunger - Quest - Cities - T~ansformation; Reader, Woman as; Education of Women; Independence, Female; Immigrant Women, Writing by and about; Jewish Women, Writing by-and about: Mother/Daughter Relationships; Poverty. Women and.
Antin, Mary: The Promised land ; Bryant, Dorothy: Elfa Prrce's J w n d ; French. Marilyn: The Wmen's Ram ; Kjngston, Maxine Hong: The W a n Wart:w Memars of a Girlhaxi among Gharts ; Marshall. Paule: Brown Girl. Brownsfones ; Meriwethcr. Louise: Daddy Was a Number Runner ; Pynchon. Thomas: The Cryng of& 49 ; Smith. Betty: A Tree Grows in Broddyn ; Whanon. Edith: A Backward Glance ; Wolfe. Thomas: Of Time and the River ; Y ezierska, Anzia: Hungry Hearts ; Bread Gtver~ .
640. Gerstenberger, Donna. "Conceptions Literary and Otherwise: Women Wnters and the Modem - Irnaginatjon." Novel. IX.2.1976.141-50.
s
Language. Paniarchal - Dualism; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; .Self. Divided; Nature, Women and; Androgyny; Power, Female; Abortion; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Quest - Birth.
Atwood, Margaret: Stlrfacing ; Le Guin. Ursula K.: The Lej Hand of Durknes .
- 641. Gerver, Ehsabeth. "Women Revolutionaries in the Novels of Nadine Gorbmer and Dons Lessing," Wwld Literature Wntten in English . XVII.1, 1978.38-50.
%e - Political Activism, Women and; Self-reaiizarion; Motherhood - Women's Ambivalence toward; African Literature. Womenand.
Gordirner, Nadine: The LHng Days ; A world of Strangers ; Occasron for Loving ; The Late Bcovgeois Wwld ; The Conservationist ; Lessing, Doris: Chrldren of Vrdence .
C
642. Giliespie, Diane Filby. "Virginia Woolfs Miss LaTrobe: The Artist's Last S&ggle against Masculine Values," Women and Literature. V.1.1977. 38-46.
195
Anis&, Woman as: Power. Male; ~e&/~eminis t Aesthetic; hagcry md Mot& in Women's Writing- Snakes - Blood.
Woolf. Virginia: Between the Acts.
Gladstein, Mirni R. "Ayn Rand and Feminism: An Unlikely +iance." Cdlege English , XXXIX.6.1978.680-85. P
Independence, Female; Selfsacrifice; Male/Female Relationshi Female.
Rand, Ayn: Atlas Shrugged . U
Gudard. Barbara. "'Between One Cliche and Another': Language in The D d l e Hook ." Studies in Canadin Literature ,111.2.1978, 349-65.
a Language. Women's Use of - Irony - Syntactical Experimentation - Punning; Writers, Women - and Silence; Language. Patriarchal - as Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience.
Watson, Sheila: The Dauble Hwk .
Godard, Barbard. "Transgressions." Fireweed. 5/6,1979/80.120-29.
Adultery; Writers, Women - and Silence; Sexuality. Female - and the Double Standard - Repressed; Foxms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; Religion, Women and - Cliristianity; Quebecoises, Writing by and about
The main fmus of the article is on the work oPSrnart and Tardif, with passing attention given the other authors cited
Barreno. Maria Isabel. Maria Teresa Horta, and Maria Fatirna Velho cia Costa: New Portuguese Lettecs ; Boucher. Denise: The Fairies Are Thirsty (Les fees ont so@ ; Conan, Laure: Angeline de Montbrun ; Hebert, Anne: Kamouraska ; Smart, Elizabeth: By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept ;-Tadif, Therese: A Spinster's Despair (Desespoir de vieille M e ) .
Goddard. Terri and Marion Linwood. "Inter-Galactic Zap: Women Invade Science Fiction," S p v e Rib. 46,1976,4445. 8
1
Speculative Fiction; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Revision --of Stereotypes. o
C
Asimo~Isaac; Bode, Pierre: Planet of the Apes ; BracketE, Leigh; Boyd, John: The Pdl imws ; Carter, Angela: Heres and Villains ; Crichton, Michael: The T e r m i d ; Farmer, Philip Jose; Harbou. Thea von: Metropdis ; Herbert, Frank: Dtrne ; Heinlein,
-
Twentieth Century Prose - --
= Robert: Stranger in a Strange Lund ; Le Guin, Ursula K.: The =bs of Atwn ; The Le$ Hand af Darkness ; MacLean Katherine: C~ntagion ; McCaffrey, h e -fhe&tP - - -
That Sang ; Moore, Catherine L: "No Woman Bornw; Norton. Andre; Piserchia, hr i s : Star &der ; Russ, Joanna: "When It Changed"; Shelley, Mary: Frankenrtein ; Sturgeon. Theodore: Venus PIus X ; Wyndham, John: "Consider Her Ways".
- - Goodhart, Lynne Howard. " J m Didion's Play h as It Lays : Alienation and Games of ~han&," Sun Jme Studies , III.1.1977.64-68.
Images of Women - Victim; Alienation, Female; Passivity. Female.
Didion, Joan: Play Il as It Lays .
Goodman, Charlotte. "Images of American Rgal Women in the Novel," University of Michigan Papers in Women's Studies. 1.4. 1975.57-70.
Poverty, Women and; Marriage - as Entrapment - and Male Authonty; Work, Women a d - Domestic Labour -; Images of Women - Happy Housewife - Frontier Woman; Isolation of Women.
Arnow, Harrietre: The Ddlmaker ; Cather. Willa: Oh .Pioneers! ;-Ferber. Edna: So Big ; Glasgow,Ellen: Burren Ground ; Hammer. Earl Jr.: Spencer's Mantain ; Kelley, Edith Summers: Weeds ; Oates, Joyce, Carol: A Garden of Earthly Delights ; Rolvaag, 0. E: Giants in the Eorth ; Steinbeck. John: The Grapes of Wrath ; Suckow. Ruth: Cauntry People. *
Goo&. Charlotte. "Widening Perspectives, Narrowing Possibilities: The Trapped Woman in Edith Summers Kelley's Weeds ," Regionalism and the Female Imagi
Writers. Women - Rediscovered; Working-class Women. Writing by and about; i
Sex Roles - Rejection of; Sexuality, Female; Motherhood - Women's Ambivalence toward; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Enclosure.
KelIey. Edith Summers: Weeds ; The Devil's Hand.
Goodman. Charlotte. "Women and Madness in the Fiction of Joyce Carol Oates," Women and bterature , V.2.1977.17-28.
Love, Romantic - Destructive Power of; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Role-Models. Female; Maniage - as Economic Necessity - and Wo%'s Fulfillment; , Sexuality, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Madness, Women and.
Overview of female characters in Oates' short stories -
Oates, Joyce Carol: Do with Me What Yau Will ; Marriage and Infidelities ; Expenslue ' *
People ; A Garden of hb th l y Delights ; Them ; Wonderland ; The Wheel of b e .
+ ' Twentieth Century Rose
Gottlieb. Lois C. and Wendy Keimer. "Demeter's Daughters: The Mother-DaugSlter Motif in --pL
Fiction by Canadian ~ o m e g Atlantis. ~.1,1977,130-42.
Mother/Daughter Reiationships; Mytholo@cal Figures in Women's Writing - Demeter - Kore; Power, Female - Lack of; Self-sacrifice; Independence, Female; Self-realization
- , ,-
Atwood, Margaret: Surfacing ; Engel, Marian: The Honeyman Festival ; Fraser, Sylvia: Pandm ; Gallant, Mavis: Green Water, Green Sky ; Laurence, Margaret: A Jest of Gaf ; Wilson, Ethel: Hetty Dwval . .
Gottlieb, Lois C. and Wendy Keimer. "Images of Canadian Women in Literdture and Society in the 1970's." International JiRcrnal of Women's Studies, II.6,1979, 513-27.
Popular Culture - Magazines; Images of Women - Earth Mother - Happy Housewife - Liberated Woman - Superwoman; BildungsromaA, Female; Role-Models, Female; MotherIDaughter Relationships; Marriage - and Conflict with Career - and Woman's Fulfillment; Motherhood - Women's Ambivalence toward; Independence, Female; Work, Women and; Friendships. Female; Images of Women - Castrating Bitch; Re-vision - of Stereotypes.
Compares images of wofnen in 26 novels published by Anglophone Canadian womeri from 1970 to 1979 with the images presented in popular magazine Chatelaine 's "Woman of the Year" feature in the same period
>
Atwood. Margaret: S u r - i n g ; Dancing Girls ; Ludy Oracle ; Barfoot, Joan: Abra ; Beresford-Howe, Constance: A Population of One ; The Book of Eve ; Engel. Marian: The Honeymczn Festival ; Monafrmar ; Jwnne ; Bear ; The Glassy Sea ; Fraser, Sylvia: Pandwa ; The Candy Factory ; A C& Aflair ; Frey, Cecilia: Breakaway ; Gallanf Mavis: A Fairly Goad Time ; Laurence, Margaret: The Diviners ; Rule, Jane: "House"; Thomas. Audrey: Songs My Mother Tmghr M e ; Blown Figures ; Mrs. B l d ; Truss, Jan: Bird at the Window ; Van Herk, Aritha: Judith ; Wiseman, Adele: Crackpot.
0
Gould. Karen. "The Censored Word and the Body Politic: Reconsidering the Fiction of \
Marie-Claire Blais," Jaunal of Popular C m , XV.3.1981.14-27.
Language. Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse - Naming - 1'Ecriture Feminine; Writers, Women - and Silence - E Subjects of Women's Writing; Language, Patriarchal - as Dominant Discourse; Adolescence; Mensmtion; Artist Woman as; Violence against Nomen; Lesbian(s) - Identity; Sexuality, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Father/Daughter Relationships; Identity, Female; Quebecoises. Writing by and about
Blais. Marie-Claire: A S e w n in the Life of Emmanuel (Une Saison dam la Vie dEmmanuelll_The Manuscripts of Pauline Archange (Les Manuscripts de Pauline Archange) ; Durer's Angel (Zes Apparences) ; Nights in the Undergtound (Zes Nuits de PU ndergracna') .
654. Green, Mary Jean "Gabrielle Roy and G p m i n e Guevremont: Quebec's Da~ghters Fxea Changing World," J w n o l of Women's Studies in Lt~rature ,1.3.1979. 243-57.
Identity, Female; Isolation of women? Alienation. Female; Motherhood; Images of Women - Earth Mother; Revision - of Stereotypes; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Enclosure; Physical Appearance; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Quebecoises, Writingby and about
Guevremont, Germaine: The Outlander (Le Survenantj ; Marie- Didace ; Roy, Gabrielle: The Tin Flute Qonheur bOccasion) . 0
b
655. Grier, Barbara. "Proud. ~ i s ~ % e d ~ a m e ~ . " ~ i n k t e r Wisdom. 14.1980.64-67.
lesbianism - Previously Unrecognized; Lesbian(s) - Invisibility of - Relationships.
Taber, Gladys: Harvest of Yesterdays ; Lute Climbs the Sun ; Stillmeadow Daybook ; Another Path .
?
656. Grodal. Hanne Tang and Kirsten Busck Mellor. "Femininity as Prison in Post-War America: Popular Images of American Womenn Hecate , VI.2,1980.52-63.
Work, Women and; Family. Women and; Popular Culture - Magazines; Marriage; ClassPosition,Women's; Sexuality.Female; IrnagesofWomen,Theory of; Images of Women - Girl-Next-Door - Temble Mother - Happy Housewife - . Sexw&fDevouring Woman - S@ Object.
Includes discussion of Ladies Home J w n a l
Shulrnan. Alix Kates: Burning Questions ; Spock, Benjainin: Baby and Child Care ; Wylie, Philip: Generation oflipers .
Gubar. Susan. "Blessings in Disguise: cross-~r&sin~ as Re-Dressing for Female Modernists." Massachusetts Review , XXII.3, 1981.477-508.
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Clothing - Disguise; Transvestism; Androgyny; Sex Roles; Lesbian(s) - Identity; Physical ~pbearance; Power, Female; Self-realization; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Male Narrator; Identity, Female.
Barnes, Quna: Nightwood ; Ladies A l m a ~ c k ; Barney, Natalie: The One Who Is Legion ; Cather, Willa: My Antonia ; Dinesen. Isak: "The Deluge of Norderney"; Doolittle, Hilda (H. D.): Tribute to Freud ; End to Torntent ; Hall, Radclyffe: The WeN of Laneliness ; Kingston, Maxine Hong: The Woman Wam'ar: Memairs of a Girlhood among Ghosts ; McCullers. Carson: Rejections in a Gdden Eye ; Moore. Catherine L: h e 1 ofJdry ; Nin, Anais: Ludders to Fire ; RichardSon. Dorothy: Pilgrimage ; Rukeyser. Muriel; Stein, Gertrude: The Autobiogtaphy of Alice B. Toklas ; F w Saints in Three Acts ; Tender Buttons ; How to Write ; Woolf, Virginia: Three Guineas ; Orlan&.
i
- Twentieth Century Prose = -
658. Gunsteren-Vie= Julia van. "The Mamage of 'He' and 'She1;, Virginia Woolfs ~ n d r o ~ ~ n o < Theory," Dutch Quarterly Review of A n g b American Letters :W.3,1976,233-46.
Androgyny; Language, Women's Use of - Creating a New J3xourse; Reason vs. Passion; Rationality, Male; Intuition, Female; Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship - as Subjects of Women's Writing; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Wnting; Education of Women.
~6
Woolf, Virginia: A R m of One's Own ; Three Guineas .
659. Hacker, Marilyn. "Science Fiction and Feminism: The Work of Joanna Russ," ChrysaLis ,4 ; 1977.61-79. , +
" . Speculative Fiction; Revision - of Stereotypes; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Forms. Innovative, in Women's Writing; Utopias; Language, Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse; Communities of Women.
Russ. Joanna: The ~ e m d e Man ; "'The View from This Window"; And Cham Died ; b
B "When It Chan dm; We Who Are About To ; On Strike against Gad. P .
660. Harris, Janice. "Ga Jones' Cwregidwa ," Frontiers, V.3,1980,1-5.
Artist. Woman as; Images of Women - Blues Singer; Black Women - Sexuality - Oral Tradition - MotherIDaughter Relationships; Violence against Women; Slavery; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Circularity; Sexuality. Female; Oral Tradition, Women and; Mothermughter Relationships.
Jones, Gayl: Cmegidora . - 661. Harrison, Barbara Grizzuti. "Psyching Out Ayn Rand." Ms. , VI1.3,1978,24-34.
Independence, Female; Masochism, Female; Male/Female Relationships.
Rand, Ayn: The Faunfainhead ; Atlas ~ h n & ~ e d .
662. Hawkins, Gay. "Reading 'Puberty Blues'." Refiactwy Girl, X.1,1980,58-64.
Adolescence; Subculture. Female; Class Position, Women's; Sexuality, Female -; Love. Romantic - Destructive Power of; Passivity. Female; Independence, Female; Ausmlian Literature. Women and.
-
Lette, Kathy and Garbrielle Carey: Puberty Blues.
663. Heatherington. Madelon E "Romance without Women: The Sterile Fiction of the American West" Gemgia Review. XXXIII.3.1979.643-56.
5
Popular Culture - Westerns; images of Women - Earth ~ o & e r - Submissi-w H'& - Adventuress - Moral Custodian - Virgin - Sexually Devouring Woman: Masculinity .
* -
Overview discussion of 20th Century Westerns > w
\
- - Berger, Thomas: Little Big Man ; Kesey. Ken: One Flew over the Cuckucis Nest ; Wister. Owen: The Virginian . ..
u 664. Hedenstrom, Joanne. "Puzzled Patriarchs and Free Women: Patterns in the Canadian Novel." .
b Atlantis, IV.1.1978.2-9. * Literary Tradition - Women's; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Escape - , Transformation; Self-realization
Atwood, Margaret:'Sur-cing ; Engel, Marian: Bear ; Sarah Bastard's N o t e b d ; Laurence, Margaret: The Stone Angel ; Munro. Alice: Lives of Girls and Women ; Ostenso, Martha: Wild Geese ; Wilson, Ethel: The Swamp Angel.
665. Hehner, Barbara. "River of Now and Then: Margaret Laurence's Narratives," Canadian ' I Literature, 74.1977, &57.
Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; Identity. Female; Alienation, Female; Regionalism in Women's Writing
Laurence, Margaret: The Sf one Angel ; A Jest of Gtx; ; The Fire- Dwellers ; A Bird in the Hime ; The Diviners. *
-4
666. Heilbrun, Carolyn G. "Marriage and Contemporary Fiction," Critical Inquiry, V.2, 1978. - o
309-22.
Marriage - as F~trapment - and Courtship; ~ndependence. Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Rooms; Death. Women and.
Austen, Jane; Eliot, George: Middlemarch ; Lessing, Doris: "To Room 19"; Martin, ~ i l l i ah : The Gmt, the W d f and the Crab ; Philipson. Morris: The Wallpaper Fox ; Ras!cin, Barbara: h e Ends ; Sexton, Anne: "HousewiFe".
667. Heilbrun, Carolyn. "A Feminist Looks at Women in-Detective Novels." Cruduare Woman . LXXIV, 1980,15-21. [Citation Inc.] (I .
Independence. Female; Sex Roles - Rejection ol: Popular culture - Detective . Fiction
Beal. M. F.: Angel Dance ; Collins. Wilkie: The Woman in ~ h t e ; Doyle, Arthur Conan: Sherlock Hdmes ; Francis. Dick: Knockdown ; Grierson. Edward: The Second , Man ; James, P. D.: An Unsuitable Jd, for a Woman ; Lewis, C. D a y (pseud Nicholas
lake): Thou Shell of Death ; he Smile7 wirh the Kni f e . A
d
Heilbrun, Carolyn G. "Virginia ,Woolf in Her Fifties," Twentieth Century Literature, XXW.1, 1981.16-33.
Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship - Conditions of - Addressing Male Readers; Feminis'm, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Forms. Innovative, iq Women's Writing; Militarism, Women and; Anger, Female; Suicide, women and; Madness, Women and; Aging, Women and L
Woolf. Virginia: The Years ; Three Guineas ; Roger Fry ; Orlando ; A R o m of One's Own ; Between the Acts.
I
Hendin, Josephine. "Problems of Intimacy: Will We Go from Vulnerability to Violence?." Ms. , V.5, 1976.66-68.91- ./d
Masochism, Female; Alienation, Female; . Anger, Female; Violence. Female; Love. Romantic - Destructive Power of; Power, Female; Satire. Women's Use of.
Buchanan. Cynthia: Maiden ; Didion, Joan: Play It as It Lavs ; Gould, Lois: A Sea- Change ; final Analysis : Such G d Fn'ends : Rossner, Judith: L d i n g f i Mr. Gadbar ; Shulman, Alix Kates: mekoirs of an Ex- Prom Queen .
-
Henke. Suzette A. "Male and Female Consciousness in Dorothy Richardson's Pilgrimage ," Jwnal of Women's Studies in Literature , IS, 1979.51-60.
Thought. Modes of, Female vs. Male; Rationality, Male; Intuition,>Female; Malememale Relationships; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Stream-of-Consciousness; Language, Women's Use of - Syntactical Experimentation.
Richardson, Dorothy: Pilgrimage .
Henke, Suzette A "Against Their Will: Rape and Seduction in Modem Literature," fireweed, 5/6,1979/80,153-58.
Violence against Women; Seduction; . Power. Male; Images of Women - Sex Object - Liberated Woman.
Angelou, Maya: I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings ; Ellison, Ralph: The Invisible Man ; Fanner, Frances: Will There Redly Be a Mwning? ; Joyce, James: Ulyses ; Lawrence. D- H.: Ludy Chatterley's Lover ; Lelchuk, Alan: Miriam at T h i r t ~ fw ; Miller, Henry: Tropic of Capricwn .
~emessy:dos.emary. "Katherine Anne Porter's Model for Heroines," C d a m o &vter l y . XXV.3.1977.301-15.
Twentieth Century Prose
Bildungsrornan. Female; Rites of Passage; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Wrinrlp - Quest - Rebirth: Identity. Feme : Adolescence; Renunciation; Death. Women and; Role-Models, Female; Love, Romantic - k m c t i v e Power of.
Porter. Katherine Anne: "The Source"; "Thi ~ o u r n e ~ " ; "The Last Leaf"; "The Fig Tree"; "The Circus"; "The Grave"; Old Mwtality ; Pale Hwse, Pale Rider .
a \
Hicks, Anne. "Mrs. Bentley: The G&' Wife," R m of One's Own , V.4, 1980, 60-67.
Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment; Love. Romantic - Destructive Power ol: Self-abnegation.
C
Lauren*, Margaret: The Diviners ; The Fire- Dwellers ; Ross, Sinclair: As Jbr Me and My H m e . c . -
Higgins. Sue. " ~ r e a k i n ~ ~ t h e Rules: New Fictionby Australian Women." Meanin . XXXIV.4. 1975,415-20.
Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women7sWriting; Self-realization; Male/FemaleRelationships; Sexuality, Female; Alienation. Female: Australign Literature, Women and.
Jones. Suranne Holly: CrHng in the Garden ; Riley, Elizabeth: All T h a False I m c t i o n ; Townend, Chistine: The beginning of everphing and the end of everphing else ; Viidikils, Vicki: Wrappings.
Higgins, Susan. "The Suffragettes in Fiction," Hecate , 11.2, 1976, 31-47.
Political Activism, Women and: Images of Women -'Suffragette - Old Maid - Frigid Woman - Hysteric - Career Woman; New Woman, The; Class Position, Women's; Education of Women; Work. Women and; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing - Influence on Men's writing; Sexuality. Female; Independence, Female; Love. Romantic; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Heroine's Marriage as Closure.
Brd , Ford kidox: Some Do Nut ; James. H e m : The Bastonions ; Johnstone. Sir Harry: ./ Mrs. Warren's Daughter ; Lavtrence. D. H.: The Rainbow ; Sons and Lovers ; Sinclair, May: The Tree ofHeaven ; Ward, Mrs. Humphrey: Delia Blanchjlaker ; Wells. H . G.: Ann Veronica ; Woolf, ~ i r~ f ' n i a : Night and Day.
Hinz, Evelyn J. "Anais Nin: A Reader aind the Writer," Canadian Review of American Studies. M.1,1975,118-27. -
Revision - of Critical Tradition; ' Writers, Women - Rediscovered - Conditions of; Forms, Non-Canonical - bmies/Joumals; ' - Forms. Innovative, in Women's Wiidng.
I
Nin, Anais: The Diary of Anais Nln ; The Anais Nin Reader. - - -
Hobbs. Glenda "A Portrait of the Artist as dother: Harriette Arnow and The Ddlrnaker ," Georgia Review . XXXIII.4.1979.851-66.
Writers, Women - Conditions of (lmh Century American); Motherhuud; Marriage - and b n f l i g with Creativity; Artisf Woman as; PoverEy, Womeb and- .
-
Arnow, Harriette: The Ddlmaker:
0 Hoeveler, Diane Long. "Oedipus Agonistes: Mothers and Sons in Richard Wright'a Fiction," Black American Literature F m , XII.2,1978.65-68.
Violence against Women; MotherISon Relationships; Images of Women - Terrible Mother - Sexually Devouring Woman; Sexuality, Female - Male Fear of: Racism; Marriage; Black Women - Relationships with Men.
wrighi Richard: Luwd Tod.y ; "The Man Who Killed a Shadoww; Native Son ; Black Bay.
Hoffeld, Laura and Roni Natov. "The Summer befie the Dark and The Memoirs of a Survivw : Lessing's New Female Bon$ngs," Dwis Lessing Newsletter, III.2, ,1979, 11-12.
Friendships, Female; Identity. Female;e ~ o l e ~ o d e l s , Female.
Lessing. Doris: The Summer befwe the Dark ; The Memairs of a Survivw . -
Holt, Marilyn J. "No Docile Daughters: A Study of Two Novels by Joanna Ruq," Room of One's Own , V1.1/2, 1980.92-99.
-
Power. Female; Role-Models, Female;, ~a&vity, Female; ' Revision - of Stereotypes; Speculative Fiction.
Russ. Joarm: Kittatin~y: A Tale of Magic ; The Two of Them .
Horst, Leslie. "Bitches, Twitches and Eunuchs: Sex Role Failure and Caricature." Lex et Scienlia . XIII.1/2, 1977, 14-17.
Images of Women - Castrating Bitch - Sexually ~ e v o w i n ~ worn& - Sex Object - Terrible Mother - Whore; Sexuality, Male; - Masculinit).
~ & y , Ken: One Rew over the Cuckods Nest.
Hull. Gloria T. "TO'B~ a Black Woman in America': A Reading of Pa& Marshall's 'Reena','
*
. . L ..
Q
-- -- cell -id-- -'& - ?
-- - Obsidian , IV.3, 1978, 5-15.
. , Black Women - Identity - and Education - Physical Appearance - and Work -' R&tionships with Men - and Black Idiom; Class Position. Women's; PoitGaI Activism, Women and; Identity, Female; Education of Womerl: ~fi~si'ml Appearance; Work Women and; Male/Female Relationsflips. .
7
Marshall, Paule: "Reenaw. t
Hummel, Madeline M. "From the Common Reader to the Uncommon Critl'c: Three hineaj and the Epistolary Form," Btctletin of the New Ymk Public Library, LXXX.?. 1977, 151- S f .
Forms, Non-Canoniciil - Letters; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writirtg; Anpcr. Female; Money. Women and; Education of Women.
Woolf, Virginia: Three Guineas ; A R m of One's Own . - - "
7
Hun< lin& "%ks about Wanen's Lives: The New Bestsellen." Rndrcd Amerrca v ~ ~ $ . 5 . 1980.45-52.
Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing: Ruder. Woman as; Images of Women - Happy Housewife - Victim; Revision - of Stereotypes; MotherIDaughter Relationships; Friendships, Female. - J . French. Marilyn: The Women's R m ; Friday. Nancy: Morh , Mpel / .
. 685. Hutcheon, Linda. "Revolt and the Ideal in Bloomsbury." English Studres In Canndo. V.1. 1979, 78-93.
Homosexuality. Male: Androgyny ; Anise Woman as; Lesbian(%) - Relationship.
I .- Campbell, Roy: The Gewgiad ; Foister, E M.: Maurice ; Hmnrds End ; A Passage to India ; Gddswwth Lowes Dickinson ; Hall. Radcl yfTe: The Wefi of lwrelrncss ; Lawrence;-D.. H.: "The Foxw; The Rainbow ; W m e n in Lore ; Lewis. Wyndhn: Thr Apes of God ; Strachey, Lytton: "The Unfortunate Lovers" ; "Truth Will Out" : I
"Ermynuude and Esmerelda"; Wilde, Oscar; Woolf, Virginia: Orlando ; The Vopge Out ; Joeob's ~ m n : The Wayes ; Mrs. Dalloway : To the L g h r h w : Between thec Acts ; ~ h r e e Guineas ; A Ram of One's Own .
, i 686. Inglehart, Babbette. "Daughters of Loneliness: Anzia Yezierska and the Immipranr Woman
Writer," Studies in American Jewtsh L i t e r w e . I, 1975. 1-10. [Citation Inc.]
Immigrant Women, Writing by and about; Working-Class Women. Wriung b) and about; Jewish Women,.Writing by and about; Writers, Women -"Gndi tions of (20th Century American); Racism; Reason vs. Passion; Father/Daughter Relationships; Alienation, Female.
> r - 205
Y a i ~ = & An&La: Hvngfy HCORS I S d m e of he Teneiuencs ; Chiidren o j h l i n e s s ; -
B r e d Givers ; An- &ggw \ Red & b h & a White Hwse .
Jrvtnc. Ix>m " A s m b t y Line Stories: Pastiche in Sylvia Fraser's The Candy Focrwy ," C a d i a n L-rrcrorwt. 89.1901.42-55.
" ~
YspufPr Culture - Dclcctive FiAjon - Modem Romances; Pornography; +
HomoscxLufity. MJc; LEsbisn(s) - Relationships; Male/Female ~e1atior;shi~s; . Ke-vim - of S ~ m y p a ; Sex Rdes - Rejection of.
\
E w e r . Sylvia: The Candy F m u y . i
\
Jones. Man Jane. 'The Spinster D e t d v c . " Javnal of Cmrnunication . XXV.2.1975.106-12. 0 1
Popular Culrurc - D e t d ve Ficrim; Single Women; Class Position. Women's; Intuition, Fcmalc. ,q a B
Grvic. Hem; Christie. Agatfid; Palmer, Stuart; Wenworth. Patricia rr.
lbpian. Wtji. *A Vision o f Power in Marparet Drabble's The R e h of Gdd ." kurnaf of H'omcn's S t d m tta rLtlerezwc . f.3.1979.233-42.
Intagcry and Motifs in Womcn's Writim - Womb - Birth; Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Anisf Wamgn as; Power. Female. , - - I)rabtrlc, u%rgarcr: The Realm of Gdd ; Lessing. Doris: The Fair- Gated City.
Kitplan. Sydncy Janet "Rosamond Lchrnanfl:~ The M u d and the S w c e : A Confrontation w h I h c Grcat Mother*.- Twmtieth Cenrkry Lterorwe . XXW.2.1981.127-45.
Mythckqpcal figures in Women's Writing --%meter; Power, Female; M M c r / D s u e h u r Relationships; Motherhood - Women's Ambivalence toward.
Lehmann, Rotamnd: The WIad and the S w c e ; A Sea- Grape Tree.
bu. Sandra L "Eavid Graham Phillips: The World o f ." M a ~ s ~ c h w r t s Studies in English . V134, 1976.4146.
Krvision - o f S t c m t y p ; Wcrk. women and - as E c o n b y c Nscnity - Need for Useid ~ t i m ; Povcrry. Women and; R o s t i u l t i a -
+ Phithps. ?&wid Graham: Susan Lcnar- Her Fall and Rrse . 1
Kcad). Sylvia H. 'Rlcfurd w righi's Women C m - and Inequality." Block American 4
7
rrh Literatwe Fwum . X.4.1976.124-28.
Images of Women - Gild-Woman - Intellectual lnferior - !%ex Object - Submissive Wife; Sexuality. Male.
Richard: The Long Dream ; Naive Son ; Lawd Taday ; The Outsider ; "Hnght rning Star"; "Long Black Song".
693. K&. Judy. "Rachel and Social Deterrniiiism: A Feminist Reading of A Jest o f G d ." Jmrnal of Canadian Fiction .27. 1980.101-23.
Single women; Male/Female Relationships; Self, Divided; Images of Women - Old Maid; Re-vision - of Stereotypes; Physical Appearance; Sexuality, Female; Rivalry, Female; Friendships, Female; Self-realization.
Laufence. Margaret: A Jesz of Gad.
694. Keizs, Marcia. "Themes and Style in the Works of Paule Marshall," Negro Amerrcan Lterature Fwum ,1X.3, 1975,67,-71-76.
0
Black Women - and the Family; Immigant Women, Writing by and about; Power, Female; Masculinity; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Masculinity; Family. Women and.
Marshall. Paule: Brown Girl, Brownstones ; S d Clap Hands and Sing ; The Chosen Place, The Timeless People; "The Valley Between"; "Reena" ;,"Some Get Wasted"; "To Da-duh. In Memoriam". a
/
695. Kelber. Mim. "Lost Women: Vera Brittain and Winifred Holtby - Testament of Friendship." Ms. , IX.9. 1981, 31-37.
Friendships, Female; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Wcting; - Pacifism, Women and; Political Activism. Women and; Writers. Women - -
Rediscovered
b Brittain. Vera; Holtby. Winifred.
696. Kelv. Jean McClure. "The Cult of Kill in ~ d o l b x e n t Fiction." Englrsh J d . LXIV.2. 1975, 56-61.
Masculinity - and violence; Adolescence; ~ites '%f passage.
Annixter. Paul: Windigo ; Swiftwater ; Borland, Hal: When the Legends Dre ; Gipson, 4
Fred: Old Yeller ; Hemingway. Emest: The Old Man and the Sea ; Mailer. Forman: W h y Are W e in Vietnam? ; Melville. Herman: M d y Drck ; Peck. Robert Newton: A Day No figs W d d Die ; Rawlings. Marjorie Kinnan: The Yearl~ng ; Sperry. Armstrong: .
- Twentieth Century Prose - - - -
Cail It Cauage ; Street, James: Gwdbye.My Lad;, ; Walton, Bryce: Harpon Gunner ; Webb, Christopher: Quest of the Otter ; ~ i e r . ' ~ s t e r : The Loner ; WojueCbows%a, Maia: - a
Shadow ofa Bull. . /
697. . Kennard, Jean. "Oates, W i n g and Jong: The Byrden of Tradition," Atlantis ,11.1,1976,14-21.
Nmative Strategies in Women's Writing- Two Suitors Convention; Sexuality. Female; Love. Rorcantic; Self-realization.
>
U Jong, Erica: Fear of Summer be f ie the- Dark ; Oats. Joyce Carol: Do with Me
P
698. Kent, George E "The Black Woman in Faulkner's Works, with the Exclusion of Dilsey," Ph90n. XXXVI.1.1975.55-67.
4
Images of Women - Black Mammy - Faithful Servant; Images of Women, Theory of; Black Women - and Work; Racism; Slavery; Work, Women and
P& One of this m y appeared in Phyfon , XXXV.4.1974 and focussed on black women --- as sexual threat
Faulkner. William: Soldier's Pay ; SartoTiS ; The Llnvanquished ; Light in August ; Absalm, Absalm! ; "The Fire and the Hearth".
-- 699. King, Patricia M. "The Maimie Letters." Women's Studies Newsletter, IV.3, 1976.67.
Foms,Non-Canonid-Letters; Work,Womenand; Prostitution; Writers; Women - Rediscovered.
Pinzer. Maimie.
706. Kirpatrick. Joanna 'Women in Indian-English Literature: The Question of Individuation," /aunaI of Sauh Asian Literprure . XII. 3/4.1977,121-29.
Lndian Literature. Women and; Independence. Female; Sexuality, ~ e m i e ; Sex Roles - Rejection of.
Ishvani: The Brocaded Sari ; Markandaya, Kbmala: Two Virgins ; Nectar in a Seive ; Nanda. Savitiri Devi: The City of Two Gateways ; Narayan, R L: The Dark Room .
701. Kissel. Susan S. "Double Vision: The Differing View of Contemporary Male and Female Writers." Frontiers. VI.1.1981.39-44.
Literary Tradition - Women's; Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Anger, Female; Style, Female vs. Male.
- Twentieth Century Pfm
Overview z
- -
Barth. John; Barthelme, Donald; Boyle, Kay; Brown. Xita Mas; Coovers, Robert; Frcnch, Marilyn; Gass. William; Hawkes, John; Hedges. ~ l & n e ; Oates. Joyce Carol; Olsen. Tilllc; Piercy. Marge; Plath, Sylvia; Pynchon, Thomas; Rich. Adrienne; Kukeyse~. Muriel;
. Singer, Isaac Bashevisf West. Jessarnyn; Walker, Alice.
Klounan, Phyllis R "'Oh Freedom' - Women and History in Marpret Walker's lrrbilee ." Black American Literature Fwwn , XI.4.1977.139-45.
Black - and and;
Women - Oral Tra Motherhood - and the Family .- Relationships with Men Black Comrnwty; arratives; Slavery; Racism; Family, Women
Oral Tradition. Wo Motherhood; Male/Female Relationships.
Walker. ~ a r & e t : Milee .
Klotman, Phyllis R. "Dick-and-Jane and the Shirley Temple Sensibility in The Bluest E p ." Black American Literature Fonun . ~III.4,1979.123-25.
Black Women - and Education - and the ~arpiiy - Mother/I)aughter Relationships; Education of Women; Family. Women and; Moiher/Daughter Relationships; Bildungsroman, Female; Language. Women's Useof - Irony; Rites of Passage; Forms. Innovative, in Women's Writing.
.L
Morrison. Toni: The Bluest Eye .
Kolbenschlag, Madonna C. "Madness and Sexual Mythology in Scon Fiugerald." Internattonal Jaunal of Women's Studies, 1.3.1978, 263-71.
I ,
Madness, Women and; Sex Roles,
Fitzgerald, F. Scott: Tender Is the N~ght ; Firzgerald. Zelda.
Kolodny, Annette. "The Lad@ Not for Spurning: Kate Millen and the Critics." Contempmy d
Literature, XVII.4, 1976. 541-62.
Autobiography, Women's; Confessional Mode in Women's Writing; Forms. Innovative, in Women's Writing; Revision - of Critical Tyadition; Writers. Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Rying.
Millet& Kate: Hyng .
Korenman. Joan S. "The 'Liberation' of Margaret Drabble." Critrque . XX1.3, 1980.61-72.
Motherhood; Sexuality. Female; Maniage - as Entrapmem - and Conflict with
e
Career.
Drabble. Margaret: A Summer Bird- Cage ; The G m ~ k Year ; J e d e m the Gdden ; - The Millstone ; The Waterfdl ; The Needle's Eye ; The Realms of Gdd ; The Ice Age.
707. '
Koski. Fran and Maida Tilchen "Some Pulp Sappho." Margins ,23,1975,41-45.
Popular Culture - Lesbian Pulps; Lesbian(s) - Literary Tradition - Positive Images of - Subculture - Sexuality; Images of Women - Lesbian as Freak - Tragic Lesbian; Literary Tradition - ~ornen's; Subculture. Female; Sexuality, Female.
. Overview of "pulp" novels featuring lesbian relationships published in the 1950s and 1960s. F
708. Kroller. Eva-Marie. "La Lampe dam la Feneue: The Visualization of Quebec Fiction," Canadian Literature .88.1981.74-82.
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Clothing - @closure - H o w - Photography - Windows; Alienation, Female; Quebemises, Writing by and about
" Bersianik, Louky: Le Pique- nique nu P Acropde ; Cadieux, Pauline: Lo Lamp dam la ~enetrt? ; Hebm, Anne: Kamauosku .
I
709. K r k e . Agate NeSaule. "Feminism and Art in Fay Weldon's Nqvels," Critique. XX.2. 1978. 5-20.
MaleIFernale Relationships; Friendships, Female; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Multiple Heroines; Anger, Female; Self-sacrifice: Death, Women and; '
Humour. Women's Use'of; Forms. Innovative, in Women's Writing; Feminism, .Twentieth Century - Influ5nce on Women's Writing.
0 '
,
W eldon, Fay: The F a Woman's Joke ; Dawn Among the Women ; ~ e r n a k Friends ; - Remember M e . =
Krouse. Agate Nesaule and Margot Peters. "Why Women Kill," Jwnal of Cmmunication , XXV.2,1975,98-104.
Popular Culture - Detective Fiction; Violence, Female; crime, Women q d .
Overview of Christie's detective fiction. -
Christie. Agatha
Ladenson. Joyce R "Gender Reconsiderations in Three of Sherwood Anderson's Novels." Mawchusets Studies in English . VI.1/2.1978.90-102.
4% - - -
Twentieth Century Prose - Images of Women - Moral Custodian - Earth Mother; Masculinity; ~ n d r & n ~ ; Sex Roles; Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment: Independence, Female.
Anderson, Sherwood: Poor White ; Many Marriages ; Kit Brandon . I
P-- Ladimer, Bethany. "Madness and the Irrational in the Work of Andre Breton: A Ferninis1 Perspective," Fewnist Studies . V1.1,1980,175-95.
Madness, Women and; Thought, Modes of. Female vs. Male; Intuition. Female; Rationality. Male; Jrnages of Women - Witch - Idealized Love Object - Madwoman; Male/Female Relationships; Alienation, Female; Independence. Female; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Power, Female - Lack of - Male Fear of; French Literature. Women and ,
Breton. Andre: Nadp .
Lamer, Susan Sniader. "Speaking in Tongues: Ladies Almunack and the Language of Celebration," Frontiers, IV.3. 1979.39-46.
Lesbianism - Encoded; Lesbtan(s) - Sexuality - Subculture - Writers. Silences of; Humour, Women's Use of; Language, Women's Use of - Encoding - Creating a New Discourse - Reclaiming; Class Position, Women's; Revision - of Myth; Subculture, Female; Sexuality, Female - as Superior to Male; Writers. women- and Silence.
Barnes. Quna: Ludies ~ l m & ; Hall. Radclyffe: The Well of loneliness.
Larsson, Lisbeth. "Women's Reading," Women's Studies Intermtional Quarterly. II1.2/3. 1980, 277-83.
Reader, Wgman as; Popular Culture - Modem Romances; Public and Private. Separation of; Marriage - as Economic Necessity; Class Position. Women's; Identity. Female; French Literature, Women and. a
Poulsen is author of the" Succeroman " series of modem romances.
Poulsen; Erling; Richardson, Samuel: Pamela .
Lawrence, Karen. "Give Her a Pattem," R m of One's Own , 1.2, 1975, 49-56.
Power, Male; Passivity, Female;. Sexuality. Male; Sexuality. erna ale.
Lawrence, D. H.: Lcldy Chatterley's Lover.
Lawr,ence. Leota S. "Three ~ & t Indian Heroines: An Analysa." CLA kd. XX1.2. 1977.
-
238-50. - > -
Caribbean Literature, Women and; Black Women - ~ e l a t i o n s h i ~ with Men - and h e Family - Sexuality - and Education; Class Position, Womsn's; - ,.Immigrant Women, Writing by d a b o u t ; Alienation, Female; Education of Women; Sexuality, Female; Family, Women and; Male/Female Relationships. ,.*
Hodge. Merls: Crick Crack ~ o n k y ; ~ames, C . L R: Minfy ANey ; McKay, Claude: BUMM Batom.
. 717. Lecierman, Marie Jean. "Through the Looking-Glass: ~ b e n s , Dreams. Fears in the Fiction of Katherine Mansfield," Women's Studies. V.l, 1977.3550.
Writers, Women - Conditions of (20th Century New Zealand) - Anxiety of Authoqhip; New Zealand Literature, Women and; - Love, Romantic; Independence, Female; Money, Women and; Sexuality, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Images of Women - Virgin - Whore; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Minors; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Doubling; Self, Divided
Ovewew of Mansfield's short fiction
hansfield, Katherine: The Short Stories ofKatherine Mansjield .
718. Lee, Sonia. "The Awakening of the Self in the Hero$es of Sembene Ousmane," Critique, XVII.2. 1975.17-25. 9
African Literature. Women and; Marriage - and Polygamy - and Woman's Fulfillment - and Male Authority; Political Activism, Women and; National Liberation, Women and; Self-realization.
Sembene. Ousmane: "Ses Trois Joursn; "Vehi-Ciosane"; G d s Bits of Wood (Zes Bouts de Bds de Dieu) ; L'Harmattan .
719. Lee. Valerie Gray. "The Use of Folkdk in Novels by Black Women Writers," CLA Jownal , XXIII.3, 1980, 266-72.
Black Women - ReJationships with Men - and Black Idiom - Oral Tradition; Folklore; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; Love, Romantic; A Oral Tradition, Women and; MaleIFemale Relationships.
Hurston. Zora Neale: Their E ~ S ' Were Watching God ; Jones, Gayl: Cmegidwa ; Momson, Toni: Sula .
720. Lefcowitz. Barbara F. "Dream and Action in Lessing's The Summer befwe the Durk ." . Critique . XVII.2, 1975. 107-20.
- Aging, W ~ m e n an& Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Journey - Beams - Child; Death, Women and; Self. Divided; Identity. Female.
P
Lessing. Doris: The Summer before the Dark.
d
721. Lewis, Paula Gilbert "Street ofR~ches and The R a d Past Altamont : The Feminine World of Gabrielle Roy," Journal ofwornen's Studies in bterazure . L2.1979.133-41.
MotherIDaughter Relationships; Childhood; Adolescence; ~ k i n g , Women and; Independence. Female; Communities of Women; Quebecoises, Writing by and about,
r
Roy, Gabrielle: Street of Riches ; The Road Past Altamont (ILa Route d' Altamont).
722. Lidoff. Joan. "The Female Ego: Christina Stead's Heroines." New Barton Review , 11.3. 1977, 19-20.
Family, Wornen and; Independence. Female; Power. Female; Anger, Female; Alienation, Female; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Absent Mother;.
. Australian Literature, Women and
- Stead, Christina: The Man Who Loved Children ; Fw Love Alone ; Letty Fox Her Luck ; Dark Places of the Heart ; The Puzzledheaded Girl ; The Little Hotel.
D ,
723, lidoff, Joan. " L C Gothio The Imagery of Anger. Christina Stead's h a n Who Loved Children ," Studies in the Novel, XI.2.1979,201-15.
ger. Female; Gothic. Female; Domestic Fiction; Identity, Female; Family, omen and; Sexuality. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Imagery and 'Y
Motifs in Women's Writing - Houses - Enclosure; Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Australian Literature. Women and.
Stead, Christina: The Man Who Loved Children. * I
724. Lifson, Martha R. "Structural Patterns in The Gdden Notebook ," Univers~ty ofMich~gan Papers in Women's Studies, 1114. 1978,95-108.
Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; Alienation. Female; Writers. Women - as Subjects of Women's Writing.
Lessing. Doris: The Gdden Notebook.
725. Lilienfeld. Jane. "'The Deceptiveness of Beauty': Mother Love and Mother Hate in To the Lighthouse ." Twentieth Century Literature,
,
. - - - - - - - . Twentietk€enturpPmserppmse
Mother/Daughter Relationships; Family, Women and; SeIf-sacrifice; Independ6nce. Female; Power. Female; MaleIFemale Relationships; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Moon; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - b Great Goddess - Demeter.
L
Woolf, Virginia: To the Lighthwe .
726. Lindstrom, Naorni. "The Literary Feminism of Marta Lynch," Critique. XX.2.1978.49-58.
Latin-American Literature, Women and; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Speech Patterns, Female vs. Male; Language, Patriarchal - and Female Invisibility; Sex Roles.
Lynch, Marta: Los Cuentw Tristes ; Cuentw de Cdwes .
c4
727. Lipking, J&. "Looking at the Monuments: Woolfs Satiric Eye," Bulletin of the New Ywk M l i c Library. LXXX.2.1977.141-45.
Satire, Women's Use of; Humour. Women's Use Of; Power, Male; Masculinity; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Male Deity;' in Women's Writing.
Woolf, Virginia: The Years. h r
728. Lippet. Noriko Mizuta. "Literature, Ideology and Women's Happiness: The Autobiographical Novels of Miyomoto ~ur iko ,"~~ul le t in of Concerned Asian Schdars , X.2,1978,2-9.
Japanese Literature, Women and; W ri ten, Women - Conditions of; Socialism, Women and; Political Activism, Women and; Love, Romantic - Destructive Power of; Marriage; Falnily, Women and; MalelFernaIe Relationships; Friendships, Female; Autobiography, Women's; Bildungsroman, Female.
Yuriko. Miyomoto: A Htxk of P w Fdk ; Nobuko ; The Two Gardens ; "The Family of Koiwai"; The Banrhu Plain ; Fuchisu . -
729. Little. Judy. "Festive Comedy in Woolf s Between the Acts ." Women and Literature , V.l, 1977.26-37. .
Revision - of Myth; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Rebirth - Warfare; +
Pacifism, Women and: 'Power, Male; Humour, Women's Use of; Female/Feminist -- Aesthetic.
Woolf, Virginia: Between the Acts .
730. Lockwood. Betty. "And Then, Were women'. . . Part 47 ~ c m m p e a k , II.2,1976,12-13.
Literary Tradition - Women'si Political Activism, Women and; Racism; -
Australian Literature, Women and. . *
See also: Part 1, Womanspeak. 1.4,197%22-23; Part 2, Wom~speak; 1.5.1975.12-13; Part 3, Womanspeak, II.1,1976,12-13; Part 5. Womanspeak. 11.3.1976.12-13; and Part
Prichard, Katharine.Sqsamah: Cwwdoo ; Black ON; Wwkmg Bullmks ; Richardson, Ethel Henrietta (Henry Handel Richardson): The Getting of Wisdom ; The F m n e s of -
Richard Mahoney ; The End of a Childhood.
731. Lockwood, Betty. "And Then, There Were Women . . . Part 5." Womanspeak .II.3.1976. 12-13. P
Writers, Women - ~ediscovkred; Australian Literature, Women and.
See also: Part 1, Womanspeak. 1.4.1975.22-23; Part 2, Womanspeak, 1.5.1975.12-13; Part 3, Womanrpeak. 11.1.1976.12-13; Part 4, Womanspeak. II.2.1976,12-13; and Part 6, Womanspeak, II.4,1976,20-21.
Eldershaw, Flora Patrician and Marjorie Bamard (pseud. M. k m m d Eldershaw): A House Is Built ; Simpson, Helen de Gueny: Bmerang ; Australia 1999 ; Under Capricorn ; Skinner, Mary Louise (Mollie): The Letters of a V . A.D. ; Black Swan ; Men We Are ; Skinner, Mary Louise (Mollie) and D. Ij. Lawrence: The Boy in the Bush .
732. Lockwood, Betty. "And Then, There Were Women. . . Part 6," Womanspeak, II.4,1976,20-21.
Literary Tradition - Women's; Socialism. Women and; Australian Literature, - Women and.
See also: Part 1, W m n s p e a k , 1.4.1975.22-23; Part 2, Womanspeak, 1.5.1975.12-13; Part 3, Warnanspeak. 11.1,1976,12-13; Part 4. Womanspeak, II.2,1976.12-13; and Part $, Womanspeak, II.3.1976,12-13.
/' <
Dark, Eleanor: Prelude to Christopher ; Return to Codami ; Waterways ; Tennant Kylie: Tiburon ; Foveaux ; The Battlers .
*
733. - Lohrey, Amanda. "The Liberated Heroine: New Varieties of Defeat?," Meanjn , XXXVIII.3, 1979,294-364.
Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Self-realization; Sexuality, Female; Independence, Female; Alienation. Female; Love, Romantic.
. *
Didion, Joan: A Bodc of Common Prapr ; French, Marilyn: The Women's R a m ; Jong, Erica: Fear of R 9 n g ; How to Save Your Own Life ; Lurie. Alison: Lave and Friendship ; The War between the Tates.
Lorsch. Susan E "Gail Godwin's T& Odd Woman : Litenwe and the Retreat from Life." Critique . XX2, 1978.21-32.
Love, Romantic - Deswctive Power of; Sexuality, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Male/Female Relationships; Reader, Woman as.
Gissing, George: The Odd Women ; Godwin, dail: Tha Odd W-n . -
Lounsberry, Barbara and Grace AM Movet "Principles of Pkrception in Toni Morrison's Sula ," Black American Literatwe F m , XIII.4,1979.126-29.
Black Women - and the Family - Mother/Daughter Relatiomhips - Relationships with Men - Sexuality - and Black Community; Racism; Sex Roles; Marriage; Death, Women and; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Circles; Family, Women and; Mother/Daughter Rela*ti&nships; MaleIFemale Relationships; Sexuality, Female.
Momson, Toni: Sula .
Love. Myra. "Christa Wolf and Feminism: Breaking the Patriarchal Connection," New Gennan Critique, 16, 1979. 31-53.
Language. Patriarchal - Dualism - as Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience - and Female Invisibility; Language. Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse -
2 Subjective Voice; Oral Tradition, Women and - Conversation; Writers, Women - and Silence; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Film-making; Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Realism, Theory of; Critical hoo l s . Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - Structuralism/Post-Structuralism; German Literature. Women and.
WolJ, Christa: The Quest jhr Christa T . (1Vachdenken uber Christa T.) . a . Q
Lurie. Alison. "Beatrix Potter: More than Just Peter Rabbit," Ms. . VI.3.1977.42-45.
Writers, Women - Rediscovered a Conditions of; Isolation of Women; Education of Women:*
Potter. Beatrix.
-. Lydenberg Robin. ;kgainst the Law of Gravity: Female Adolescence in Isak Dinesen's Seven Gdhi'c Tales ," Modern Fiction Studies. XXTV.4,1978/79.521-32.
Adolescence; Androgyny; ~b th ic , Female; Rit& of Passage; Aging, Women and; Independence, Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Flying; Scandinavian Literature. Women and
- -- -
Dinesen, Isak: Seven Gothic Tales.
739. McCamey, Kathleen M. "Images of Women in West African LiteraFe and Film: A Struggle against Dual Colonization," International /ournu! of Women's Studies. 111.1. 1980. 76-88. -
African Literature. Women and; Colodalism. Women and; Imperialism. Women and; Black Women - and the Family -Motherhood - Physical Appearance - and Religion - and Work; Images of Women - Great Goddess - Earth Mother - Moral Custodian; Work. Women and; Power, Female; Religion. Women and - Islam; Language, Women's Use of - Naming - Reclaiming; Prostitution; Family, Women and; Motherhood; Physical Appearance, : - -
. +
Aidoo, Ama At.: Anma ; "In the CuttingWa Drinkff; "A Gift from Somewhere"; "Everything Counts"; w, Ayi Kwei: " h e Offal find"; Two Tharuznd Semns ; Awoonor, Kefi: "Just To Buy Corn" ; Konadu. Asare: A Wwnan in Her Prime ; Sadji, Abdoulaye: Nini, la Mulatresse ; Sembene, Ousrnane: Ceddo ; White Gertesis ; Xala ; "The Mother"; 0 Pays, Mon Beau Peuple! ; Emitai ; Barom Sarret . .
740. McCarty. Maxi. "Possessing ~ e n $ l e Space: 'The Tender Shmt'." W&nFs Studies. V111.3. - 1981,367-74. >
Mother/Daughter Relationships; Independence, Female; Sexuality. Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing -Garden -'Mirrors; French hterature. Women and.
- - Colette, Sidonie-Gabrielle: "The Tender Shoot".
741. McCauley, Car~le Spearin. "Zelda," Rwm of One's Own ,I.3, 1975, 33-42.. \$
Writers. Women - Conditions of; Madness. ,Women and. I
Firzgerald, F. Scott; Fitzgerald, Zelda: Save Me the Waltz : Milford. Nancy: Zelda A . Biography .
742. McCauley, Carole Spearin. "Doris Lessing: ,Shapes of Pain. Patterns of kecovery," Firenieed , 2, 1979,8-19. - -
9 Role-Models. Female; Writers. Women - as Subjects of Women's writing! Alienation, Female.
Lessing. Doris: Children oflidence ; The Gdden ~ o t e b & ; The Grass Is Singing ; The Memairs of a S w i v w ; The SwnmCr befwe the Dark ; Tke Temptation of h k Orkney
\ and Other Stwies . 8
743. McDowell, "The Narrows : A Fuller View of Ann Petry," Black American - *
\ 3 Po.
217 . --
& -
L
Twentieth Century Prose
Black Women - and Black Community - and the Family - and Black Consciousness; Miscegenation; Racism; Family. Women and.
Petry. Ann: The N m s . 6
744. McElhiney, Annette Bennington. "Alternative Responses Life in Tillie Olsen's Work," F m i e r s ,II.l, 1971, 76-91.
* - Mgther/Daughter'Reiationships; Rites of Passage; Imagery and Motifs m Women's Writing - q i r t h ; ' Adolescence; Motherhood; Death. Women and
Olsen. Tillie: "I Stand Here Ironing"; "Oh Yes"; Tell Me a Riddle ; Yonnondio: From the Thirties .
5
-%
745. Mdnhemy, Frances. "Woman and.Myth in Thomas Keneally's Fiction," Meanjn . X L 1981, 1 24-58.
-/ Images of Women - Other - Earth Mother - Virgin; Sexuality, ~ e d e - d' ale Fear of; Power. Female - Male Fear of; Menstruation; Austra?ian fiterahire. Women and.
Overview
Keneally. Thomas
8
746. McKenna, Isobel. "As They Really Were: Women in the Novels of Grove," English Studies in Cawda. II.1.1976.1W16.
d
Sex Roles; MaleIFernale Relationships; Masculinity; Work, Women md.
Grove, Frederick Philip: Settlers of the Marsh ; Our Daily Bread ; Yoke of Life ; Fm.ts of the Earth ; Master of the Mill ; Two Generations ; In Search of Myself.
B
McLaughlin, AM L "The Same Job:, The Shared Writing Aims of Katherine Mansfield and . Virginia Woolf," Modern fiction Studies. XXIV.3.1978. 369-82.
Literary Tradition - Wome-'~; Riialry. Female; Forms, Innovative, in ~ m i n ' s Writing; New Zealand Literature, Women and.
Mansfield, Katherine: "Prelude"; "At the Bay"; "A Man's Story"; "The Garden Parry"; "Bliss"; "The Daughters of the Late Colonelw; Wwlf, Virginia: The Vopzge Ow ; "The Mark on the Wall"; The Waves ; The Years ; T o the Lighthaae ; Mrs. Dalloway ; kcob's Ram ; " Kew Gardensw; Night and Day. . -
0 Tw&tietlr Rosc - * - -
748. McLaughlin, Marilou B. "->itid in The M& Who Loved Children .' ~ m r + University Fwum , XXI.4. 1980, 30-37. . +- A
Marriage - as Entrapment; Anger, Female; Sexuality. Female - Male Fear of- Women's @bivalence toward; FatherIDaughter Relationships; Lanpuae. Women's ,
Use of - Irony; Aqstralian Literature, Women and.
A Stead. Christina: The Man Who Lovedshildren . 4<
t
749. McMahan, Elizabeth E "The Big Nurse as R a e e t : Sexism in Kqey's C u W s Nest ." ClE A Critic , XXXW.4, 1975, 25-27. '1 , .
c Images of Women .- Castrating Bitch - Temble Mother - Whore; Re-vision - of Stereotypes; Racism.
Kesey, Ken: One f lew over the Cuckoo's Nest .
750. McMullen, L o h e . "Images of Women in Canadian Literature: W m as ,Hero." Arlontrr . II.2(Part 2). 1977.134-42.
-- -
Imagery and Motifs in Womc n's Writing - Quest - Journey; Iridependencc.~Female; . Sex Roles - Rejection of;"ielf-realization,
Atwood, Margaret: Surfacing ; Nresford-Howe, Constance: The Bmk of Eve : Waghan, Morley: The Loved and the Lart ; Laurence. Margaret: A eft of Gad ; Wilson, Ethel: The Swamp Angel.
751. McMullen, Lorraine. "A Canadian Heloise: Elizabeth ~Sman an$ the Feminis~ Adullen Novel.' Aolantis, 1v.1: 1978, 76-85. I
Adultery; Love, Romantic; Language, Women's Use of - Subjective Vorce; Revision - of Myth; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - B l d - Water - Landscape. ..
Heloise; Ovid: Herddes ; Smart, Elizabeth: By Grand Central Sraron / SUI bown and Wept ; Virgil: Aeneid . . .
752. McSweeney, Kerry. 1v.3. 1979,4653. a
Love. Romantic -
C'
I_)
753. Maan , Nan Bauer. "Discovering Women's Activist Fiction.' University ofMrchigan Papers in
Wmen's Studies, 11.2, 1976.96-104.
L " P
219
Poti lrd Piaivism, W m m and; % c i a k g Wtrmen and; Class Pusition, Women's; Sex Roles - Rtjtction of.
Wq. Zoe: A Chance to t r v e ; Converse. 'Florence: D i w i Vicfrlx ; Cooke. Marjorie Iknton: The Thrrshdd ; Galr. Zona: Dmcgh~er ef the Maning ; Hirsh. Char1otte Teller: The Cugr .
'54. Magiin. Nan Baucr. ''Vida to Florence: 'Comrade and Companion'." F m i e r s . D1.3.1979, 13-10.
Friendship. Fmulc; Communities of ~ o & & Single Women; Political Activism. W e n and; Writen. Womtn - Conditions of (20th Century American); Class Pasition, Wornen's; Work. Women and;. Religion, Women and - Christianity; ifid-. Female.
Canverrc. Florenrx: Dmm Vlnrix ; The Baudin ofChriaopher ; Chiidren ofLighr ; Sntdder. Vida: A h i e n e r m &%I ; On Awney .
-
755. Maglin, Nan Bauer. '#rldrm Ihmas,' Heresies. UI.3.1981.42-46.
r)omcstic Fictian; . Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Housekeeping - Rooms; - Work, Womcn and - D o m n L a b w ; Mother/Daughter Relationships;
Subatltwe. Female; Public and Private. Separation of; Immigrant Women, Writing / by rad abwc WorkingCkn Wornen, Writing by and abouc Poverty. Women and: - w w a ; "
Bmwra. R o ~ l l r n : %ood Housekeeping'; W t e l d . Dorothy: The H-&I ; Kingston. Maxinc H c q : The Wanan Warrior: Memars ofa Girlhard mong Ghms ; Krasm, Frarodne: 'Cclia'; L i n k . Adele: The Arrogad Beggm ; Marshall. Palale: B m n Girl, B W M ~ S ; Mohr. Nicholasa: El Bmnx &membered ; "Old Mary"; Paley. Grace: 'The brig-Distance Runner"; 'Used Boy Raiscan: Pew. Ann: The Sfrzet ; Seaton. ,
Esta; Steir. Pat: 'Kiicherts 1970'; Stern. Elitabctb: My Maher ond 1 ; Yezierska, Anzia: 'Children of tionelinus' ; 'The Fat of the Land'; "The Lost Beautihilness".
-
Mluo, b t h i '(Skcicton in the) Clclset Literanu&: A A k at Women's Mystery Fiction." The S c c d Wave : IV,4,1976.8-20.
' * Popular Culture - Ik teaive Fiction; Gothic, Female; Literary Tradition - Women's; Malt Chamam in Wmm's Writing; Independence. Female; Single Womta
Survcy-s fhc women's tradition in detective fiction. citing more than thirty authors. with morc defailcd tnauncnt dSayers
Sqvm. Dorothy L: Sfrang Pd#Kt ; Have His Curcaw ; G d y Night ; Busman's Honc)mam. .
- -
Twentieth Century hose *
757. Malmsheimer, Lonna M. "Sexyal Metaphor and Social Criticism in Anderson's The Man Who Became a WCR~UU~ ," Studies in American Fiction , VIL1,1979. 17-26.
_ - Sex Roles; Masculinity; Power. Male.
Anderson. Sherwood: The Man Who Became a W a n . J 0
758. Malpezzi, Frances. "A Study nf the Female Protagonist in Fran!! Waters' People of r he Valley and Rudolf0 Anaya's Bless Me, Ultima ," Sacth Dokora Peview . XIV.2.1976. 102-10.
Power, Female; Nature. Women and; ,Revision - of Stereotypes; Androgyny; Technology. Women and fl
Anaya, Rudolf~: Bless Me, Ulrima ; Waters. Frank: People of the Valley.
759. ~ L d e l . Dorothy. "R~didismvering Angna Enters." Fronrrers. V1.3. 1981.1b-05. P
Autobiography, .Women's; Artist Woman as; Writers. Women - Rediscovered. 3
Enters. Angna: Silly Girl ; Artist's Lif i ; ~ i r s t Person Plural ; On *iUihe ; Among the Daughlers .
760. Maridlove. Nancy B. "Humour at the Service of the Revolution: Leonora Camngton's Feminist Perspective on Surrealism," Perspectives on Contempwary bterdture , VII. 1981,117-22.
Images of Women - ln-ationzl Woman - Muse - Madw Re-vision - of . Stereotypes; Humour, Women's Use of; Cornmum Women; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Great Goddess - Mary Ma ; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Rebirth; Aging. Women b d ; ism. Women and; f rench Literature. Womrn and
Breton, &Ire : N o d p : Carrington, Leonora: he Hearing T b mpet ; Joubert Alain: "Wrecker of the Senses"; Jouffrey. Main: "Double Flight"; Marien, Marcel: "The Children's Marquis de Sade".
0
761. Manheimer. Joan. "Margaret Drabble and the Journey to the Self." Stud~es In the LAterary Imagimion . XL2.1V8.127-43.
Identity. Femaie; Literary Tradition - Women's; Self-realization; Nanauve Strategies in Women's Writing - Doubling - Absent Mother; Forms. lmovativc, in Women's Writing; Sexuality. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward.
3
Drabble, ~ G g a r e t : A Summer Bird- Cage ; The Gurrick Year ; The Millslone ; .r)
k d e m the Gddsn ; The Waterjhll ; The Needle's E y ; The Realms of Gdd .
L - --
Twentieth Century Prog ,
I P
762. Marcus, Jane. "The Years as Greek Drama. Domestic Novel, and Gotterdammerung." Bulletin qfthe New Ywk MliFLibrar;/, LXXX.2.1977.276-36~.
0
Fernale/Feminist Aesthetic; ~ a m i l ~ , Women and; - Ihmestic Fiction; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing -oBirds - Housekeeping - Houses - Kettles - Moon - Music - Rebirth - Sun - Water; ~
Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Antigone - Great Goddess; Political -- Activism. Women and; Revision - of Critical Tradition.
Woolf. Virginia: The Years .
763. Marcus. Jane. "Pargetipg The Porglters ." Bulletin of the N>W Y a k Public Library. LXXX.3. .k 4 I877.416-35.
lrnagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Colour - Fire - Moon - Sheep - Time; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Great Goddess; . Re-vision - of Myth; Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Forms. Imovative, in Women's Writing.
Woolf, Virginia: The Years .
Marcus. Jane. "'No More HO&': Virginia Woolf on Art and Propaganda." Wmen's Studies, -
' IV.2/3,1977,265-90. b
Writers. Women - Conditions of; Political ~ c t i v k m , Women and; Androgyny; Money. Women and; Socialism, Women and; Forms, Innovative. in Women's -
Writing.
W mlf. Virginia: Three Guineas ; The Years ; A R a m of One's Own .
Marcus. Jane. "Art and Anger,"-Feminist Studies. 1V.l. 1978.69-98.
Anger, Female; Artist Woman as; Work, Women and; - Power. Male; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Public and Private, Separation of; M m , Women and; Political Activism. Womeq and; Writers. Women - Conditions of - Addressing. Male Readers; Suicide. Women and; Literary Tradition - Women's
,-
Robins. Elizabeth: Ancilla's Share ; Woolf. Virginia: A R a m of One's Own ; The Years ; Three Guineas. '
Marcus, Jane. "Olive Schreiner: Cartographer of-the SpiriVAReview Article" Minnesota Review ;12, 1g9.58-66.
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Dreams - Landscape - Quest; Alienation. Female; Isolation of Women; Writers, Women - Conditions of - Use of Pseudonym; !haahsm, Women and; Pacifism, Women and; Power, Female; African
-- -~
- -- Twentieth Century Prow
Literature. Women and. - - -
iC
~chreine;. Olive: Woman and Lo6w ; Trmper Peter H d k e ~ marho hod and ; Dreams ; The Story of an Afiican F m .
Martin, Edward A "H. L Mencken and Equal Rqhts for Wornen.* Georgta Revlen.;XXX\'.l , 1981,6576.
Feminism, Twentieth Century - p u e n c e on Men's Writing; Independence. Female; Maie/Female Relationships.
?
Mencken, H. L: In Definse ofwomen .- L
Meikle. Phoebe. "Inside and Outside Views: Women Short Story Writers." Landfdl . XXXIII.2. 1979,110-17.
Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Style, Female vs. Male; New Zcaland @
Literature. Women and. e
Survey of contemporary New Zealand women writers
Batistich, A. E; Campion, Edith; Frame. Janet; Fresne. Yvonne du; Grace, Patricia; Kidman. Fiona; Metcalfe, Rowan; Randel. Narena; Shaw. Helen; Sutherland. Margaret
Meldrum, Barbara. "Images of Women in Western American Liteqture." Midwest Q w e r l y , XVII.3.1976.252-67.
Images of Women - Moral Custodian - Frontier Woman - Schoolmarm; Work, Women and - Domestic Labour; Poverty. Women and; Popular Culturc - Westerns; ~ a b l i n i t ) . - as Socially Destructive Force. .
Cather. Willa: My Antoma ; Clark. Walter van Tilburg: The Ox- Bow incrdent ; Fisher. ,Vardis: The Mdhers ; Foote, Mary Hallock: Led- Hwse Clam ; Guthrie. A. B.. Jr.: The Way We;r ; Ham. Brec "The Idyl of Red Gulchw; Rolvaag. 0. E: G~anrs in rhe fGmh ; Peder Victwiuis ; Sandoz. Mari: Old Mes ; Winther. Sophus Keith: T& AN lo Nebrash ; Mmgage Y a u H e m : Thrs Passion Clever Dies ; ~ i s t e r : Owen: The Virginian .
Menagh, Diane. "The Life of Marianne Francis," Bulletin ofthe New York Publrc b b r a r y . LXXX.3.1977.318-44.
Forms, Non-Canonical - Letters; Writers, Women - Conditions of - Rediscovered; Edumtion of Women; Work. Women and; Religion, Women and - Christianity.
Francis. Marianne.
Twentieth Century Prose
771. Mendez. Charlotte Walker. "Virginia Woolf and the Voices of Silence." Language and Style. XIII.4,1980.94-112. A
Writers, Women - and Silence; Mysticism, Women and;. Artist, Woman as; *Power. Female.
Wmlf, ~ i r g i k a : To the Lighthouse ; The Years ; Between the Acts.
772. Miller. Carroll. "Toys and Slaves: The Subjectiog of Women throughout the World in the Writings of Mary Gaunt" Sarth Atlantic Bulfetin.; XLI.2.1976, 131-36.
z Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Wrihg; Colonialism, Women and; Slavery; Power, Male; Money, Women and; Work, Women and.
Gaunt Mary: Alone in West Afiica ; The Uncounted Cost ; A Broken J w n e y ; A W o k n in China ; Where the Twain Meet ; Rejection - in h i a i c a .
773. Millett Kate. "The Shame Is Over." Ms. , II1.7, 1975.26-29.
Confessional Mode in Women's Writing; Writers, Womer~,- and Silence; Autobiography. Women's; Lesbian(s) - Sexuality - Writers, Silences of; Sexuality, Female. - Millett, Kate: RHng .
774. Milliner, Gladys. "The Third Eve: Caddy &mpson," Midwest Quarterly, XV1.3,1975,268-75. J
Images of Women - Temptress - Virgin - Earth Mother; Revision - of Stereotypes.
Faulkner, William: The Smnd and the Fwy .
775. Minu. Jacqueline A. T h e Myth of the Jewish Mother in ihree Jewish, American, Female Writers." Centennial Review, XXII.3, 1978. 346-55.
Motherhood - Women's Ambivalence toward; Family, Women and; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Jewish Women, Writing by and about
- Olsen, Tillie: "Tell Me a Riddle "; Schaeffer. Susan Fromberg: Anyz ; Y ezierska, Anzia: Bread Givers .
776. Mitchell. Judith. "Women and YVyndham Lewis," Modern fiction Studies. XXIV.2.1978, 223-31.
Images of Women - Anu.zal- Intellectual Inferior - Lesbian as Freak.
-- -- Twentieth Century Prow
Lewis, Wyndham: The Apes of Gad ; The Revenge fw Love ; Snmy Beonst ; T a r , \
777. Modleski. Tania. "Why Do We Still Fear Flying?," University of Michigan Papers In Women's 8
. - Studies, 1.4.1975,107-12. \
Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Writers. Women - as Subjects of Women's Writing; Rivalry, Female.
\
Jong, Erica: Fear ofH3ng.
778. Modleski, Tania. m e Disappearing Act: A Study of Harlequin Romances." Signs. V.3.1980. 435-48.
Popular Culture - Modem Romances; Anger, Female; Passivity, Female; Masculinity - as Mysterious to Women; Sexuality, Female; Self. Divided; Reader. . Woman as.
Survey of Harlequin romances
779. Monk, Patricia. "Frankenstein's ~aughters: The Problems of the Feminine Image in Science Fiction," M w k , XIII.3/4.1980.15-27.
Speculative Fiction; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Sex Roles; - Speculative Fiction; Male Characte~s in Women's Writing; Identity. Female; Corrumnities of Women.
Asimov, Isaac; Brackett, Leigh; Bradley, Marion Ummer: The Ruins of l s~s ; Le Guin. Ursula K.: The Lejt Hand of Darkness ; The D~spsessed ; McCaffrey. Anne: Dragonflight ; Decision at Doom ; Moore. Catherine L.; Neeper. Caryu A Place Bepnd Man ; Russ, Joanna: The Female Man ; Picnic on Paradue ; Sheldon. Alice (pseud. James Tiptree Jr.).
-J
\ -
780. . Moore, Madeline. "Virginia Woolf s The Years and Years of Adverse Male Reviewers." Women's Studies, IV.2/3,1977.247-63.
C ' Writers, Women - Conditions of - Anxiety of Authorship; Phallic Criticism; ~ o n e y . Women and; Work, Women and; Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Revision - of Critical Tradition.
Woolf, Virginia: The Years ; Three Guineas.
781. Morey-Gaines. AM-lhne. "Of Menace and Men: The Sexual ~ ~ n s i o n s of the American Frontier Metaphor," Soundings, ~IV.2,1981,132-49.
Masculinity; Popular Culture - Westerns; Nature, Women and; Power. Female - F
225
. . 5 % - Twentieth Century Prose
- --
0 <
Male Fear of; Sexuality, Male; Violence against Women; Images of Women - Earth Mother - Sexually Devouring Woman - Terrible Mother. 0
Brand, Max: Singing Guns ; Cooper, James Fenimore: The Prairie: A Tale ; Garland, Harnlin: Main Travelled Rwds ; Hemingway, Ernest: "The Short Happy Life of Frances Macomber"; Kesey, Ken: One Hew over the C u c W s Nest ; Norris, Frank: The Octopus ; Schaefer. Jack: Shane ; Steinbeck, John: The Grapes of Wrath :
*
782. Morgan, Ellen "The Feminist Novel of Androgynous Fantasy," Frontiers, II.3,1977,40-49.
Androgyny; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Doubles - Rebirth - Transformation; Physical Appearance; Motherhood - Women's Ambivalence toward
Arnold, June: Applesmrce ; Brophy, Brigid: In Transit: An He[& Cyclic Novel ; Woolf, Virginia: Orlando. ,
783. Morley. Patricia. "No Mean FeaLW Canadian Newsletter of Research on Women. W.2,1978, I 25.
Family, Women and
Brief response to editor's question about the specificity of women's writing
Laurence. Margaret: The Diviners.
784. Morley. Patricia. "Eng~l, Wiseman, Laurence: Women write&, Women's Lives," Wwld bteratqe Written in English , XVII.1,1978,154-64.
1 Sexuality, Female; Independence. Female; Single Women
]Engel. Marian: Bear ; Laurence. Margaret: The DLviners ; The Stone Angel ; A Jest of God ; Wiseman, Adele: The Sacrifice ; Crackpot.
785. Morton. Marian J. "'My Dear, I Don't Give a Damn': Scarlett O'Hara and the Great Depression," Frontiers, V.3. 1980. 52-56.
Work. Women and - as Economic Necessity -; Poverty, Women and; Independence, Female -; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Punishing Heroine.
t B Mitchell. Margaret: Go&? with the Wind.
786. Mowshowitz, Hamet "La'Reine et Sa Princess," Room of One's Own, IV.1/2,1978,144-51.
* Writers. Women - as Subjects of Women's Writing - Anxiety of Authorship; Family.
- - - - -- - T W - b c R n s e
Womenund; Adolescence; Quebecoises, Writing by and &UL --
Blais. MarieClaire: A Season in the Llfe of Emmanuel (Une Suison d a m la Vle &Emmanuel) ; Dtuer's Angel (Zes Apparences) ; The Manuscripts of P d n e Archange (Zes Manuscripts de Pauline Archange) ; Vivre! Vivre! ; Roy. Gabrielle: Garden tn the Wind (On Jardin mc Baut du Monde). .
787. Mussell, Kay J. "Beautiful and Damned: The Sexual Woman in Gothic Fiction," Jwnal of ~opdar?ultwe. IX.1.1975.84-89.
Gothic, Female; Physical ~ ~ ~ e a r a n c e ; Rivalry. Female; Sexuality. Female - Male Fear of;, Images of Women - Sexually Devouring Woman.
Survey of work of novelists cited below. 2-
Eden, Dorothy; Holt, Victoria; Stewart, Mary; Whitney, Phyllis A.. v
Myers, Mitzi. "You Can't Catch Me: Mary McCarthy's ~ v a s h e s ~ Comedy." Regionalism and the Female Imagination, IU.2/3,1977/78,58-69.
Humour. Women's Use of; Satire. Women's Use of; Phallic Criticism. . *
McCarthy, Mary: The Grmp ; "Letter to a Translator"; T l i e ' ~ o m ~ a n ~ S h e Keeps ; On the Contrary ; The Seventeenth Degree ; MemtSes of a Cathdic Girlhood.
789. Nebeker, Helen E "Jean Rhys's Quartet : The Genesis of Myth." International Jownal of Women's Studies . II.3,1979,257-67.
Images of Women - Fallen Woman - Sex Object; Revision - of Stereotypes; Love. Romantic - Destructive Power of; Class Position, Women's; Money. Women and; Language, Patriarchal - as Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience - Dualism; Reason vs. Passion; Power, Male.
Quartet was published in 1928 as Postures
Rhys. Jean: Quartet. I
790. Nelson, Gayle. "The Double Standard in. Adolescent Novels." English Journal, LXIV.2. 1975, 53-55.
- Adolescence; Sexuality. Female - and the Double Standard; Abortion; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Punishing Heroine.
Anonymous: Go Ask Alice ; Dizeno, Patricia: Phoebe ; Haggard, Elizabeth: Nobody Waved G d b y e ; Head, Ann: Mr. and Mrs. Bo Jo Jones ; Zindel, Paul: My Darling, My Hamburger .
- 791. Nichols, Kathleen L "The Celibate Male in A Lart M y : The Unreiiabk &me ef
Consciousness, " Regionalism and the Female Imagination , IV.1,1978,13-23.
Sexuality, Male; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Masculinity; lrnagesbof Women - Fallen Woman - Madonna.
Cathex. Willa: A Lost Lady ; My Antonia .
792. Nichols, Marianna Da Vinci. "Women onwomen: The Looking (Jlass Novel," ~ e n v e r ' '
Quarterly, X1.3, 1976, 1-13. hi
Masochism, Female; Madness, Women and; Love, Romantic - Destructive Power of; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship - as Subjects of Women's Writing; F o q s , Innovative, in Women's Writing.
Atwood. Margaret: Sw-c ing ; Gould, Lois: Final Analysis ; Jong, Erica: Fear of Hying ; Kaufman, Sue: Falling Bodies ; Lurie, Alison: The War between the Tates ; Mortimer,
es Penelope: Long Distance ; Oates. Joyce Carol: With Shuddering Fdl ; Paley, Grace: Enwmau Changes at the Lust Minute ; Rhys, Jean: Quartet ; Rossner, Judith: Looking / jir Mr. Gmdbar ; Sarton, May: Mrs. Stevens Hears the Mermaids Singing.
-. . 793. Niemi. Judith. "Jane Rule and the Reviewers," Margins, 23,1975.34-37.
Lesbian(s) - ~nvisibilit~ of; Litera~y Tradition - Women's Absence from; Heterosexism; Phallic Criticism.
0
Rule. Jane: This Is Not fw Y au ; Desert,of the Heart ; Against the Season .
794. Niess, Robert J. "Some 'Mal Mariees' of the Early 'Twedtieth Century," Kentucky R m n c e Quarterly, XXV.2,1978.205-12.
Love, Romantic - Destructive Power of; Images of Women - Victin; Power, Male; Passivity. Female; French Literature, Women and
Flaubert, Gustave: Madame Bovary ; Gide, Andre: L'lmmoraliste ; Proust, Marcel: La Prisonniere : Albertine Disparrre ; Radiguet, Raymond: te- Diable au Corps.
795: Niasche, Jane Chance. "'Isadora Icarus': The Myhc Unity of Erica Jong's Fear of Flying ," Rice University Studies . LXN.1.1978, 89-100. L $
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Flying - Labyrinths; Revision - of Myth; a - Sexuality. Female; Self. Divided.
Jong, Erica: Fear of f79ng.
- - - Twentieth Century Frtm
'1 796. Norell, Donna M. "Colette and the Burden of a Legend," kmrnaf o,fWomen*s Wies In .
-
Literature, 1.4,1979,301-18.
Revision - of Critical Tradition; Phallic Criticism; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Independence, f em ale; Marriage; Violence against Women; Power. Female - Lack of; French Literature. Women and.
Colette. Sidoniffiabrielle: Cheri ; Lo Fin de Cheri ; The Vagabond ; LEnvers du Music- Hall ; A Pwtee de la Main ; La Jumelle Noire ; Gigi ; Paysages ; Lo Maison de Claudine ; Claudine a Paris ; Claudine den Va ; Claudine at Schad (Claudine a I'Ecde).
797. Notkin, Debbie. "A Reader's Guide," Room of One's Own , VI.1/2. 1986:124-39.
Feminism, Twentieth Century -. Influence on Women's Writing - Influence on Men's Writing; Speculative Fiction.
Includes bibliography of feminist science fiction and reference sources.
Bradley. Marion Zimmer; Charms, Suzy McKee: Walk to the End of the World ; - . Motherlines ; The Vampire Tapestry ; Cherryh, C. J.; Delaney, Samuel R: Triton ;
Babel- 17 ; Le Guin, Ursula K; Lynn, Elizabeth A: A Differenr hght ; Watchtower ; The Dancers of Arun ; The Nwthern Girl ; ~clntyr"e. Vonda N.: The Exile Waiting ; Dreamsnake ; "Of Mist, and Grass, and Sand"; Randall, Marta: Islands ; Journey ; Dangeras Game ; Sheldon, Alice (psend. James Tiptrte Jr.): "The Women Men Don't See"; t / p the Walls of the Wwld ; Varley, John: Titan ; Wizard ; Demon ; Vinge. Joan: Eyes of Amber ; The Snow Queen ; Wilhelm, Kate: Fault Lnes ; JLniper Time ; The Clewistm Test. O
B
\ 798. Nowack, Marion. "'How To Be a Woman': Theories of Female Education in the 1950's." Jmrnul of Popular Culture , IX.1.1975.77-83. 4
Education of Women; Advice Literature; Sex Roles; Family. Women and - as Woman's Sphere; , Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment - and Conflict with Career; Adolescence. <-
i Frank, Lawrence K. and Mary Frank: How To Be a Womizn ; Haupt, Enid: "Seventeen" J
r- ' , Bwk of Young Living ; Landis, Paul: Making the Most of Y car Marriage ; Your Marriage and Family Living ; Strain. Frances Bruce: Teen Days; White. Lynn Jr.: Educating Out
- Daughters . \
799. Oehschlaeger. Fritz H. "Civilization as Emasculation: The Threatening Role of Women in the Frontier Fiction of Harold Bell Wright and Zane Grey." Midwesf Quarterly, XXLI.4.1981, 346-60.
Popular Culture - Westerns; Masculinity; Power. Female - Male Fear of; Images of Women - Moral Custodian - Castrating Bitch - Sex Object - Native Ex'otic.
- - - -- Twentieth Century Prose --
Grey, Zane: Desert Gdd ; The Heritage of the Desert ; Riders ofthe furple Sage ; Wright, Harold Bell: The Sheperds of the Hills ; .When a Man's a Man.
Okonkwo. Rina. "kdelaide Q q l y Hafford: Culnual Nationalist and Feminist," Phylon , . XLIL1.1981.41-51.
African U(erature. Women and; Black Women - and Black C&munity - Writers, Conditidnsof; Colonialism,Womena."d; ClassPosition,Women's; Writers, ~ o m c d - Conditions of (20th Century African); Nationalism, Women and
Casely-Hayford, Adelaide: "Mista Courifer"; "A Black and White Encounter. A Tale of Long Ago".
Ola, Virginia U. "The Vision of Power: Joyce Cary and African Women," Ariel , IX.1.1978, 85-97. B
Images of Women - Madwoman - Witch; Power, Female - Male Fear of; ' Racism. Y
Cary, Joyce: The Afiican Witch ; Aissa Saved. /
Olenski. Kathy. "Anais Nin: The Feminine Artist" Hysteria, L3,1981,9-11. - Forms, Non-Canonical - Diaries/Journals; Artist, Woman as; French Literature, Women and
Ordonez. Elizabeth. "The Decoding and Encoding of Sex Roles in Carmen Martin Gaite's Retahilas ," Kentucky R m c e ~ u a $ e r l ~ , XXVII.2.1980.237-44.
0
Sex Roles; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Moon; Sexuality, Female; Language. Women's Use of - Encoding; Spanish Literature, Women and e
Gaite. Carmen Martin: Retahilas . c-
Orenstein, Gloria F. "The Feminist Rebirth of the Divine Child: Eroticism and Transcendence in Christiane Rochefort's Ellcare Heurew: Qu'on Va Vers PEte ," Jwna,' of Women's Studies in LIteratwe ,1.1,1979,61-73.
Revision - of Myth - of Stereotypes; Childhood; +Adolescence; Nature, Women and; Sexuality, Female; Sexuality, Male; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Rebirth - Female Christ; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Great Goddess; Quebaaises. Writing by and about
,
b Twentieth Century Prose
- -
Rochefort Christiane: Encure Heureux Qu'on Va Vers I'&e .
805. patterson, Janet "Consuming Passion." Fireweed . 11.1981.19-33.
Populu Culture - Modem Romances; Love, Romantic; Publishing. Women and; Reader. WomanW Power, Female - Lack of; Power, Male - and the Social Order.
C
Overview discwion of Harlequin Romances
806. Pavlik; Katherine B. "Contimporary Feminist Literature: Satire or I&lemic?," Amerrcan Humor: An Interdiscipiiwy Newdetter, VIL1.1980.10-16.
Humour, Womt!n's Use of; Didactic Literature; Passivity. Female; Revision - of Stereotypes; Sexuality, Female; Love,. Romantic - Desmctive Power of;
'L Marriage; Motherhood - Women's Ambivalence towq$; Characters in Women's Writing.
.
Alther, Lisa: Kin- ; French. Marilyn: The w h e n ' s Rmm i Piercy. Marge: Small Changes ; Shulman, Alix Kates: Memairs of an Ex- Proh Queen . '
807. Pearson, Carol. "Women's Fantasies and Feminist Utopias." Frontiers .II.3, 1977. 50-61.
6 Utopias; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Motherhood; ~ ; t h e r / ~ a u ~ h t e r Relaticaships; Vioience against Women; Class Position. Women's; Imagery and Motifs in Women's ,
Writing - detjirth; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Great Goddess. . Bryant, Dorothy: The Kin of Ata Are Waiting for Ym ; Gilman. Charlotte Perkins: Herland ; Lane, Mary Bradley: Mizarza: A Fantasy ; Le Guin. Ursula K.: The Dispwssed ; Piercy. Marge: Woman on the Edge @Time ; Russ, J k n a : The Female Man-: Staton, Mary: From the Legend ufBiel ; Sheldon, Alice {pseud. James Tiptree Jr.): "Houston, Houston, Do You Read?".
808. Pearson, Carol S. "Towards a New Language, Consciousgess and Political Theory: The Utopian -
Novelsof Dorothy Bryant Miby Staton and Marge Piercy," Heresies, 13,1981,84-87.
Spckulative Fiction; Utopias; Language. Patriarchal - Dualism; Language. . Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Rebirth; Mysti&rn, Women and; Political Activism, Women and.
Bryant, Dorothy: The Kin o j ~ t a Are Waiting fw Yar ; Piercy. Marge: w-n on the Edge of Time ; Staton, Mary: fir& the Legend of Piel'.
809. Perlett Gerry-Anne. "Escaping into Reality," Rwm of One's Own, VI. 112, i981.7-9. 9
Speculative Fiction; Power, Female.
- - Twentieth Century Prose , ,
. r
'1
Charnas, SPlzy McKee: Walk to the End of the W d d ; Mdherlines ; Gearhart, M y : The Wander~ound ; Le Guin, Ursula IC: The Lejt Hand of Darkness ; Mclntyre, Vonda N.: Dreamsnake ; Russ, Joanna: The Female Man.
8 10. Petersen, Kirsten Holst. "The Personal and the Political: The Case of Nuruddin Farah," Ariel , ' x11.3,19~1,93-ioi.
h - Sex Roles; African Literature, Women and; Power, Male; Power, Female - Lack of; Violence against Women.
Farah. Nuruddin: A Naked Needle ; Sweet and S a u Milk ; From a Crodced Rib.
\
8 Petite, Joseph.. "'Out of the Machine': Joyce Carol Oates and the Liberation of Wori.len." Kansar Quarterly, IX2.1977.75-79. 0 .
- Identity. Female; Power. Male; Independence. Female; self-abnegation
Oates, Joyce Carol: "Dreams"; "The Heavy Sorrow of the ~ o d y " & - us
812. Plaskow, Judith. "On Carol Christ on Margaret Atwood: Some Theological Reflections." Signs, 11.2. 1976. 331-39. 2 .
-e, Women and; Spirituality. women and; Abortion; Imagery and Motifs in . . .-,
Women's Writing - Quest
Response to: Christ, Carol P. "Margaret Atwood: The Surfacing of Women's Spiritual Quest and Vision," Signs, 112,1976,316-30.
Atwood, Margaret: Surfacing ; Lessing, Doris: CKaren op idence .
813. Porter. Abioseh M. "Ideolopy and the Image of Women: Kenyan Women in Njau and Ngugi," Ariel . XII.3. 1981. 61-74. ,'
5.
African Literature, Women and; Images of Women - Castrating Bitch - Child-Woman - Witch. -
-- _ -
Njau. Rebeka: Ripples in the Pad ;nNg~gi, Thiong'o Wa: Petals of Blwd .
814. Quiglqy, Ellen " R e d e f ~ g Unity and Dissolution in ku&a ," E w p on Canadian Writing. 20,1980/81,201-19. 4
Self-realization;' Male/Female Relationships; Revision - of ~ ~ t b ; Language. Patriarchal - Linearity; Writers. Women - as Subjects of &men's Writing.
Thomas, Audrey: Latakia .
Woolf, Virginia: Three Guineas ; The Years ; The Pargiters .
3
Radner, Rebecca. "You're Being Paged Loudly in the Kitchen: Teen-age Literature of the Fomes and Fifties," Juurruil of Popular Culture , XI.4.1978.7 8P-99.
Adolescence; Identity, Female; Rule-Models, Female; Love. Romantic - 0 Qestructive Power of; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Two Suitors Convention; Male/Female Relqtionships.
Daly, Maureen: Seventeenth Summer ; l>u Jardin, Rosamond: C l s s Ring ; A Man jbr Marcy ; Emory, Anne: Seniar Year ; Weber, Lenora Mattipgl y : Meef the Mafones ; Beany's Secret Life ; Whimey. Phyllis A: Willow Hill,
Rahm, Linda. "Language and Power: An Essay on Adrienne Rich's On Ues. Secrets. and Silence ," Fireweed, 5/6,1979/80,58-63.
Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Language, Women's Use of - Naming; Masculinity - as Destructive Force.
Rich, Adrienne: On Lies, Secrefs, and Silence .
3 Rankin, Ginny. "Women and Science Fictio : Possible Fumes." The Second Wave , q 2 , 1978. 7-10.
A Speculative Fiction; Sex Roles - ejection of; Androgyny; Utopias. I
Le Guin, Ursula K: he Lejf Hand of Ddness : Memll. Judith; Piercy. Marge: W m n on the Edge of Time ; Russ, Joanna: The Female Man ; W ilhelm, Kate: The InJirur y Box ; Where6Late the Sweet Birds Sang.
Rapping, Elayne Antler. "Unfree Women: Feminism in Doris Lasing's Novels," Wmen's Studies, III.1,1975,29-44.
-Twe!ntieta Century Rose - -
L 0 -
W-a: Wrim.Wma-asSu@mof~mm'sWriting; Forms;. b c m t r v c . in Wmtn's Wntkg; Puliticd Activism. Women and; FamiTy, Women
- * md: Ihm&ic Fiaioa; Thwgh~ Mods of. ~ c k d e vs. Male; Madness, Women ad; Foikiorc; Femrrtisq Twentieth Ccnnuy - Influence on Women's Writing; Sptculativt Fiction
ks ing . Doris: The Gdden Naebods ; The F w - Gated City.
Rapmch. Beverly J. "Chil&womtn and Primitives in the Fiction of Alice Munro." A t h i s . . 12.1976.4-14. 2,
I b t i t y . Ftprale; Alienation, Female; In@$endence. Female; Male/Female Rdahaships; Sexuality, Ftmale; images of Women - Chiid-Woman; C2Mimd; Nature, Women and.
M w m : h x e of the Happy Shades ; Something f ve Been Meaning to Tell Yac ; ltves bf (;ids and W a n .
Rayson. Ans 'Motherhood in the Novels of Margaret Drabble." F&ers, III.2. 1978.43-46.
Motherhood; Sexuality. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward. 1
DnbMc. Margarrr: The Needle's E p ; Tire lce Age ; The Garrick Year ; The W o r ~ ~ # d l ; The Realms o/Gdd.
i&ardon. Joan. 'Few of Ryng : Developing tpe Feminist- NoveU Internatid h n a l of H.aen*r Studres .1.3. 1978.306-20. -
Md Female; Rita o f Fasage; Menstruation; Morherhood - domen's Arnb=d -; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Time - Blmd - - - --- Jountcy - G*dcs - Flying; Images of Women - Child-Woman - Ideatized Love 0- Writcrs, Women - as Subjects of Women's Writing; Literary Traditim - Wocncn's.
Jong Erica: Few ol?lHng ; Fnrits & Yegetdies ; Half Lives ; h e m ; Plath. Sylvia: - 'Thc Munu+ Mannequins'; Sexum. Anne: 'In Celebration Of My Uterus";
'Mearmuua, at Fony": 'Those T i . . .'; "The Break"; "Soag for a R F Nightgown". . ,"
KC&. N w - . 'A Home of (me's Own: Women's Bmhes in R s m t Women's Fiction," .ha& Cdlm . XL4.1978.772-88. '
h Stxuaiiq-. F d c - Wanen's Ambivalence toward -; Gothic Female; Imagery and M ~ f s in Wamffl's W-itiag - Homes - Eadosure - Landsape; Alienation, Female; Powtr. FaMk - Lack of-
Arwood XILorguec Surjbng ; Drabble. Margaret: The W l l r e r - ; Hdf Victoria: The
Twentieth Century Prose
Mistress ofMellyn ; On the Night of the Seventh M h ; The shad^^ d the Lyffx ; 30ng. -
Erica:'Fear of R N n g ; Rossner. Judith Lmking IQr Mr. G d b w ; Whitnej . Phyllis A.: Listeo Jbs the Whisperer ; Snowfire'; The Twqudse Mask .
825. , Relyea, Suzanne. "The Symbolic in the Family Factory: My Apprenticeships :" Wumen's Studies. MII.3.1981.273-97.
-. Autobiography, Women's; Writers. Women - Conditions of (20th Century French) - Use of Pseudofiym - Anxiety of Authorship; Marriage - and Male Authority - and Marriage Law; Class Position. Women's; Money, Women and; French Literature. Women and.
Colette. Sidoniffiabrielle: My Apprenticeships . . ,
-, 0
826. Rice, Mary. "Unrequited Vision: The Writing of Shirley Jackson." Maerrnd . I .2. 1981.57-62.
. Alienation, Female; Self-sacrifice; Violence, Female; Mysticism. Women and; Lesbian(s) - Identity; Identity, Female.
Jackson, Shirley: Hangsoman ; The Haunting of Hill House ; Come Along with Me ; The Bird's Nen .
827. R i c h a n Michele. "Eroticism in the Pahiarchal Order.: Dracrrtrcs . Vl. 1. 1976. &-53.
Critical Schools, Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - Structurdism/Post-Strucnualism; lmages of Women - Object - Other; Male Bonding; Seltua!ity. Male; Identity. F e d e ; Mother/Son Relationships. French Literature. Women and 2'
Bataille, George: Ma mere ; L'Hisrarc de roeil ; L'Abte C . ; Le Bleu du crel .
828. Rigsbee. Sally Adair. "The Feminine in Winesburg, Ohro ." Studres rn Amencan Frctron . 1x2. , 1981,233-44.
Sex Roles; Male/Female Relationships; Masculinity; Artist Woman as; Self-realization. 4
Anderson, S h e r w d : Winesburg, Ohro.
8, ,
829 Roberts. Heather. "Mother, Wife and Mistress: Women Characters in the New Zealand Novel From 1920 to 1940." Landwl. XXIX.3.1975.233-47.
Images of Women - Submissiv? Wife; Marriagk - and Woman's Fulfillment and Equality/Mutuality; Male Bonding; Sexuality. FemaIe; Motherhood; New &d Literature. Women and.
men, C. R: A Poor Schdar ; The Hedge- Sparrow ; Bolitho. Hector: Sdemn Boy ; Bumside. Heather: Heather of the Sacth ; Devanny, Jean: Dawn Beloved ; Hyde. Robin: The Gadwits R y ; Lee. John A: Children of the Pcm ; The Hunted ; Mander. Jane: The Stwy of a New Zealand River ; The Strange Attraction ; Morley. Mary: Castles of the Sail ; Mulgan, Alan: Spur of the Morning ; Mulgan, John: Man Alone ; Smnlan, Nelle M.: Pencarrow ; Vogel. Sir Julius: A. D. 2000 w Woman's Destiny; West, Joyce: Sheep Kings.
L
' P
Roberts, Mary. - "Imperfect Androgyny and Imperfect Love in the Wgrks of Carson McCullers." University of HartMd Studies in Literature , XII, 1980.73-98. [Citation Inc.]
Androgyny; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Sexuality. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Adolescence.
McCullers, Carson: The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter ; RefIections in a Gdden Eye ; The Member of the Wedding ; The Ballai of the Sad Cafi .
1 T? Rooke, Constance. "Saul Bellow's 'Leaving the Yellow House': The ouble with W m n . w .
Studies in Shwt Fiction , XTV.2.1977. 184-87.
Images of Women - Intellectual Inferior,: r
Bellow. Saul: "Leaving the Yellow Housew. 0
Rose. Ellen Cronan. "Liqming: Or Why Tillie Writes," The Hdlins Critic, XIII.2, 1976. 1-13.
Writers. Women - and Silence - Conditions of; Artist Woman as.
Davis. Rebecca Harding: L@ in the Iron Mills ; Olsen, Tillie: "Tell Me a Riddle"; Yonnondio: From the Thirties.
4
i: Rose. Ellen Cronan. "Feminine Endings and Begmmgs: Margaret Babble's The Waterjdi ," Contempwary Literature , XX .l, 1980.81-99. ,
Writers. Women - as Subjects of W men's Writing; Self, Divided; Sexuality, Female; Passivity, Female; Imagerq and Motifs in Women's WritingB- Water; Literary Tradition - Women's.
Drabble. Margaret: The Waterfhll .
Rosen. Ellen I. "Martha's 'Quest' in Lessing's Children ofVidence ." Frmiers , m.2. 1978. 54-59.
'-Mother/Daughter Relationships; Images of Women - Earth Mother - Terrible Mother; Revision - of Stereotypes; Critical Schools. Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism -
- ~ & u d i a x i i i i ~ r i t i c i s m ; ~oci&m, Women and; Politiml Activism. - Women and; Family: Women and - as Agent of Women's Oppression; - Father/Daughter Relationship$; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Quest -
. Landscape - Water. -
Lessing. Doris Children opidence . \
835. Rosenfelt Deborah. "From the Thirties: Tillie Olsen and the Radical ~radsltion," Femmst Studies, VIL3.1981,371-4U6, w- .
Political Activism. Women and; Socialism. Women and; Literary Tradition - Women's; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Artist.
* Woman as; Critical Schools. Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism - Marxisr Criticism: Class Position, Women's; Poverty, *omen and; Motherhood; Sex Roles; L
Work, Women and; Family. Women and.
Olsen, Tillie: YonROndio: From the Thirties ; "Tell M e a Riddle".
- I'
836. Rosowski, Susan J. " Wiila &ther's.~omen," Studies in American fiction , IX.2. 1981, 261-75.
Sex Roles - Rejection of; Independence. Female; Self. Divided: Nature. Women and; Images of Women - Earth Mother - Muse - Idealized Love Object; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Male Narrator; Lme. Romantic - Destructive Power
' of; Artist, Woman as: Masculinity. B
Cather, Willa: 0 Pioneers! ; The Song of the Lrvk ; My Antorua ; One of Ours ; A hf , . L a d y ; M y Mmal E n e m ; "Old Mrs. Harris".
837. Ross, Catherine Sheldrick. "A Singing Spirit: Female Rites of Passage in Klee Wyck . Surhcing and The Diviners ," Atlantis . lV.1.1978.87-94.
Rites of Passage; Self-realization; Religion. Women and - North American lndih; Self, Divided; Technology, Women and; Power, Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Rebirth; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - d'Sonoqua;
6 Abortion 1)
Atwmd, Margaret: Surfacing ; Carr, Emjly: Klee W w k ; Laurence. Margaret: The Diviners.
838. Ruddick. Sara. "Learning to Liv; with the Angel in the House." W a e n ' s Slud'es, IV.2/3.1977. 181-200.
Mother/Daugbter Relationships; Artist Woman as; Motherhood; Family, Women and; Writers. Women - Conditions of; Images of Women - Angel in'the House; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Great Goddess; Sex Roles; FatherIDaughtex Relationships.
Woglf, Virginia: To t jlk Lighthouse .
Ruggiero, Josephine A. and Louise C. Weston. "Sex-Role Characterization of Women in 'Modem Gothic' Novels." Paci#c Scxidogical Review, XX.2.1977.279-300. -
Popular Culture - Modem Romances; Gothic, Female; Sex Roles; Reader, Woman as.
- -
Content analysis of seven writers for depiction of'traditioxial and non-traditional sex roles. Charts of findings included.
Blackmore. Jane; Eden, Dorothy; HolL Viearia; Howatch. Susan; Maybury. Axye; Stewart, Mary; Whitney, Phyllis A.
Rupprecht. Nancy E "The Critics. Simone de Beavoir and AN Said and Done ," University of Michigan Paprs in Women's Studies, 1.4.1975. 129-47.
Autobiography. Women's; Aging, Women and; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Phallic Criticism; French Literature, Women and.
Beauvoir, Simone de: All Said and Done . A.
Ryan. Kiernan "The Revenge of the Women: Lawrence's Tickets, Please ," Literature and - . Histwy. W.2.1981.210-22.
w
~nger,' Female; . Self. Divided; Physical Appearance; Passivity. Female; Power. Male; Sex Roles.
-
Lawrence. D. H.: "Tickets Please".
Sacks, Karen. "Women and Class Struggle in Sembene's G a f s Bits of Wood ," Signs, IV.2, 1978.363-70.
Class Position, Women's; Colonialism, Women and; Political Activism, Women and; Afrim Literature. Women and; Working-class Women, Writing by and about
Sembene, Ousrnane: Gafs Bits of Wood (Zes Bouts de Bois de Dieu):
Salem. 1. Christine. "On Naming the Oppressor: What Woolf Avoids Saying in A Rmn of One's Own ." Women's Studies Internat id Quarterly, III.2/3,1980.20!3-18.
Language, Women's Use of - Encoding; Images of Women - Victim; Power. Male - and the Soda1 Order; Power, Female - Lack of.
Woolf, Virginia: A Ram of One's Own . -
Sand, Cy-Thea. "Radclyffe Hall: Spooked by the Patriarchal Depths," Mnenad .1.2,1981, 78-90.
Lesbian(s) - Relationships; Lesbianism - Definitions OR h@ges of Women - Lesbian as Pseudo-Male; Heterosexism; Family. Women and - and Parental Authority; Self-sacrifa; Self-abnegatioa . -
Hall, Radclyffe: The Unlit Lump ; "Miss Ogilvie Finds Herself'; The Well of Loneliness .
Saunders, Judith. "Mortal Stain: Literary Allusion and Female Sexuality in 'Mrs. Dalloway in Bond Sneet'," Studies in Short Fiction . XV.2.1978.139-44.
Sexuality, Female - Women's hbivalence toward; Menstruation; Nature. Women and; Death, Women and.
Woolf. Virginia: "hirs. Dalloway in Bond Streetw.
Saunders, Judith P. "A New Look at the Oldest Profession in Wharton's New Year's Day ," Studies in Short fiction . XVZ1.2. 1980.121-26.
Prcktitution; Adultery; Independence, Female; Sex Roles.
Wharton. Edith: New Year's Day.
Scharfman. Ronnie. "Mirroring and Mothering in Simone Schwarz-Bart's Pluie et vent srv y
Telumee ~ b a c l e and J e . Rhys' Wide Sargarso Sea ," Yale French Studies, 62,1981.88-106.
, Freudian Theory, Relation to Women's Writing; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Identity, Female; Black Women - MotherlDaughter Relationships - Identity; Colonialism, Women and; Madness, Women and; Reader. Woman as; Caribbean Literature, Women and. a
Rhys. Jean: Wide Sargasso Sea ; Schwarz-Bart, Simok: Pluie et vent sur Telurnee Miracle .
Schlack, Beverly Ann. "Virginia Woolf s Strategy of Scorn in The Years and Three Guinea ." Bulletin of the New Y w k Public Library, LXXX.2. 1977, 146-50.
Anger. Female; Satire. Women's Use of; ~ a s c k i n i t ~ : Language. Women's Use of - Irony - Parody.
Woolf, Virginia: The Years ; Three Guineas.
Schmuckex, Carol Fox "Has Anyone ~ e a d ' ~ o n e with the Wind Lately?," Chrysal~s ,9,1979. 61-69.
Images of Women - Southern Belle; Revision - of Stereot~lpes; Independence, -
Female; Work, Women and; Money, Women and; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Friendships. Female; Racism; Black Women - Relation to White Women.
see Minnie Bruce Pratt, "Dear Chrysalis", in Top Ranking: A Cdlection of Articleson Rocism curd Clossism in the Lesbian Community, Joan Gibbs and Sara Bennett, eds. (New York: February 3rd Press, 1980) pp. 116-18. for a response to this article and an analysis of the relation between racism and sexism in Gone with the Wind
I , Mitchell, Margaret: Gone with the W i d .
r i
-m a 850. Schuster. Marilyn R "Strategies for Survival: The Subtle Subversion of Jane ~ule. ' Feminia
Studies, VII.3.1981.431-50.
Lesbian(s) - Identity - Sexuality - Writers, Conditions of - Relationships; Langwge. -- - Patriarchal - as Dominant Discourse; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; A
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Mirrors - Doubles; Heterosexism; Identity, Female; Sexuality, Female; Writers, Women - Conditions of - and ~ilenie.
Rule. Jane: Desert of the Heart ; This Is N~ot $N YGU ; Against the Season ; The Ymng in One Anather's A m ; Contract with the Warld ; Lesbian Images.
851.' ' Schyfter, Sara E "The Fragmented Family in the Novels of Contemporary Spanish Women Writers," Perspectives on Contempwary Literature , lIl.1.- 1977.23-29.
Spanish Literature. Women and; ~arnilj , Women and; Images of Women - Moral Custodian; Alienation, Female.
Laforet, Carmen: Nada ; Medio. Dolores: N m r m h Rivero ; M q Ana Maria: Primeria Memoria ; Moix, Ana Maria: JWia .
852. Scura. Dorothy McInnis. "The Southern Lady in the Early Novels of Ellen Glasgow," '
.Mississippi Quarterly, XXXI.l, 1977/78, 17-31.
Regionalism in Women's Writing; Cult of True Womanhood; Self-sacrifice; Physical Appearance; Passivity, Female; Work, Women and.
Glasgow, Ellen: Virginia ; The Descendant ; The Deliverance ; The Voice of the People ; The B a t l e Gratnd ; The Ancient Low ; The Rmance of a Plain Man ; The Miller of Old Church ; he Wheel of Life.
853. sears, Sallie. "Notes on Sexuality: The Years and Three Guineaw .' Bulletin of the New Y a k Public Library. LXXX.2,1977,211-20.
Masculinity; Power, Male; Power. Female - Lack of; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Death - Mutilation - Warfare - Enclosure - Escape - Home;
Sexuality, Female; Friendships, Female.
Woolf, Virginia: The Years ; Three Guineas .
Seator, Lynette Hubbard "Women and Men in the Novels of Unarnuno." Kentucky R m n c e Quarterly, XXVIII.l, 1980, 39-55. -
Images of Women - Viigin - Sexually Devouring Woman - Madonna - Terrible Mother - Witch.
Unamuno, Miguel de: Dm Madres ; El Marques de Lumbria ; Abel Sanchez ;. La Tla . Tula .
*
Secor, Cynthia. "Ida. A Grpat American Novel," Twentieth Century Literature , XXIV.l. 1978, ' 96-107.
Identity. Female; Forms. Innovative, in Women's Writing; Marriage - and ~ ~ u a l i t y / ~ u t u a l i ' t ~ ; LRsbian(s) - Identity; Self-realization.
* %
Stein, Gertrude: Ida: A Novel ; The Superstitions of Fred Anneday, Annday, Anday: A Novel of Real Lifi .
Secor. Marie. "Violet Hunt, Nowelist: A Reintroduction," English LiterafurZin Transition , XIX.1,1976,25
' Writers, Women - Rediscovered; Male/Female kelationships; Sexuality. Female; Independence, Female; Love, Romantic - Destmctive Power of; Family, Women and; Gothic, Female.
Hunt, Violet: White ~ a r e q f weary Leaf; The Maiden's Progress ; A Hard Woman ; Unkist, Unkind ; Sooner ov Later ; The Celebrity at Home ; The Celebrity's Daughter ; Their Lives ; Their Hearts ; Tales of the Uneasy ; Mare Tales ofthe Uneasy.
Secor, Marie and Robert Secor. "Violet Hunt's Tales of the Uneasy : Ghost Stodes of a Worldly Woman," Women and Literature, VI.1,1978,16-27.
Power, Female; Male Characters in Women's Writing; ~asculi&; Gdrhic. Female. .
- -- Q .
Hunt, Violet: Tales of the Uneasy.
Sharma, 0. P. "Feminism as Aesthetic Vision: A Study of Virginia Woolf s Mrs. Dalloway ." Women's Studies. III.1.1975.61-73.
Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Thought, Modes of. Female vs. Male; Identity, Female; 6. ,
Marriage - and ~quality/~utui$ty; Independence, Female; Popular Culture - Detective Fiction.
Sayers. Dorothy- L : Busman's Honeymoon ; Gaudy Night ; Sttvng Poison .
Male Characters in Women's Writing. -
Woolf, Virginia:% Mrs. Ddoway . -
- 0 CI
Shefrin, Jill. "A Feminist's Ideal of Love and Marriage: Dorothy L Sayers and the Lord Peter Wirnsey &ovels," Rown of One's Own, V.3.1980.19-30.
Shelton. Frank W. "Family. Community, and Masculinity in the Urban Novels of Rjchard Price." Critique , XXI.1;1979, 5-15.
--- - -
~ & l i n i t y ; Male Bonding; Sexuality;Male. K
.Price. Richard: The Wanderers.; Blanibrothers ; Ladies' Man.
Showalter, Elaine. " A Passuge to India as 'Marriage Fiction': Forster's Sexual Politics," Women aty:Uterature . .V.2.1977.3- 16.
Marriage - and Equality/Mutuality - and Woman's Fulfillment; Sexuality, Male; Revision - of Stereotypes; Imperialism, Women and; Racism; Violence against Women; Homosexuality, Male.
"-
Forster, E M.: A P m g e to India. I
Showalter, Elaine. "Rethinking the Seventies: Women Writers and Violenct-," Antioch Revisw , XXXIX.2,1981,156-70.
Violence against Women; Anger, Female; Violence, Female; Power, Female - Lack of; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Heroine's Death as Cldsure - Punishing Heroine.
French, Marilyn: The Women's Room ; Godwin, Gail: The Odd Wuman ; Gould, Lois: A Sea- Change ; Irving, John: The Wwld Accwding to G w p ; Johnson, Diane: The Shadow Knows ; Jong. Erica: Fear of HHng ; Rossner, Judith: Looking& Mr. Goadbar ; Spark. Muriel: The Driver's Seat .
Simpson, Hilary Croxford. "A Literary Trespasser: B. H. Lawrence's Use of Women's Writing," Women's Studies Internat id Quarterly, 11.2.1979.155-69.
?
Writers. Women 7 Redimwered; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from.
- - - Twentieth Century Brase
Burrows, Louie; Chambers, Jessie; Lawrence, D. HL The Trespasser ; So~s4ntCLovws ; : -
The White Peacock ; "Coldness in Love"; Lawrence, Frieda; Luhan. Mabel Dodge; .-
Richardson, Samuel:, Sir Charles Grandrson ; Skinner, Mary Louise (Mollie) and D. H. : a Lawrence: The Boy in the Bush .
864. Skene. Fran. "Venus in Conjunction: Women in Science Fiction," Room of One's Own. 12. 1975.30-39.
+ $ Images of Women - Intellectual Inferior - Happy Housewife - Witch - Castrating Bitch - Bluestocking/Leamed Woman; Speculative Fiction.
Makes passing deference to other science fiction writers, and to works by the authors cited
J- Bracken, ~eigh; Bradley. Marion Zimmer; Campbell, John w.; DeFord. Mirim Allen; Eisenstein, Phyllis; Gemsback, Hugd; Gotlieb, Phyllis; Henderson. Zenna; Le Guin. Ursula K.; McCaffrey, Anne; MacLean Katherine; MacLennan Phyllis; Merrill, Judith Moore. Catherine L; Norton, Andre; Russ. J q .
865. Sledge, Linda Ching. "Maxine Kingston's China Men : The Family Historian as Epic Poet." Melus . VII.4.1980.3-22.
Chinese-American Women, Writing by and about; Ethnicity in Women's Writing; Masculinity; Family, Women and.
Kingston, Maxine Hong: China Men. I
866. Smith. jbrbara. "Sexual Politics and the Fiction of Zora. Neale Hursron." Radical Teacher. 8. 1978,26-30. C
Phallic Criticism; Revision - of Critical Tradition; Black Women - and Harlem Renaissance - Relationships with Men; Male/Fernale Relationships; Power. Female; Marriage; , Racism; Violence against Women.
I
Hurston, ZoraNeale: Jonah's G w d Vine ; Mares, Man ofthe Mountain ; Their Ejes Were Watching Gai ; Seraph on the Sewanee ; "Sweit"; "Gilded Bits".
867. Smith, Don D. "The Social Content of Pornography," Jwnal ofCommunicatlon . XXVI.1. 1976. 16-24
Pornography; Sex Roles; Masculinity; Sexuality. ~ a k . +
ConteG analysis of "Adults-only" pulp fiction
868. Smith, Rebecca "'The Only Flying Turtle under the Sun': The Bildungsrcwnan in Contemporary Women's Fiction." Atlantis , II.2(Part 2). 1977, 123-32. b
- L.,' .
BiMtmgsroman, Female; Self-realization; Sex Rdes - Rejection of', Feminism, . Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Flying - Rebirth; Physical Appearance.
Jcmg. Erica: Fear of Flying ; Laurence. Margaret: The Diviners ; Munro, Alice: Lives of b
Girls and Women ; Piercy, M G e : Smoll Changes ; Shulman, Alix Kates: Memoirs of an 4 Ex- Rum Queen.
869. Smith. Robert P., Jr. "Mongo Beti: The Novelist Looks at Independence and the Status of the Women," CLA Jwnal , XIX.3.1976.301-11.
)African literature. Women and; Colonialism, Women and; National liberation, Womeri and; Black Women - and Education - and the F d l y - Relationships with Men - and Religion; Family, Women and; Education of Women; Religion, Women and - Christianity; Male/Female Relationships.
0 f'- Biyidi, Aiexandre (pseud Mongo Beti): Perpetue .
870. Snitow. Ann Bm. "Mass Market Romance: Pornography for Women Is Different," Radical Hisrwy Review. 20,1979,141-61. [Citation Inc.]
Popular Culture - Modem Romances; Love, Romantic; Sexuality, Female - Repressed; Images of Women - Virtuous Woman - Waiting Woman; Marriage,- and Woman's Fulfillment; Passivity. Female; Pornography; Reader, Woman as; Masculinity - as Mysterious to Women e
I
Over@ew of Harlequin romances
871. Snitow. Ann Barr. "The Front Line: Notes on Sex in Novels by Women. 1969-1979;; Signs. V.4, 198Q 702-18.
Sexuality. Female; Lesbian(s) - Sexuality; Black Women - Sexuality; Male/Female Relationships; Love, Romantic - Destructive Power of; Male Characters in Women's Writing.
Atwood Margaret: Surfbcing ; Bryant, Dorothy: Garden of Eros ; French, Marilyn: The Wmen's Room ; Gordon, Mary: Final Payments ; Isabel, Sharon: Yesterday's Lessons ; Johnson. Diane: The Shadow Knows ; Jong, Erica: Fear o/HHng ; Leffland, Ella: Mrs. Munck ; Lessing, Doris: The Gdden Nuzebook ; Millen, Kate: Sita ; Morrisoh, Toni: Sula ; Piercy, Marge: The High Cad of Living ; Rossner, Judith: Looking fw Mr. Gaaibar ; Schor, Lynda: Appetites ; Schwamm, Ellen: Adpcent Lnes ; Shulman. Alix Kates: Memairs of an Ex- Prom Queen ; Southerland, Ellease: Let the Lion Errt Straw ; Stimpson, Kate: C l m Nutes ; Walker. Alice: Meridian,
872. Spector. Judith A. "Science Fiction and the Sex War: A Womb of One's Own," Literature and Pswhdogy . XXXI.l, 1981.21-32.
T&W~ Century Prose - -
-- --
& Power, ~ e & e - Male Fear of: Sexuality. Female - Male Fear of: Images of Women - Terrible Mofher; Speculative Fiction.
# Asimov, Isaac: I, Robot ; Clarke. Arthur C.: 2001: A Space Odyssey : C h i l d h d s End ; Russ, Joanna; Shelley, Mary: Frankenstein ; Vo~egu t , Kurt Jr.: The Sirens of Titan .
873. Spencer, Sharon "The Lady of the Beasts: Eros and Transformation in Colette," Women's Studies, VIII.3,1981,2!8-312.
Sexuality, Female - and the Double Standard; Independence. Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Animals - Paradise; French Literature. Women and.
overview of ~olette'$ treatment of sexuality/sensuality . Qlette, Sidonie-Gabrielle: La Chatte ; Cheri ; The Vagabond ; Break of Day.
874. Spivak, Gayatri. "Three Feminist Readings: McCullers. Drabble. Habermas." Union Seminary Quarterly Review , XXXV.1/2.1979/80.15-34.
Public and Private, Separation of; ColltXti~ity in Women's Writing; Class Position. Women's; Racism; Sexuality. Female; Deconstruction, Feminist
Drabble, Margaret: The Waterfall ; McCullers, h n : The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter.
875. Spivak, Gayatri ChaLravorty. "Translator's Foreword to Mpasveta Devi's 'Draupadi'." Critrcd Inquiry, VIII.2.1981.381-92.
Deconstruction. Feminist; Colonialism, Women and; Indian Literature, Women and; Political Activism, Women and
The short story "Draupadiw follows Spivak's Foreword on pp. 392-402.
Devi. Mahaweta: "Draupadi ".
876. Spraggins, Mary Pringle. "Myth and Ms.: Entrapment and Liberation in Monique Wittig's Les Guerilleres ," hternhtional Fiction Review ,111.1, 1976.47-5 1.
Revision - of Myth; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's.Writing; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Woman Warrior - Enclosure - Circles - Genitals; French Literature, Women -an@
Wittig, Monique: Les Guerilleres .
877. Springer, Marlene. "As We Shal! Be: May Sarton and Aging, " Frontiers , V.3.1980.46-49.
Overview of Sarton's novels and autobiographical writings 6
-n, May.
- 878. Squier. Susan "Mirroring and Mothering: Reflection on, the Mirror Encounter Metaphor in -Virginia Woolf s Works. " Twentieth Century Literature . XXVIL3.1981.272-88. . 6\
Imagery and Motifs in Women's ~ r i t i b g - Mirrors; Motherhood; Power, Female - \
Male Fear of; Power. Male; Identity, Female.
W oolf, Virginia: A R m of One's Own ; "Thoughts on Peace in an Air Raidw; "A Sketch of the Past"; ~ r s . Ddloway ; To the Lighthouse ; "The Lady in the Looking-Glass".
r \
879. Stanley, Julia P. "Uninhabited Angels: M e t a p h ~ f o ~ h v z , " Margins, 23.1975.7-10.
Lesbian(s) - Literary Tradition - Identity - Positive Images of; Lesbianism - Definitions of - Encoded; Images of Women - Fallen Woman - Lesbian as Freak - Tragic Lesbian; Black Women - Lesbians - Relation to White Women.
Abby. Alain: Lib'ido Beach ; Aldridge, Sarah: The Lute Comer ; Barnes, Djuna: Nightwoad ; Brown, F5ta Mae: RirbyNt Angle ; Dykewoman, Edam (Elana Nachman): Riverjnger Woman ; Hall. Radclyffe: The Well of Loneliness ; Harris. Bertha: Catching Sruadove ; Confessions of a Cherrrbino ; Isabel. Sharon: Yesterday's Lessons ; Miller. Isabel: Patience and Samh ; Morgan, Claire: The Price of S d t ; Shocyey, Ann Allen: Loving Her ; Verel, Shirley: The Dark Side ojVenus.
880. Stasz. Clarice. "Androgyny in the Novels of Jack Lond0on," Western American Literature . XI.2, -' . 1976.121-33.
New Woman. The; Masculinity; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Independence, Female; Class Position, Women's; Androgyny. ,
rd 9 London, Jack A Daughter oft 'te Snows ; The Sea- Wdf; The Iron Heel ; Burning Daylight ; Martin Eden ; Adventure ; The Valley of the Moon ; htt le Lady of the Big H a m . \
- -
881. Staton, Shirley F. "The Great Divide: Gender in Sylvia Plath's Shes Fiction," Wanen and Literature . I1 (New Series), 198: 206-21.
Power, Male; FatherlDaughter Relationships; Mothex/Daughter Relationships; ,. Self. Divided; Power. Female; Anger. Female; Love, Romantic - Destructive Power of; lmagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Death - Male Deity - Nature; Images of Women - Temble Mother; Violence, Female.
Plath. iylvia: "Among the Bumblebees"; "Superman and Paula Brown's New Snowslur"; .. "The Shadow "; "Stone Boy with Dolphin "; "Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams" ; "The Wishing Box": "The Daughters of Blossom Street"; "Above the Oxbow"; "Sweeuc Pie and the Gutter Men"; "Mothers"; "Day of Success'; *Ocean 1212 - W"; "The Green Rock"; "Sunday at the Mintonan; "The Fifty-Ninth Bear".
882. Stein, Karen F. "Reflections in a Jagged Mirror: Some Metaphors of Madness." Aphra . Vl.?. 1975.2-11.
Madness. Women and; Self-realization; Identity. Female; Revision - d I
Stereotypes; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Mirrors; Physical I i
Appearance.
Atwood, Mawet: Surficing ; Gilman, Charlotte Perkins: The Y ellm Wallpaper ; Lessing, Doris: The Summw befove the Dark ; The F m r Gated City ; Plath. Sylvia: The '
Bell Jar,
Stetson, Erlene. "Their Ews Were Watching God : A Woman's Story," Regionalrsm and fhe F&male Imagination, IV.l,1978.30-36.
Black \k-- Relationships with Men - MotherlDaughter Relationships - and Blad 1
Community - Pelation to White Women; Marriage; Revision - of Sterebtypes; c; Images of Women - Tragic Mulatto; Mother/Daughter
Love' Rz Male/Fernale ReTtiodships. Relatio
refine Marriage category 1
+/. Hurston, Zora Neale: Their E x s Were Watching Gad.
~ t e w m Joan Hinde. "The School and the Home." Women's Studies. VI11.3. 1981,259-72. c
Writers, Women - 'Conditions of (20th Century Childhood; Rites of Passage; Mother/Daughter - Women's Ambivalence toward; French Literature, Women and.
Colette, SidohieGabrielle: Claudine at Schad Claudine a PEcde) ; My Mdher's Haue (La Maison de Claudine). !
Lesbian(s) - Writers. Conditions of - Identity - Relati~nships - Sexuality; Lesbian@ -
E n d e d ; Education of Women; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Identity. Female; Sexuality. Female.
\
Stein, Gertrude: The Making of Americans ; Q. E. D. ; Three Lives ; Fernhursl ; The
W Waznm tittm F. 'Simoac de Btzawirr An AaWographical Blueprint for F d e Liberty," Unrrtmry ofAdfcJugrur Papers rh W#ntn's Studies. UJ. 1977.99-122.
~ 3 9 Sullwaa V u t m . 'An knmcan Dram h o y c d : ~ e l h ~ i ~ e d d . ~ CEA Critic. XU.2. t 1979.33-39.
f iqemtd. &&:-Saw Me rhr Wdtz . . . ' ..
-- Twentieth Century Prose
I
Ttmmt" tfecate , V.1.1979.87-100. A r -
Bildungsroman, Female; Socialism, Women and: Independence. Female; Australian Literature, Women and
<I'
Twnan~ Kyiie: Tibwon ; Foveaux ; The Eattfers ; Ride on Stranger ; Time Enacgh 0
- Luter ; taFl Haven ; The Jo@ Condemned : The Honey How ; ,Tell M m n g T h l ~ .
1 . ,
891. ~undehand, Jane. "'Lines Driven Dee$: Radical Depanurtis. or the Same Old Story. for Pritchard's Womeq" Hecate . IV.1,1978,6-24. , ' C- -
\ -
a bchkn . Women and; Family, Women and; Images of Women - Earth Mothfr; Sex Roies; Australian Literature, Women md. %
Richard. Kathaiine Susannah: The Pmeers ; C w w d m ; Haxby's Circus ; W~nged Seeds ; Working Builocks; The Raaring Nineties ; Iruime Strangers ; Gdden Mile5 ; Subtle Rime . j
"b
C
892. SwafEelQ Audrey-Claire. "Paperbacks Promoting passion! What 1s Harlequm Regly Q . - . Presen~ng?," C d i m Wutnen's Studies .III.2,1981,4-6.
3.
Popular Culture - Modem Romances; Power. Female - Lack of; Love. Rom+nt~c: Marriage - and Worm's Fulfillment -
~verview discussion of Harlequin romances I
\'
893. Sweetapple. Rmmaiy. "Margaret Atw@: Victimq aid Suivi~prs .~ Suuhern Revrur (Adelaide), IX.1. 19'76.50-69.
9
Power, Female - Lack of; Self, Divided; Nature, Women and; Thought. Modes ~ of, 'Femaie vs. Male.
Atword. Margaret: S u r - i n g . B
P *
8%. Sylvandtr. h m l y n W. "Ralph Ellison's lnvidble Man and ~ c k d e Stereotypes." rVegro Amencan ljlerolwe Fonun . IX.3.1975.77-79.
Images of Women - h i m i l - Madonna - Sex Object - Superwoman - Black Matriarch.
Ellison, Ralph: The lnvirible Man .
Tmm, Dcixxah. "Coming of Age i A The Modem Greek Prose of Lilika Nakos,' RegiOnal1srn and the Female I-mion . IV.1, 1978.37-50.
\
Childhood; Adol-m; Sexuality. Female - Women's Ambrvalew loiard;
-. Mother/Daughter ~ e l a t i o & h i ~ ; lrnagery and Motifs in Women's Xri;dng - h d Child; Greek Literature, W h e n and.
Nakos. Litika: "Photini": "The &elas One"; "And the Child Liedw; My Petefs Bmk (The Dejowered One) ; The LAM ; Boetian Eorth ; T w w d a New Lijk ; hk&zn Dreamers.
~ a r k n , Deborah. "Mothers and Daughters in the ~ o 8 e r n Greek Novels of Lil&a Nakos." Women's Studies. VI.2.1979.205-21.
MotherYDaughter Relationshik; Writers, Women - Conditions o t -page; Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse;' Sexuality,Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; 'Violence, Female; Childhood; Adolescence; Class Position, Women's; Greek Literature, Women and.
Nakos. Lilika: "Photini"; "And the Child Liedw; My Peter's Bodc (The Dejfowerqi Une) ; - The Last ; "The Nameless One': The Children's Inferno . , c
* Tau. baudia 'Nelb Luren's Pnrrihg : A Problem of interpreration." Black American Literature Fauin , XIV.4.19fiO. 142-46.
\i
Black Women - P w n g ; images of Women - Tragic Mulatto; Revision - of Critical Tradition; f i va lq . Female. ,
Lawn.' Nella: Pasing .
. Texmo. Dell. "The Other Side of the Looking Glass: Image q d Identity. in Margaret Atwood's The Hible W m n ," Atlantis, II.2(Part 2). 1977, 64-76.
Identity, Female; Mamiage - as Entrapment; Role-Models. Female; Sex Roles; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Mirrors. Atwood. Margaret: The Edible_Wmn .
Thiebaux, Ma~celle. "A Mythology for Women: Monique Winig's Les Guerilleres ." 13th '
Moon . IV.1.1978.37-45.
Revision - of Myth; Irna~ery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Circles - Sun - Fire - Mirrors - Birds; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Osiris - Dionysus - Orpheus - Chris - Artemis - Aphrodite - Dido - Amaterasu - Cihuacxrad (Serpent Woman) - Eristikos - Phoenix; Language; Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse - Syntactical Experimentation; I)econ~rmction. Feminist; French Li teranue, Women and:
Twentieth Centuu hose - - - - -
900. Thompson, Irene. "The Left Bank Aperitifs pf Jean Rhys and Ernest Hemingwag." Geargia Review, XXXV.1.1981.94-106. *r
Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Writers. Women -Xedis&vered; .- Phallic Criticism; Isolation of Women.
Hemingway, Ernest: The Sun also Rises ; A Moveable Feast ; Rhvs. Jean: G d Marnrng. Midnight .
Thorn, Arline R "'Feminine' Time in Dorothy Richardson's Pilgrimage ." hternationol h n a l of Women's Studies. 1.2. 1978,211-19.
Narrative Strategies in women's Writing - Stream-ofConsciousnss - Circularity; Forms. Innorrative, in Women's Writing; Style. Female vs. Male; Thought, Modes of, Female vs. Male; imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Journey - Tunnel - Time - Light; Male Characters . ~ a Women's Writing.
Richardson. Dorothy: Pilgrimage .- '1
2
,* \ Thornton, Patricia Pacey. "Sexud Roles in Th rear Garsby . " Engl~sh St~dies~rn Canada V.4, 1979,457-68. 5. e .
Sex Roles - Rejection of; Androgfny; Masculinity; New Waman. The.
Fitzgerald. F. Scott: The Great Gasby .
Throne, Sara R. "Vi~ginia Wmlf s Feminist Identity and the Parthenqzcnesis of Female Culture." University of Michigan Pajers in Women's Studies. 11.1. 1975. 146-61.
Subculture. Female; Literary Tradition - Women's; Artis L' Woman as; , Idenu ty. Female; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Androgyny ; MotherIDaugh ter 0
- 9
Relationships; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing. r
e
Woolf, Virginia: A Room of One's Own ; Three Guineas ; To the Lighthme .
Thurman, Judith. "The Mistress and the Mask: Jean Rhys's Fiction," Ms. . IV.7, 1976. 50-52 . 81.
Writers, Women - Conditions of; Alienation. Female; Physical Appearance; Male/Fernale Relationships. F
Rhys, Jean: Quartet ; Ajer Leaving Mr. MacKenzie ; Good Mwning, Mldnrght ; Tigers Are Better- Lodrrng ; Wide Sargarso Sea .
r
Toth, Emily. "Female Wits," Marwchusetts Review , XX11.4, 1981. 783-93.
Humour, Women's Use of; Sex Roles; Motherhooct; Family. Women and; Sexuality. Female; Friendships. Female.
Alther, Lisa: Kinpicks ; Bombeck, Erma: At Wit's End; The Grass Is Always Greener over the Septic Tank ; Bracken, Peg: The I Haze to Cook Book ; Brown, Rita Mae: Rubymt iungle ; Jong, Erid: Fear ofFi'@ng ; Parent, Gail: She& Levine Is Dead and . hving in New Yotk ; David M e y r Is a Mdher ; Parker, Dorothy; Tomlin, Lily.
Toth. Emily. "Fatherless and ~ i s~oss&d: Grace Metaliom as a French-Canadian Writer," laurnal of Popular Culture , XV.3.1981.28-38.
Regionalism in Women's Writing ; Ethnici ty in Women's Writing ; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Class Position. Women's; Poverty, Women and; Rivalry. Female; Independence. Female; Alienation, Female; Alcohol, Women and; Mother/Daughter Relationships; FatherIDaughter Relationships; Quebecoises. Writing by and about
Metalioa. Grace: Pepon Place ; Theright White Cdlar ; No Adam in Eden .
Treichler. Paula A. "Verbal Subversions in Dorothy Parker: 'Trapped like a Trap in a Trap'," - Langwge and Style. XII1.4. !qO. 46-61.
Speech Patterns, Female vs. Male; Self. Divided; Passivity, Female; Anger; Female; Language. Women's Use of - Irony; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Subtext a
Parker. Dorothy: "The Walew.
908. Trenfield. Karen. "Seminist Science Fiction: Reality or Fantasy: A Review of Some Recent Science Fiction by Women." Hecare. IV.l.1978.99-108.
Speculative Fiction; Sex Roles.
Sargen~ Pamela, ed: Women of Wonder ; More Wamen of Wonder.
909. Underwood. June 0. "Experimental Forms and Fernale Archetypes: -Lillian Hellman's Pentimento ." Missauri PhiCdogical Association Micat ions, V , 1980.49-53. [Citation Inc.]
Autobiography, Women's; Forms. Innovative, in Women's Writing; Sexuality, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward.
Hellman, Lillian: Pentimento.
910. Vallejos. Tomas. ' tela Portillo Trambley's Fictive Search for Paradise," Frontiers, V.2.1980, 54-58.
C
Ethnicity in Women's Writing; Utopias; Imagery md Motifs tfn Women's Writing - Flood - Paradise - Quest
Tramblay. Estee Portillo: The Day of the Swallows ; Rain of Scorpions and Other Writings .
911. Van Gelder, Lindsy. "A Year Later: The Lure of The Women's Rcpm ." Ms. . VII.lO. 1979, 38-44.
. L
,I Images of Women - Victim; Male Characters in Wbmen's.Writing; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Anger. Female.
French, Marilyn: The Women's R o m .,
d 912. Verduyn. Ghristl. "Looking Back to Lot's Wife." Atlantis, VI.2. 1981, 38-46.
Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Lot's Wife; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Quest; Childhood; Adolescence; Identity, Female; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Quebmises. Writing by and about
8
Atwood. Margaret: SurBcing ; Lady Oracle ; Beresford-Howe. Constance: A Populatton of One ; Blais. M&e-Claire: The Manuscripts of Pauline Archange Manuscripts de Pauline Archangel ; h'ights in the Underground (tes Nuits de PUndergratnd); Bosco. Monique: Un Amour maladrait ; Lot's Wife (La Femme de Loth) ; Engel. Marian: Sarah '
Bastard's Norebtwk ; The Honeyman flstival ; Jmnne ; The Glossy Sea ; Fraser. Sylvia: Pandwa ; Giguere, Diane: Whirlpod (L'erm est p r o m e ) ; Guerin. Michelle: Le Segter de la lane ; Hebert, Anne: Children of the Black Sabbath (Les Enfants du Sabbaf) ; Laurence, Margaret: The Stone Angel ; A Jest of Gad ; The Divlners ; Maheux-Forcier, Louise: A m a h ; L'Ile &yeuse ; Une Fwet pow & ; Maillet. Andree: Lettres rm Surhomme ; Le Mirdr de Salwne ; Munro, Alice: Lives ofGirls and Women ; Paradis. Suzanne: Emmonuelle en n& ; Wiseman, Adele: Crackpot .
i 913. Vipond. M. ' ~ ~ a i h a Christie's Women." I n t e r ~ ~ o M I ~ict ion Review . VIII.2. 1981. 119-23.
Popular Culture - Detective Fiction; Independence. Female; ' Intuition. Female; Sex Roles. B
e* Overview of women chafactersin Christie's detective fiction ,
Christie. Agatba. - -
/
914. Wachtel, Eleanor. "The Mother and the Whore: l h g e and Stereotype of African Women.' Umop ,1.2.1977,231-48. /
B d .
African Literature. Women v d ; Images of Women -%lack Whore - Adventuress - Parasite - kmh Mother - Vi;cuous Wgman - Black Woman as w e r of Culture;
Popuiar Culture - Magazines; Images of Womm. Theory of; Pow@, Male - the Social Order; Rivalry, Female; Political Activism, Women and; Re-vision - of Stereotypes; Black Women - Relation to White Ferninish.
-"
Kahiga, 3 u e l : The Girl frDn A b r d ; Mangua. Charles: A Tail in the Mauh ; Son of Womun uli, Okello: "Orphan"; p'Bitek, Okot: "Sang of Owl"; Ruheni, Mwangi: What a Wl; The Future Leaders.
Q Waelti-Walters, Jennifer. "The Changing Face of Age." Atfan+. 1.2.1976, 16-24.'
b
Aging. Women and; Sexuality. Female; Physical Appearance; Work, Women and; French Literature, Woinen and
' ,
Beaqvoir, Sirnone de: The Mandarins ; Les Belles Images ; The Fwce of ~ i r c u k t a n c e ; The Prime of Lifi ; The Coming of Age ; The Second Sex. .
Waelti-Walters, Jennifer. " k u t y ahd Madness in M . C Blais' Im Belle Bete ," JkwM1 of Canadian Fiction ,25/26,1979,186-98.
Physical Appearance; O~adness, Women and; sibling Relationships; MotherIDaughter Relationships; Violence, Female; Images of Women Love Object; Quebecoises, Writing by and about
c-.
~/ais, Marie-Claire: L4 Belle ~ e t e . *d- Waelti-Walters. Jennifer. "Circle Games in Moniqae Winig's Les ~uerilleres ," Perspectives on Contemporary Literature, VI, 1980,5+64. J \
Language. Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse - Naming - Reclaiming; Narrative Suategies in Women's Writing - Circularity; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Circles - Genitals - Snakes - Quest - Warfare - Woman Wanior; Re-vision - of Myth; Fairy Tale Imagery in Women's Writing - Sleeping Beauty - Snow White and Rose Red; French Literatyre. Women and.
Wittig. Monique: Les Guerilleres .
Wagner. Linda W. " B w e n Ground 's Vein of Iron: Dorinda Oakley and Some Concepts of the Heroine in 1925," Mississippi Quarterly, XXXII.4 1979,553-64.
Independence, Female; Identity. Female; Love, Romantic - Destructive Power of; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - landscape; Work, Women and; Single Women
Glasgow. Ellen: Barren Grcund ; Vein of Iron .
919. . Walker. Alice. "h Search of &a Neale Hurston." Ms. . HI.9.1975i-74-79.85-89. ,. Black 'Women - Writers, Rediscovered - Writers. Conditions if - and Black Communi~ -
+ and Harlem Renaissance; Writers, Women - Rediscovered - Conditions of.
Hmton, Zora Neale.
920. Walker. Alice. "Beyond the Peacock: The Reconst~uction of Flannery O'Connor," Ms. . IV.6. - 1975.77-79.10246.
4 Writers. Women - Conditions of; Racism; Revision - of Stereotypes.
O'Connor. Flannery.
921. Walker, Nancy. "Do Feminists Ever Laugh? Women's Humor and Women's Rights." International Jwnal of Women's Studies, IV.l, 1981.1-9. 01
Humour, Women's Use of; Satire, Women's Use 6.f; Language. Women's Use of - Irony; Sex Roles; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Literary Tradition - Women's.
Beard, Miriam: "Waman Springs from Allegory to Life"; Ephron, Nora: Crazy SuIad: Some Things abmt Women ; Greenwood. Grace: "Mistress O'Raffeny on the Woman Question"; Halsey. Margaret: This Bemi- Paradise ; Holley. Marietta: My Oprnionr and Betsey Bdbers ; Jackson, Shirley: Lifi, among the Savages ; Ken; Jean: The Snake Has All the Lines ; McCarthy, Mary: "Up the Ladder from Charm to Vogue " ; McGinle y. Phyllis: Times Three ; Parker. Dorothy: "Big Blonde"; "Indian Summer"; Perry, Carlotta: "A Modem Minervan; Seabury, Florence Guy: The Delicatessen Husband ; 'v'iorst Judith: How Did I Get to Be 40 & Other Atrocities ; Yes, Married: A Saga of Love and Complaint ; Whicher. Frances: "Widow Bedott".
922. Walker. S. Jay. "Zora Neale Hmton's Their Eyes Were Watchlng Gcrd : Black Novel'of Sexism," Maiern Fiction Studies , XX.4.1974/75. 514-27.
Black Women - Relationships with Men -.Identity; Sex Roles - Rejestion of; Class Position, Women's; Male/Female Relationships; - Identity, Female.
Hmton, Zora Neale: Their Eyes Were Watching Gai .
923. Walton, Martha Ballard. "Images of the Black Woman in Afro-American Fiction." T e r n Swthern University: Faculty Research Jaunal. 1.1. 1976.6673.
Images of Women - Ambitious Black Woman - Black Matxiarch - Self-Hating Black Woman - Vengeful Black Woman; Racism.
Baldwin, James: Go Tell It on the Marntain ; Andher Country ; Demby. William: P
Twentieth Century Prose
-- Eeeclecreek ; Petry. AM: The Street ; Wright. Riclqrd: Nut& Son,
924. Washington, Mary Helen. "Lost Women: Nella Larsen - Mystery Woman of the Harlem Renaissance," Ms. , IX.6.1980'44-50.
Black Women - Writers. Rediscovered - and Harlem Renaissance - Passing - and Black , Community; Class Position, Women's; Writers, Women - Rediscovered - and ,
Laxsen, Nella: Quicksand ; Passing.
925. Weems, Renita. "'Artists without Art Form': A Look at One Black WO&'s World of Unrevered Black Women," Conditions. II.2,1979,48-58.
Black Women - Physical Appearance - Relationships with Men - Writers. Conditions of - and the Family - and Black Community - Suppressed Ahst; Friendships, Female; Madness, Women and; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Flying - Enclosure; Family, Women and; Male/Femde Relationships; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Physical Appearance; Artist, Woman as.
Morrison, ~oni : ' The Bluest ~b ; Song of Sdomon ; Sula .
926. Wendell. Carolyn. "The Alien Species: A Study of Women Characters in the Nebula Award Winners. 1965-1973." Extrapdation, XX.4,1979,343-54. *I
Speculative Fiction; h g e s of Women - Intellectual Inferior - Idealized Love Object - Victim - Moral Custodian - Child-Woman - Sex Object
Includes checklist of women characters in Nebula Award-winning science fiction, 1965-1973.
Aldiss, Brian: "The Saliva Tree"; Asimov, Isaac: The Gads Themselves ; Delaney, Samuel R.: Babel- 17 ; Ellison, Harlan: "A Boy and His Dog"; Herben Frank: Dune ; Le Guin, Ursula K: The Lej? Hond of Darkness ; Mclntyre. Voqda N.: "Of Mist, and Grass, and Sand"; Niven, Larry: Ringwovld ; Panshin, Alexei: Rite of Passage ; Russ, Joanna: "When It Changed"; Silverberg, Robert: A Time of Changes ; Wilson, Richard: "Mother to the World"; Wolfe. Gene: "The Death of Dr. Island".
927. Wenzel, Helene Vivienne. "The Text as Body/Politics: An Appreciation of Monique Wit(igys Writings in Context," Feminist Studies, M.2.1981.264-87.
Forms. Innovative, in Women's Writing; Language, Women's Use of - lYEcriture Feminine - Creating a New Discourse - Naming; Language, Patriarchal - as Dominant Discourse; Sexuality, Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Birth; t
Lesbian(s) - Sexuality - Positive Images of - Relationships; Heterosexism; Communities of Women; Revision - of Stereotypes; Feminism, Twentieth Century
Cixous, Helene: The h g h of the M e d m ; Soufpes ; Prepatif i de Noces rn delo de P Abime ; Leclerc, Annie: Parde de Femme ; Wittig, Monique: L'Opopo~x ; Les Guerilleres ; The Lesbian Body ; Lesbian Peoples: Material fk a Dictionary .
Westling. Louise. "Carson McCullers's w om boys." Smthern Humanities Revrev . XIV.4. 1980, 339-50.
Adolescence; Self-realization; Power. Female - Lack OR Sexuality . Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Artist, Woman as.
McCullers. h n : The H e m Is d Lonely ~unter": The Member of the Weddrng . 4
Wexler, Joyce. "E R. A. for Hemingway: A Feminist Defence of A Farewell to Arms'," Georgia Review , XXXV.l, 1981,111-23. , Y
Revision - of Critical Tradition; Love. Romantic; MalelFemale Relationships.
Hemingway. Ernest: A Farewell to Arms.
Whitehurst, Carol A. "Images of the Sexes in Science Fiction." International Journal of Women's Studies. 111.4, 1980. 327-37.
Speculative Fiction; Sex Roles; Images of %omen - Sex Object - Intellectual Inferior - Victim.
Content analysis of 26 Hugo Award-winning science fiction novels for sex-role stereotyping
Whittier, Gayle. "The Divided Woman and Generic Doubleness in The Bell Jar ." Women's Studies, 111.2, 1976, 127-46.
Nanative Strategies in Women's Writing - Doubling; Confessional hlodc in Women's Writing; Madness, Women and; Sexuality. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward: Self, Divided; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Birth.
Plath, Sylvia: The Bell Jar.
., 932. Whittier, Gayle. "Nature as Birthright and Birthloss: Mary McCarthy and Colette." Perspectrve~
on Contempwary Literature, V. 1979.42-54.
~utob~ogra~hy . Women's; MotherlDaughter Relationship; Rites of Passage; Menstruation; PregnancylChildbirth; Motherhood; Religion. Women and - Christ,ianity; French Literature, Women and.
- Coktte. SIdonieGabriek My M&Ws h e &-Matson de C t i i n e ) ; Sido ; McCarrhy, Mary: Memories of a Cathdic Girlhaai.
933. Whirtier, Gayle. "Mistresses and Madonnas in the Novels of Margaret Drabble." Women and Literatwe, I (New Series), 1980,197-213. '
Motherhood; Pregnancy/Childbirth; Rites of Passage; Work, Women and; , Sexuality, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Adultery.
Drabfile. Margaret: The Millstone ; The Garrick Year ; The Waterfdl ; The Needle's EJV ; The Realms of Gdd .
934. ~ i l s o n , J. J. "A Comparison of Parties, with Discussion of their Function in Woolf s Fiction," Women's Stydies, IV.2/3.1977.201-17.
Imagery and Motifs in. Women's Writing - Parties - Houses - Food; Artist, Woman as; Female/Feminist Aesthetic. tk
' Woolf. Virginia: The Vowge hu ; The Waves ; Night'and Day ; The Years : Between the Acts ; % the Lightharse ; Jwob's Room ; Orlando .
'1.- L A
i
935. Wolfe. Margaret Ripley. "The Southern Lady: Long Suffering Counterpart of the Good Ole' Boy." J w d of Popular Culture. XI.l,1977,18-27.
Q
Images of Women - Southern Belle - virtubus Woman - Moral Custodian; Sexuality, Female - and the Double Standard; Miscegenation; Slavery - and Abolition; Political Activism, Women and
Overview of stereotypes of Southern American women in historical, popular and fhional writing
Farrar, Rowena Rutherford: A W o n d r w Moment Then ; Ford, Jesse Hill: The Liberation ofLord Byron Jones ; Glasgow, Ellen: Virginia ; Vein of Iron .
936. Wolfe (Robbins). Susan J. "Stylistic Experimentation in Millen Johnston, and Wittig." Fireweed, 5/6,1979/80,134-42.
Language. Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse - Subjective Voice - Syntactical Experimentation; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; FemaleIFeminist Aesthetic; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Circularity; Imagery and .
, Motifs in Wornerr's Writing - Circles; Feminism, Twentieth Ceatury - Influence on Women's Writing; Lesbian Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of; French Literature, Women and.
\
Johnston, Jill: Lesbian Notion ; Millen Kate: H9ng ; Wittig. Monique: Les Guerilleres .
937. Wolff, Cynteja Griffin. "Edith W h m n and the 'Visionary' lmapination." ~ G e r s . It.3. I*. 24-30.
9 Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Revision - of Stereotypes.
Wharton, Edith: The Age of Innocence ;.The Custom of the ~ a r n t r ~ : The Hause of Mirth ; Ethan F m e .
I
938. Wood, Susan. "God's Doormats: Women in Canadian Prairie ~iction." Jaunal of Popular , Culture-. XIV.2.1980.350-39.
Images of Women - Moral Custodiw - Angel in the House; Self-sacrifice; Work, Women and; Poverty, Women and; F 'ly, Women and. \ Comer, Ralph: Block Rock ; The Doctor ; The Fcweigner: A Tale of Saskatchewan ; Grove, Frederick Philip: Settlers of the Mursh ; McClung, Nellie: Painted Fires ; The
a Second Chance ; In Times Like These ; Avple Springs ; Sowing Seeds in Danny ; Ostenso. Martha: Wild Geese ; Ross, Sinclair: The Lomp at Ncbn ; A s k Me ard M y Haue ; Stead, Robert J. C.: Grain ; The Home Steaders ; The Smoking F l a x .
939. Woodward. Kathleen. "May Sarton and Fictions of Old Age." W m e n and Liferatwe ." 1 ( ~ e w Series), 1980,108-27. _-
Aging, Women and; Single Women; Revision - of Stereotypes; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Time; Male/Fernale Relationships; Female/Femi~a Aesthetic; Political Activism, Women and; Power. Female - Lack of.
Sarton, May: Kinds of Love ; Plant Dreaming Deep ; h r n a l of a Sditude ; AS W e Are N o w .
. 940. Zimra, Clarisse. "In Her Own Write: The Circdar Structures of Linguistic Alienation is Assia
B Qebar's Early Novels." Research in Afiican Literatures , XI.2, 1980, 20623.
African Literature, Women and; Language. Patriarchal - as ~ o r n i b t Discourse - as hadequate for Expressing Women's Experience; Colonialism, Women and; Writers. Women - and Silence; Identity. Female; Alienation. Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Circles - Quest; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Circularity; Communities'of Women; Sexuality. Female: Rivalry. Femde.
Qebar. Assia: LJ S d f ; Les Irqpatients .
941. Zonailo, Carolyn. "The Wilderness Metaphor: A Study of Four Novels." R m ofone's Own , n.i.1976.76-78.
Identity, Female; Independence. Female; lmagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Wild'erness.
* , i) L
A t w d . Marjpret: S u - i n g ; Laurence. Mapet : The Diviners ; Moodie, Susanna: . Roughing A in the Bush ; Wilson. Ethel: The Swamp Angel.
4 0
942. Zonailo. Carolyn. "Male Stereotypes in The Diviners and The Edible W o r n ," Room of O d s Own , 111.1, 1977.70-72.
* . Male Characters in Women's Writing.
Aovmd, Marpet: The Edible Woman ; Iaurence. ~rggarec The Diviners.
I
943. Zorn, Marilyn. "Visionary Flowers: Another Study of Katherine Mansfield's 'Bliss', " Studies in Short Fiction. XVI1.S 1980. 141-47. .
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Flowers; Revision - of CriticalJradition; * Speech Patterns, Female vs. Male; Nature. Women and; Artist. Woman as; New'
Zealand Literature. Women and.
. Mansfiejd. Katherine: "Bliss". I?
XXLI, TWENTIETH CENTURY POETRY -,
944. Allen, Paula Gum. "'The Grace that Remains' - American Indian Women's Literature.' B o d Fdrum , V.3.1981.376-82. ' i
Q
North American Indian Women. Writing by and about; Writers. Women -<and S~lencc. Nature. Women and; Religion. Women and - North American Indian: Male Characters in Women's Writing; Oral Tradition. Women and; Power. Female; Imperialism, Wbmen and
Cook-Lyn. Elizabeth: "Then Badger Said This"; Hill. Roberta: "Conversations Overheard on Tamalpais Road"; Hogan, Linda: "Blessings"; Silko. M i e Marmon: "Story from Bear Country".
945. Andrews, Marcia S. "'When Silence Has Its Way With You': all (1886 - 1924); W m r n and Literature , I (New Series), 1980.87-107. P\
Writers. Women - Conditions of - Use of Pseudonym; Illness. Women and; Language. Women's Use of - Subjective Voice; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Needlework - Death.
-'l
Includes short annotated bibliography
A Hall, Hazel: Cmuins ; Wdkers ; Cry of Time .
946. Annas. Pamela J. "The Self in the World: The Sadal Contexc of Sylvia Plath's Late Poems,* Women's Studies , VI1.1/2, 1980. 171-83.
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Enclosure - Warfare - Mutilation - Paper; Alienation, Female; Identity, Female. v
Plarh. Sylvia: ? h e Applicantn; "Cut"; "The Munich Mannequins"; "Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams"; "Tulips".
947. Arbur, Rosemarie. "Le Guin's 'Song' of l q o s t Feminism.: Extrapdmon . XXi.3. 1980. 223-26.
Sex Roles - Rejection of; Self-realizatidn,
Le Guin, Ursula K.: Wild Angels.
948. Arenal. Electa. "Two Poets of the $mdinista ~ r m g s l ~ " ~ ~ e n u n m Studies ; V1l.l. '1981. 19-27.. -%-
Writers, Women 5 Conditions of: : ati in-~men& Liux@ture. Women and: Political ( Activism, Women and; Socialisn. Women and; National Liberation. Wmim and. '
\-
\\ *-LA Alegria. ClaribeI: * I Survive ; Belli, Gioconda: Finng L n e .
w
Barney. Natalie. "On Renee Vivien." trans. Margaret Porter. Heresies. 1.3. 1977.65-71. . . . . Writers. Women - Conditions of; Lesbian(s) - Litemy Tradition - l ave Poetry - *
S u W t u r e - Writers. Conditions of; Literary Tradi t iog Women's; lave Poem. Women's; Subculture. Female; French Literature. Women and.
Bamey. Natalie; Sappho; Vivien, R-bee. . i
Bornstein. Miriam "The Voice of thqChicana in Poeuy."' Denver Quarterly 28-47. --
Chicanas. Writing d about; Revision ?of' Stereotypes: Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Feminism. Twentieth mnuy - Influence on Women's Writing; Political Activism, Women and; F3hnicity in Women's Writing; Racism. Sexuality, Female; ~ a l e / ~ e & e Relationships. -
Overview 5
Aoosta. ~ i r e s a Morna; BrinvmPineda, Barbara; Cantu. virgmia; Cemantes. I s m a Dce; Cota-Cardenas. Margarita; Cunnin h a . Veronica; Hoyos. Angela de; Rivera, Marina; Tafolla. Carmen; Tapia. Betsy; To . lnes Hernandez. &
bwles. Gloria. "buise Bogan: To Be (Or Nor To Bc?) Woman Poet." Wmen's Studiei , V.2. 1977, 131-35.
Writers. Women - Conditigs of - Anxiety of Authorship; Rivalry. Female; Language. Women's Use of - Encoding.
I * >
Bogah Louise: Body b f ~ h r r Deorh ! Dark Summer ; The s l e e i n y Fury : Ackevemmr in Amenccm Poetry, ]%MI- 1950.
Bulkin. Ellp. *The Places We Havt Been: The ~oet.ry6i~usan Gnflin.* Ajorgim . 2 3 . 1975. 31-34.
Motherhood - Women's Ambivalence toward; Writers. Women - Condiuons of. Political Actjvism, Women and; Violence apainst Women; Imsbian(s) - l m c PMW; h v e Pocu), Women's.
Griffin. Sum: 'The Tiredness Cycle'; 'I Likc LO Think of Hamer Tubman'; 'Nineteen Sixty-Eighr'; 'Nineteen Sevwry-One"; "The Song of the Woman with Hcr Pam Chiping Out"; 'The Woman Who Swims in Her Tears". ! t
Burke.' Carolyn. 'Bemmutg Mina Lo)..̂ Women's S~wires . VII.1/2. 1980. 137-5Ir.
- - :- - b ~ w e n t i e f h ~ e n t u r y P-
Writers, Women - Conditions of (20th Century Brifish); Artist. Womm as; - Madage - and Conflict with Creativity; Identity. Female; Sexuality. Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Birth; Forms, Ipnovative, in @omen's Writing.
. Includes text of three poems , a- %
Lay, Mina: "Aphorisms on Futurism" ; " W e du Neant" ; "Three Moments in Paris" ; "Three ltalian Pictures"; "Parturition"; " n e Costa San Giorgio".
4
r& R.
Cam. Mary Ann "Wariness and ~ o m t n ' s Language: Two Modest Verbal Studies.' W a r n arid Literature, I (New Series), 1980.26-36.
Style. Female vs. Male; Language. Women's Use of - Subjective Voice; Personae in P Women's Poetry; Passivity. Female; French Literatqre. Women and ,
~1biach:Anne~arie: "Etat" ; Boissonas. Edith: "Le Regard " ; "Acmlmie"; "Le Vide ".
ata-Cardeps. Margarita. 'The Chicana in the city as Seen in Her Literature." Frontiers. VI.1.1981, 13-19.
Ethnicity in Women's Writing; Chicanas. w3tingby and about; Revision - of Stereotypes; Alienation. Female; - Language, Women's Use of - Irony.
AJvarez. Tina: "Guadalajara. U. S. A."; Castillo, Am: "Our Tongue Was Nahuatl"; '
Cervantes, Lorna Dee: "Beneath the Shadow of the Freeway" ; "Refugee Shipw ; Cisnexos, . - Sandra: "North Avenue/1600 North " ; Gonzales, Sylvia: "Chicana Evolution" ; "On an Untitled Theme" ; Hoyos. Angela de: "The Greatest City"; Omelas. Berta: Come Down PM the Marnd ; Rivera. Marina: "The Lion Tamer's Wife" Rocha, Rim Garcia: "Chicana Studies" ; "The Truth in My Eyes" ; Rodriguez, Silvana:, "Untitled" ; Tovar, Ines Hernandez: "Para ~eresa"; Vigil, Evangelina: "Putow ; Xelina: "Urban Life" ; &or& Bernice: "Do Ybu Take?".
- = - b
Decker, Sharon. "'I Have a Self to Recover': Sylvia Plath's &iel," Michigan OcC.asional Papers in Women's Studies. VII. 1978.1-21.
Artist. Woman as; Marriage - and Conflict with Creativity; Motherhood - Women's Ambivalence toward; Passivity. Female; ,Anper. Female; Identify. Female; lmapes of Women - Submissive Wife - Victlm; Imagery and Motifs in Women's - Writing - Housekeeping - Bees - Child - Rebirth; Domestic Poetry,
Plath. Sylvia: "Ihddy" ; "The Applicant" ; "The B p d a y Present"; "Kindness"; "Childless Woman "; "Elm"; "The Night Dances"; "Momiug Song"; "Nick and the Candlestick" ; "Lady Lazarus" ; "Getting here" ; "The Hanging Man" ; " Ariel" ; "Stings". , .
7
Diehl. Joanne Feit "'Cartographies of Silence': Rich's Common language and the Woman Poet." Femnist Studies . VI.3.1980.530-46. % -
Language. Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse - Naming; Writers, Women- - -
and Silence; - R6-vision - of Myth; Power. Female: Language,, Patriarchat -as , Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience; Lesbian(s) - Love Poetry - Writers. e - Silences of; ' Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Love Poetry. Women's.
. . Rich, Adrienne: The Dream of a Common Language .
. Dresner, Zita Z "A Textual Interpretation of<ernative Women's Music," M a e d .1.2.198L. ; *
33-42. ' 5 --,
A .
Popular Culture - Songs; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's ~ r i ' t ing ; Subculture. Female; . Language. Women's Use of - Naming - Recl~ming; " ksbian(s) - Corning Out - Relationships; Humour. Womenls Use of; Anger, Female.
- B
Adam. Margie; Christian, Meg; Near, Holly; Tyson. Willie; Williamson. Cris. , '
DuPlessis, Rachel Blau "The Critique of Consciousness and Myth in Levertov, Rich and Rukeyser," Feminist Studies. II1.1/2, 1975, 199-221.
Revision - of Myth; FemaleIFerninist Aesthetic; Artist. Woman as; Political Activism, Women and; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Thought. Modes bf. Female vs. - Male; Self-realization; Alienation, Female; Anger. Female; Power, Ferpale; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Quest - Rebirth - Moon; , identity; Female. '
Levemv, Denise: The Smow 'Dance ; 0 Taste and See ; To Stay Alive ; Relearning the Alphabet ; Rich. Adrienne: Diving info the Wreck ; Snhpshorqof a Daughter ik- Law : . Rukeyser. Muriel: ~ r e a k ~ g Open ; The Speed of Darkpess ; "brpheus".
DuPlessis. Rachel Blau. "Romantic Thralldom in H. D.. " Contempary Literature . XX.2. ,+?. -F -". 1979,178-203. -S
Love, Romantic - Destructive Power of; Male/Female Relationships; Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Identity. Female; Revision - of Stereotypes; Power. Male; Power, Female; Family, Women and.
Doolittle. Hilda (H. D.): Her ; B d Me to Live ; Helen in Egypr
Eaglen, Audrey. "A Queer Lot: Conthporary Feminist Poets." Emergency Librarian . V.5, 1978.3-8.
Feminism, Twentieth Century - 1nflueh;x on Women's Writing.
Contains annotated bibliography ~f feminist poetry published in the 1970s. mostly by American small pressa. Includes individual mllections. anthologies. and a secti~n on
* periodicals which regularly carry fedminist poetry. B
I %
264 - .
Atwood. Margaret; ~ifsk& Lynn; Pie~cy, Marge; Rich. Acbie~np; Sexton, _Anne; - , z -
Swenson, M g ; Wakoslti. %Diane. L fl
c ,
962. ' Faderman, I$ian. " Off the Watch and Ward Sodety: Amy LowcII's Treatment of the Z
Lesbian Theme," ,1.2,1979,23-27.
Lesbianism - Encoded; kbian(s) - Love Poetj; Persome in Women's Poetry: Imagery and Motifs in Women's Wriring - Flowers - Garden - Moon; Love Poetry. Women's.
Lowell. Amy: Pietwes of the ~ k i r g W d d .
963. FairleyJene R "Curnmiags' Love Lyrics: Some Notes by a Female Linguist""The J w d of Modern titeratwe, VIl.2,1!?79.205-18. I
Images of Women - Idealized Love Object - Sex Object - Whore. -.
Overview of Cummings' love poetry.
Cummings. E E.
964. Felstiner, John. "A Feminist Reading of Neruda," Purnassus: Poetry in Review , III.2.1975,
&& 90-112. '
1 -
Images of Women - Sex Object - Earth Mother; Nature, Women and; Sexuality. Male. ..- >..
Ovewic: of Neruda's love poem. . ru'e ruda, Pablo.
h e %5. Femer. Carole "Sexual Politics in Diane Wakoski's Poetry." Heme. 1.2. 1975. y 9 4 .
Personae in Women's Poetry;' confessional Mode in Women's - Writing; Images of . Women - Victim; Male Chahcters in Women's Writing; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Housekeeping - Roorps - Music; Domestic Poetry.
Wakoski, Diane: "The Pink Dress"; "In Gratitude to Beethoven" "The Father of My ,
Country"; "Alone"; "The Story of Kchard Mafield"; "Driving Gloves"; "Second Chance" ; The Moracycle Betrayd Pmms ; V i m Literature jbt Two and F a u Hands.
" h
Ferrier. Carole. "'If I Were the Sun': Diane Wakoski's Greed Sequence." Margins, 11213. 966.
Love. Romantic - Destructive Power of; Passivity, Female; Independence, Female;
Working-Class Wmen, Writing by -and a b w ~ ; Izeffonae- in-Women-%i%my;- - - - -.+.
Imagery ahd Moiifs in Women's Writing - Animals - ~ m n - Water; Cdnfessional Mode in Women's Writing.
Wakoski, Diane: Greed ; "Justice Is Reason Enough"; "Creiiting a Personal Mythdogy"; "The Water Element Song for Sylvia". +.
, .
P. . , .Femer, Carole. "Anne Sexton: Dernystifier or Mystic," Hecute ; IV.2,1978,65-7i.
P
Madness. Women and; Imagery and Motifs in wbmen's Writing - Housekeeping; . Marriage.
Sexton, AM^: The AWN Rowing Toward God ; All My Pretty Ones ; The B& of ~ d l y : 45 Mercy Street ; The Death Noiebodcr .
968. Fifer, Elizabeth, "Is Fl@ Advisable? The Interior TheatTe of Gertrude Stein," Slgns . IV:3. 1979,472-83.
a Lesbianism - En'coded; Lesbian(s) - Sexuality - Relationships; Language, Women's Use of - Parody - Punrring - Encoding; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Food - Cows - Needlework; Sexuality. Female.
Q Ste' Gertrude: "PaintedLacen; "PinkMelDn Joy"; "PossessiveCasem; "N-on; "Lifting Be? ; "Not a Holew; "A Sonatina Followed by Anotherw. CI
a
969. Foulks. Debbie. "Livesay's Two Seasons of Love." Canadian Lirerature .74. 1977. 63-73. .s
Love, Romantic; Passivity. Female; Independence. Female; Self. Divided; Masculinity; Political Activism, Women and; Sexuality. Female; kging, Women
-c and. --
Livesay. Dorothy: Cdlected Poems: The Two Seasons. _- B
970. Frieben L M. "Conflict and Creativity in the World of H. D.." J w d ofWomen's Studies in 6 Literature. 1.3. 1979.258-71. P-.
'"% Writers, Women - Conditions of - Anxiety of Authcrship; Artist. Woman as; Independence, Female; Male/Female RelatioGhips; Revi~ion - of Myth.
i
Doolittle, Hilda (H. D.): Tribute to Freud ; Helen in Egypt . a
' 971. Friedman, Susan. "Who Buried H. D.? A Poet, Her Critics, and Her Place in 'Tl?e Literary * Tradition'." Cdlege English . XXXVI.7, 1975, 801-14.
- iterary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Phallic ~ r i t i & m ; Objectivity. Myth ol;
5 . . f*
I ' s * ?
- - .- '~ven& ~ e ~ t @ y ~aetry " 9 %$
I - J w-;
Writers, Women - Rediscovered - Anxiety of Au&crship; - Critical Schools,Qther, +
Relation to Feminist Criticism - F~eudian/Psychoa.nalytic Criticism; Revision" of Myth; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Quest - Muse; Mythological Figwes in Women's Writing - Helen. . -
D
9 Overview d i b n n o f H. D.'s work* '
. 7 . . Doolittle, Hilda (H. D.): Wiger Love. - - D
7 .. -.-
972. Friedman, Susad "Creating a ~ o m & ~ Mythology: H. D.'s Helen in Egypt ." Wamen's Studies, V.2.1977.163-97. .
* ,
Uterary Tradition - Women's; Revision - of Stereotypes; self-realization; Self. Divided; Identity, Female; Religion, Women and - Classical Greek; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Quest; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing --Great Goddess - Helen; Subculture, Female; ~ndrogyak Language, Women's Use of - Reclaiming.
1 Doolittle. Hilda (H. D.): Helen in Egypt . ',
- -/
4 973, Friedman, Susan. "Psyche Reborn: Tradition, R e ~d he G Q ~ ~ ~ S S as ~ o ~ e r - ~ ~ m b o l in
t H. D.'s Epic Poetry." Women's Studies. VL2.1979.147-60. 0
Imagery and Motifs in Women's WritingL Muse - Birth - Quest; Mythological Figures in Whmen's Writing - Great Goddess; Mother/Daughter Relationships; ' Re-vision -, of Stereotypes; .Self-realization; Mystiasm, Women and .
Doolittle. Hilda (H. D.): Trilogy. 4 - i
974. Gannon. Catherine and Clayton'Lein. "Diane Wakoski and the Language of Self," Sun Jose Studies, V.2.1979.84-98.
-L . .
Identity, Female; Independence. Female; Love, Romantic; Imagery and Motifs in W
Women's Writing - Enclosure - Light - Moon - Quest; Images of Women - Victim; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Masculinity. L
Wakoski. Diane: The Motarcycle Betrayrzl Pwms .
975. Gelpi, Barbara Charlesworth. "From Colonial t.6 Revolutionary: The Modem American Woman Poet" SOR Jose Studies. II.3.1976.37-50.
Images of Women - Victim; Language. Women's Use of - Irony; . Anger, Female; Mother/Daughter Relationships.
13
A t w a Margaret: Survival ; Clifton, Lucille: Good Times ; An Ordinary Citizen ; W i t t l e , Hilda (H. D.): Helen in Egypt ; Griffin, Susan: "White Bear"; "Mother and
I
- - - - - ~11entietL-$Poenvp 7 - 9 -& '
.q, ; €hildn ; M m , Marianne: "The Mind 1s an Enc#itntecCWgm ; - "Mw y25 gmen! -- Plath, Sylvia: "Purdah" ; "All the Dead Dears" ; "Hansel and Gret+eln. . . -
4 . . . %
d * $ 7 - .
'970. Gilbert, Sandra M. "'My Name is Darkness': The he& of Self-Definition;" Contempwary Liteiuture . XVIU.4,1977,443-57. I .
Confessional Mode in Women's W $ identity. Pimale; ~el f - r tk i&ion; , . Writers, Women - Anxiety of Au orship; Revision - of Stereotypes; lmagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Doubles. -
, >
Levertov. Denise: The Swrow Dance ; 0 Taste and See ; Plath. sylvia: Ariel ; Rich, Adrienne: Diving into the Wregk ; Poems: Selected and New. 195& 1974 ; Sexton. Anne: The B d of Fdly ; The Death N a e M ; Love Poems ; Wakoski, Diane: h i d e the Bload Factwy ; Dancing ors the Grave \of a Son of a Bitch . !
\ ..- 2
\
P
J3ilbert,.Sandia M. "'A Fine, White Flying Myth': Confessions of a Plath Addicln ? Massachusetts Review, XIX.3. 1978: 585-603.
FemaleIFeminist Aesthetic; Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Enclosure - Exape'- Flying - Doubles - Birth.
~ r o n t e , b a r l o n e ; Dii:ku?son. Emily; Plat$. Sylvia: The Bell J u ;' Ariel ; Winter Trees.; The C d w ; Crassing the Water ; "The ~ i f t y - ~ i n t h Bearu; Shelley. M W .
f
Gilbert. Sandra M.. Wendy Barker et al. "On Ruth Stone."~lowa Review . XII.2/3. 1981, 323-30.
Writers. Women - Rediscovered - Conditions of; Tradition - Wqmen's; Role-Models. Female.
Stone. Ruth.
Gillman, Linda. " h e Looking-Glass Through Alice," .Women and Literature . I (New Series), 1980.12-23.
Language. Women's Use of - Cr-ating a New Discourse - 1'Ecriture'Feminine - * Syntactical Experimentation; Critical Schools. Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism - F r e u d ~ h y c h o a n a l y t i c Criticism - Strucluralism/Post-Smmralism; Writers, Women - and Silence; French ~iterature. Women and.
Cardinal, Marie: Les Mas p a u lr dire ; Dantec. Denise le : ,Lepuurr de Go ; &as. Marguerite: Le Ravissement de Ld V . Stein ; Irigaray. Luce: Spenriwn of the Other
0 Woman: (Speculum de P u r e firnrne) ; The Sex That Is N a One (Ce Sexe qui n'en esr pas un); Jouve, Nicole Ward: L.e spectre du gtis ; Leclerc. Annie: Parde de Femme ; Wittig. Monique: L'Opoponax ; Les Guerifleres ; The Lesbian Body.,
* 980. - Gubar, Susan. "The Echoing Spell of H. D.%$grilogy ," Conte~posory Literature .WX2,1978, , - 3 * - 196-218. -_,.r t
'wig . - 1 . 4 - 6logical Figures in womm's Wiiting - Art$mis <&is , ' Revision - of Sterytvpes Narrative Strategies in Women's W r i w - - Eve - Lilithi- Mary Mag
Circularity; Language. Women's Use of - Reclaiming; Power, Female - ?tYomenys .Ambivaleilce toward . o $
**
Doolittle. 'Hilda (H. D.): Trilogy.
Gustafson. Richard. "Time,is a Waiting Woman': Xsw Poetic Icons," Midwest Qhrferly , XVL3.1975.318-27.
Imagery and Motifs in Women7$ Writing - Time - FatJm - Womb; Revision - of Stereotypes. - - Eliof T. S.: The Wuste Lond ; ~ o r & , Robin: "Matrilineal Descent"; Plath, Sylvia: "Daddy" ; Rich, Adrienne: "Snapshots 0f.a Daughter-in-Law " ; Wak&ki, Diane: The George washing& Poems.
Honton. Margaret "The Double Image and the Division of Parts: A Study of MotherIDaughter Relationships in the Poetry of Anne. Sexton." Jourd of Women's Studies in Literatwe. 1.1. , 1979,3350.
Mother/Daughter Relationships; Personae in Women's Poetry; Confessional Mode - in UmexkWriting; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Minors - Doubles -
Wikhes/Witchcraft - Food - Dead Child - Womb.
Sexton, Anne: "Talking to Sheep"; "The Double Image"; "The Division of Parts"; "The Operation "; Wreaming the Breasts"; "Food" "The Hoarder"; "Dancing the Jig "; "The
;Death Baby" ; "Ninth Palm" ; "Little Girl, My Stringbe-p. My Lovely Woman"; "A Little Uncomplicated Hymn"; "Mother and Daughter"; "The Risk"; "Live "; "Hurry Up Please - It's Time"; "In Celebration of My Uterus".
Hull. Gloria T. "'Under the Days': The Buried Life and Poem of Angelina Weld Grimke," Conditions. 11.2. 1979. 17-25.
Black Women - Lesbians - Writers. Rediscovered - Writers, Conditions of - and Harlem Renaissance; Lesbian(s) - Writers. Conditions of - Writers. Silences of - Love Poetry; Lesbianism - Previously Unrecognized; Writers, Women - and Silence - Conditions of - Rediscovered; Love Poetry, Women's.
Grimke, Angelina Weld
Hull, Gloria T. "Researching Alice Dunbar-Nelson: A Personal and Literary Perspective." Feminist Studies. VI.2.1980.314-20.
I _-
C
~ *
v , - , - - - - - - - - - -. - - - -- --A-
' L ' . "kren&tti6eo~--poeng.. . G * . *
'. O
Black Women - Writers, Conditions of - Writers. ~edisdovered - Lesbians: -%- I . - - - Previously Unrecognized; Role-Models, Female; Writers, Women - Conditions of - Rediscovered. 'I
~undar- els son, Alice. D
8L - Irvine,-loma. "The Red and Silver Her& Have Collapsed." Concerning Poetry. XII.2. 1979. ~$68. I .
c Male/Female Rel8tionships;. Imagery ,and Motifs in Women's Writing - Mde Deity - Father - Journey - Mirrors; Masculinity - and Heroism; Re-vision - of Myth.
Atwood Margaret: The Circle Game ; The ~ n i & s in Thar Ccuntry r,,~roceduresfi Undergrand ; Power Pditics ; ,Y cu Are Happy. - - I - ,
+b
I * , L 956. Jenkins. Mercilee. "Woman to Woman: Speaking the Common Language." Women's St le5
lnternahnal Quarterly, IIL2/3,1980,319-23.
a Language, Patriarchal - as Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience; Language, Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse; Writers. Women - and Silence.
. Rich. Adrienne: "The Origins and History of Consciousness"; "Cartographies of Silence". i
987. Kammer. Jeanne H. "The Witch's Life: Confession and Control in the Early Poetry of AM^ Sexmn,%nguclge and St$e, XIII.4,1980.29-35.
Co~fessional Mode in Women's Writing; ' Madness, Women and; Literary Tradition - Women's.
Sexton, Anne: To B i d m and Pae W a y Back ; All My Pretty Ones. 4
988. Larkin, Joan "Nothing Safe: The Poetry of Audre Lorde." Margins. 23.1975.23-25.
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Birth; Black Women - Motherhood; "
Power, Female; Motherhood P
I-oi.de. Audre: The first Cities ; Cables to Rage ; From a Lond Where Other People Live ; The New Ywk Head Shop and Museum.
!?89. Lee. Valerie. "The Female Voice in AfreAmerican and Afro-Caribbean Poetry." Umop ,111.3. 1979,175-84. -
Caribbean Literature, Women and; Black Women - and Black Consciousness - and the Family - Identity - Relationships with Men; Childhood; Re-vision - of Stereotypes; Regnancy/Childbirth; Self-realization; ~ a m f i ~ . Women md; Identity. Female; -
L --- 6
- - - - a- - - A - --- - - - - &-- A-
~;onae* Century Poetry ,
. *
WelFemale Relationships. . (
v . - t-
Brooks, Gwendolyn: "When You Have Forgotten Sunday"; "A Lovely Love"; Clifton, o
'
Lucille: "Good Times"; "An Ordmary Woman"; Etienne, Jocelyne: "In Time's Tender Age" ; Evans, Mark "Where Have You Gone"; "I Am a Black Woman."; Giovanni, vikki: "Nikki-Rosa"; "My House"; H w Vivette: "Leda and the Swan"; Jolicoeur, MarieAnge: "je Suis"; Kingdom, Karen; Lorde. AuQe: "The Woman Thing"; "Bloodbirth"; Miles, Judy: "Litanyw; Moss, Hazel: "Mirror"; R o d , We-Therese: .
"Enfam" ; Sanchez, Sonia: "Present"; Walrond, Linda: "A Woman's Agony". . . 990. Lefcowi&Barbara F. "The Search Motif in Some Conterpporary Female Poets: Atwood,
RukeyGer. Rich," University of Michigan Papers in Women's Studies, 11.3.1977.84-89. , 7
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Quest - Water - Moon; Self-realjzation. I
Atw& Margaret: "Dream: Bluejay or Archeapteryx"; "Procedures for Underground"; Rich. Adrienne: "Diving in6 the Wreck"; Rukeyser. Muriel: " Ajanta".
991. Iilienfeld, Jane. "Silence and Scorn in a Lyric of Intimacy." Wumen's Studies, VILI/2.1980. 185-94.
Love. Romantic - Destructive Power of; Anger. Female; Male/Female Relationships; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Transformation; Mythological Figures in women's Writing - Sybil - Circe - Odysseus.
I
Atwood, Margaret: "The Director of Protoc~l"; "A Sybil"; "The Shadow Voice"; "Interview with a Tourist"; Power Pditics ; You Are Happy. ,
0
992. ' Mallinsun. Jean "Ideology and Poetry: L -tion of Some R w n t Trends in Canadian Criticism," Studies in Canadian Literature , IIL1,1978,93109. -
Phallic Criticism; Laages of Women - Earth Mother; Sexualily. Female - Male Fear of; Revisionp- of Myth.
Atwood, Margaret: Yar Are Happy ; S u r - i n g ; The Edible Woman ; Avison. Margaret; MarIatt, Daphne; Page, P. IC; Webb, Phyllis.
993. ManQel. Charlotte. "Garbo/Helen: The self-kojection of Beauty by H. men's, Studies, VII.1/2,1~0,127-35.
Physical Appearance; Images of Women - Idealized Love Object; Imagery and I . . Motifs in Women's Writing - Muse.
Doolittle. Hilda (H. D.): "Helen"; Trilogy ; Helen in Egypt ; Bid M e to Live ; Prrlimps$ ; Hedylus . -
- - -- - - , - 4
271
/ 994. Martin, Dellita L "The !Madam Poems' as bramatic Monologue," B/U+ AmericorrtjHeroture - -
/ >
F& , XV.3.1981.97-9: e
- - C
Black Women - Identity; Revision - of Stereotyps; Racism; Identity, Female. \
Hughes. Langston: "Madam Poerik".
995. Martinez. Inez "The Poetry of Judy Graham Margins, 23.1975,48-50.
-. Lesbian(s) - Identity; - Political Activism. Women and; Militarism, Women and; '
Identity. Female. - *
Grahn, Judy: Edward the Dyke and Other Poems ; "A Woman Is Talking to Death ".
996. Montefibre, /menet "In Her Own Image: Feminism and Poetry," S w h ~ u s f Arts Revrew .20. 1981/82,3&l7. - -
Female/Fe-minist Aesthetic; Literary Tradition - Women's WaFe from; lkgery and Motifs ih Women's Writing - Wooing Woman - Muse - l3pivem Language. Paaiarchal - as Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience&&anguage. Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse.
Boland, Eava.: "Tirade againsf the Mimic Musen; Bosbn. Lucy: "Hybrid Perpetual"; Fell, Alison: "Girl's bifts": Montefiore. Janet: "The Mistress to Her hver"; Kch. Adrienne: "The Burning of Paper instead of Children";, "T$amcendental Etude"; 4
Shulman, Sheila: "Hard Words, or Why Lesbians Have to Be Philosophersw; Stevenson. Anne: Cwespondences .
1
997. Moore, Patrick. "Symbol. Mask, and Meter in the Poetry of Louise Bogan." Women and Literature, I (New Series), 1980,67-80.
' a Language. Women's Use of - Encoding - Irony; P e r w e in Women's Poeuy; Writers, Women - Conditions of.
Bogan, Louise: The Blue Estwies .
998. Moorhead, FinBEi. "Goodbye Prince Hamlet: The New Australim Women's Poetry." Meanjn , XXXIV.2, 1975, 169-79.
/
Qriters, Women - Conditions of; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Australian Literature, Women and.
B e ~ e t f Stephanie: Madame Blackbas ; Jennings. Kate: Come to M e M y Melanchdy Baby ; Jennings, Kate, ed.: Mdher Prn Rmed ; Maiden, Jennifer: Tacticc-Novack. Carol: Living Alone Withart a Dictionary ; Viidikas. Vicki: Ctidirion Red .
Musher. Andrea "Virtuoso literature for TWO and Four Hands." Morgim .1/2/3,1976,108-10. )-'?
independence, Female; ' Power, Female; h e Characters in Women's Writing. - Wakoski, Diane: Virtuao Literatwe ji-r Two a S .
3 Newlin, Margaret. "Unhelpful Hymen!': Marianne Moore and . Hilda Dmlittle." E w y in Criticism , ~XVII.3,1977,216-30.
Literary Tradition - Women's-Absence from; Writers. Women - Conditiohs of (20th Centuy American); Marriage - k d Conflict with Creativity; . Love Poeby. Women's. .,
c. = 4
Doolittle, Hilda (H. D.); Graves, Robert The White Gaddess ; Moore, hiarianne: " Marriage".
Ostriker. Alicia me Nerves of a Midwife: Contemporary American women's Poetry," B .r
Par- Poetry in Review . VI.1.1977.69-87. Identity, Female; Self, Divided; Physical Appearance; Sexuality. Female; Confessional Mode in Women's Writing; Feminism, Twentieth C e n h - Influence on Women's Writing; Anger, Female; Passivig. Female; Love Poetry. Women's.
Overview of contemporary kmerican women's poetry. *
Ai; Alta; Atwood, Margaret; Bark Sharon; Berge. Carol; Clifton, Lucille; Gioscfii, Daniela; Giovanni, Nikki; Grahn, Judy; Griffin. Susan; Jong, Erica; Kizer, Carolyn; Kumin, Maxine; Levertov. Denise; MacDonald Cynthia; Moore, Honor; Morgan, Robin; Mueller, Lisa; Owens. Rochelle; Piercy. Marge; Plath, Sylvia; Rich, Adrienne; Rukeyser. Muriel; Schott. Penelope; Sexton, Anne; Swenson, May; Van Duyn. Mom; Wakoski. Diane.
~smiker, Alicia. "Her Cargo: Adrienne Rich and the Common Lgmguage." American Poetry Review . Vm.4.1979. 6-10. .
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing T Birth - Rebirth - Transformation - PhilosopherQueen; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Inflvence on Women's w r i h g ; Language, Patriarchal - Dualism; Style. Female vs. Male; Revision - of Myth; Identity, Female'; Anger, Female; .Male ~harackrs in Women's Writing.
0
Rich, Adrienne.
Pdenpaugh. Angela. "Beaming New," Mcvgins ,1/2/3,1976.32-33,193.
Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence od Women's Writing; Feminist Process - in . p.- b. -
Iverson, ~ u u i k and Kathrun Ruby. e&.: We Beccxne New: Pwms 6y &%uciii-Y American Women. . , b * .
8
1004. Rebolledo. Tey Diana "The Bitter-Sweet Nostalgia of Childhood in the Poetry of Marpanla 4 Cota-Cardenas," Frontiers. V.2.1980.31-35.
I hica can as, writing by and about; Ethicity in Women's Writing; Childhood:
Cota-Cardenas. ~ a r ~ a h t a : Noches Despertando in Conciencias ; Siete Poetas .
Ridgeway, Jaqueline. "The Necessity of Form to the P m of buise Ekvjan.' ~ n e n ' r ' ' a
-3 3
Studies, V.2.1977.137-49. a -
Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship - Conditions of; Religlbn. Women and - Christianity; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Love. Romantic= desmfrive Power ' of; Imagery and Motifs in 'Women's Writing - Quest; Pendue in Wbmen's Poetry. 6
&@ .n
Bogan. Louise: "A Tale"; "Body of This Death "; "Fifteenth Fare Sleepw ; "Little Mbelia's Song".
* Rosenbaum. Jean. "You Are Your Own Magician: A Vision of Integrity in
f
Piercy," Modern Poetry Studies, VIII.3.1977.193-205. ,
Self-realization; lodependen&. Female; Power. l em ale; Thought Mojes of. Female vs. Male; Male/Female Relationships.
Piercy. Marge: To Be of Use ; Breaking Camp ; Hard hvmg\
1
Sadoff. Dianne F. "Mythopoeia, the Moon, and Contemporary Women's Poeuy," Massachusetts ~ e v i e w . XM.1.1978.93-110.
Imagery and Motifs in Womenls Writing - Moon; . Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Great Goddess; Female/Feminist Aesthetic; . Revision - of Speotypts; Sexuality, Female; Personae in Women's Poetry; Critical Schools, Other. Relation to
aeminist Criticism - Jungian Criticism.
Leveitov. Denise: 0 7 2 e and See ; Relearning the Alphabet ; Wdcorki. Diane: The Motwcyle Betrayal-Poems ; Willard, Nancy: Nineteen Masks f i thgb)&d Port .
B-
Sage, Frances. "Contemporary Wome of Texas." Texas Quzrlerly. XXL2. 1978. M- 108.
~eg iona l ik in Women's Writing; Imagery and Motifs ' Worn 's Writing - '
G Landscape - Death; Idqntity, Female; Male/Female elationships; Mother/Dgughter Relationships; Ethniaty in Women's Writing; Chicanas, Wrihng
i
274 ,a
#'
IBVC Poetry, Women's.
0 . kbmn, JtKtrh. 'Ya i im Clmcr : Wharinc I& B k and Utharinc CoPnan.' Fnmticn. IV.1. ITS'. 9-67. * .
- -
- M d y Unraqpmtb - hfrnitlk &, YPfemtships. F d c : Stn@ Women; Communities of Wornm; tesbian(s) - Wriren. Conditions of - lnvc Pmw; tovc Poctry, Women's; Writers. women - Condiuons of (20th Centup American)+ . ffatcs. h t h a r i n e Lee: Y e l lw Clovec A B a d oJRenembrance .
4
1012. S m , T h r k a i n e . 'The Poetry of Michele Murray." Women's S~udter . ViI.l/Z 119XO. ---
195-213.
Wriurs, w b c n - 13ondibns of (20th Century American); Marriage - a d Conflicr with Creativity; M o r f i e r h d ; Illness. Women wdi ,
% 1
Indudes nine p&ms which Murray planned for a second voiurnc b
Mumy. Michele: The Grea Morher . ,--
-1013. Shore, Rima "Runembering Sophia Pamok (1885 - 1933).* Cdrrrom: Six. 11.3.19110. 176-93. /
+ Lasbms) - Lnve Poetry - Literary Tradition - Writers. Conditions of; Writen. Womm - Rediscovered - Conditions of (Nth Cenrur). Russian); Russian literature, omen and; Hqerrxexism; Alieaation. Female; Imager). and Motifs in Women's Writing - Muse.
1 - Parnok published critical reviews under the pseudonym Andrei Polyanin hght poems b)
- ~ a m k . niwfy tTanslated into En@& by Rirna Shore. precede che anicle on pp. 171-75.
Paizmk. Sophia: Rarer ofpienu ;,The Vrne ; M u c ; Ar Half Face ; Sobrarue Sriravaenij .
-- S
1014. S t e m . Erlene. .mArye Spencer.. CLA ~au& . XX1.3.1978.400k09. Black W m c n - and Harlem Renaissance Writers. Condmons of; Cult of True W d o b d ; Images of Women - Black Woman as Bearer of Culrure; Imagery and. Motifs in Women's Writing - Garden - Rowers; Writers, Women - Conditrons of.
1
Spence~. h e . - , . . < *
% . -
1015. Smson. Erlene. 'Rediscovering the Harlem Renaissance: Georgra Ikuglas Johnson, 'The Ne* Negro Poet'." Obduzn . Lr.l /2. 1978. 26-34.
0.
Black Warnen - and Harlem Renaissance - Writers. Rediscovered Kelauonshtps wlLh Men; imagery and Motifs inYWumen's Writing - E)lsgursc; Writers. Women - Rediscovered; Malefiemale Relationships; Love Poem, Women's
Smusr. ~exhier. "The Poetry of Dobson. ~ a r w ~ % d Wnght: 'Within the Bounds af f;eminine=ibili@?," Memjn . XXXVILI.3.1979.334-49:
Style. Female vs. Male; Artist Woman as; Pregnancy/Childbirth; Motherhood; Australian Literature. Women and
Dobson. RW&; H a r w d . Gwen; Wright, Judith.
Tanenhaus. Beverly. "Politics of Suicide and Survival: The Rbetry of Anne Sexton and Adrienne Rich," Bucknell Review . XXIV.l. 1978.106-18.
Passivity. he; Suicide. Women and; ' Power. Female\; MaleIFemale b
.Relationships; .Feminism+ Twentieth Century - Influence dn Women's Writing.
Rich. Adrienne: "Autumn Equinox" ; -"An Unsaid Word"; "Orion" ; " ~ e - ~ o r m i n g the Crystal" ; "Trying to Talk with a Man"; "Tear Gas"; "The Phenomenology of A@erw; "From an Old H o w in America"; "From a Survivor"; "Waking in the Dark"; "To Judith. Taking Leave" ; Sexton, Anne: "The Red Shoes" ;. "Jesus Dies"; "With Mercy for the Greedy"; "Flee on Your Donkey"; "Iron Hans"; "The Fury of Beautiful Bones"; "The Fury of Cocks"; "You All Know the Story of the Other Woman"; "Loving the Killer"; "Fifth Psalm" ; "The Gdd-Monger".
+- >
Weir. Lorraine. "'Fauna of Mirrors': The Poetry of Heben and Atwood," Ariel , X.3.1979, 99-113.
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Mirrors - Enclosure - Escape.
+ Atwood. Margaret: Power Pditics ; T w e Headed Paems ; The Jownals of Susanna -- M d ~ e ; The Circle Game ; Rocedures fw Undergrand ; Hebe& Anne: Le Tombenu
des Rais .
Wells. Karen. "Elsa Gidlow." Margins. 23.1975.53-53.
Lesbian(s) - Literary Tradition - Love Poetry - Writers, Conditions of; Writers, Women - Conditions of (20th Century American); Literary Tradition - Women's; Luve P o e a - Women's.
Gidlow. Elsa: On a Grey Thread ; Wild Swan Singing ; Makings fw Meditation ; Ask No Man's Pardon .
W I H i m . Mary C. "The Poetic Knife: Poetry by Recent Southern Women Poets," S m h Cardina Review, XI.1.1978.44-59.
Personae in Women's P m ; Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorskip; Domes& Poetry; Nature, Women and; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Doubles Pain - Mutilation; Black Women - and Black Consciousness;, Sexuality, Female.
Adcock, Betty: Walking Orrt i Bevington, Helen: When Farnd ; M BemdijU h j y People ; Daniell. Rosemary: A S d Tour oft he De Ann: Poetics South ; Carbon 14 ; There Is No Balm in Birmingham ; Wage War on Silence ; My Bones Being Wiser ; Onions and R Puritan Carpenter ; Adam's Dream ; Sanchez, Sonia: Home Blues Bwk fbr Blue Black Magical Women ; W E a BaddDD Ross: Wilderness of lrrdies ; Welcome Eumenides ; Walker. Alice: a Petunias ; Walker, Margaret: F a My People ; Prophers* a New Day : October Jiurney . - -
B
1021. Wright, celeste Turner. "Elinor Wylie: The Glass Qlimaera and the Minotaur." W a e n ' s . Studies, VII.1/2,1980,159-70, 2
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Jewels; Writers. Women - Conditions of (20th Century American); Love, Romantic - Destructive Power of; Male Characters in Women's Writing. , - -
Wylie, Elinor: "Jeweled Bindings"; Angels and Earth1 y Creatures ; Cdlected Poems ; Incidental Numbers ; The Venetian Glass Nephew ; Black A r m w .
1022. a m , Marilyn. "Mother Lore: A Sequence for Daughters." Great Lakes Review . V1.1.1979. 37-'39.
Mother/Daughter Relationships; Sexuality. Female; , Rites of Passage.
~ i h t y , Judith: - "Letters to My Daughtersw:
I
--- - - -
xxm; TW~FETIETH CENTURY DRAMA-- .- -
1023. Adams, Elsie B. "Shaw's Ladies." Show Review. XXII1.3,1980.112-18. iI
Independence. Female; Class Position, ~omen ' l . . v
* Overview of Shaw's female characters
' Shaw. George Bernard
\ 1024. Anderson. Mary of Womq in Three Plays," Negro
American Literature
Images of Women -ck Matriarch - Black Woman as Bearer of Culture; Revision - of ~ter6types.
Baldwin, James: The Amen C w k r ; Childress, Alice: Wine in the Wilderness : Hamberry. hrraine: A R p n in the Sun.
#
1025. Anonymous. "Nightwood Theatre Tells the True Story of The True Stwy aflda Jbhnron , fireweed ,7,1980.3&35.
Fkminist Process - in the Theatre; Theatre, Women in the; Money, Women a d ; Collectivity in Women's Writing.
c-
Describes Nightwood Theaue's adaptation of Sharon Riis' novel The True Story of Ida h h m , in particular their Struggle to fund and find space tg perform the.play
Riis. Sharon: The T m Story of Ida lbhnsosl ; Daele, Christa Van; Grant, Cynthia; Renders. Kim; Vingoe. Mary; White, Maureen
S
1026. l3a.j. Milla. "The Subrnissiqe Wife Stereotype in Anton Chekhov's 'Darling'." CLA kaud , XX.4.1977.533-38.
Q
- Images of Women - Submissive Wife - Sex Object - Castrating Bitch - Career Woman; Speech Patterns. Female vs. Male; Russian Literature. Women and.
Chekhov. Anton: "Darling ; Solzhenitsyn, Alexander: The ~CUU:er '~ard .
1027. Benneg krone Jr. and Margaret G. Burroughs. "A Lorraine Habberrq'. Rap," Freedamways, XIX.4.1979.226-33.
4 *
Black Women - Writers, Conditions of - and Black Feminism; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influe 7 Women's Writing; Images of Women - lack Matriarch;
/ i
I
C,
4
- - - - Twentieth , Century Drrrnsa
Writers,"Women - Canditiom06f (20th ckmury Americax$ -+ - -- -
<
Hansbeny, Lorraine: A Raisin in the Sun . v
1028: Billman. Carol. "Women and the Family in American Drama," Arizona Quotterly ,'XXXVI.l', . 1980,3548. . a J
Family, Women and; Mamage - as Entrapment - and Woman's Fulfillment; Power, Female - Lack of; eminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing: Independence, Female; 9cx RO~S - Rejection of.
AIbee, Edward; BootheJhre: The )?omen ; Clothers, Rachel: He and She ; Jacker. . Corinne: Bits and Pieces ; Lamb, M w : Tire Mad don^ ; Memarn, Eve. Paula Wagner
o and Jack Hoffsiss: Ow of Olu Fahers' Hacse ; Miller. Arthur; O'NeiH, Eugene; Terry, 7; Wolff. Ruth: Megan: Cdm Down Mother ; Apprwching Simone ; Williams, Te The Abdication .
0.
1029. Brown, Lorraine k "'For the Charaners Are Myself: Adrienne Kekedy's Funnyhcuse of g ' Negro ." Negro American Literature Fwwn , IX.3,1975.86-88.
Black Women - Identity - Sexuality - Suppressed Artist; Madness. Women and; Sdf, Divided; Artist Woman as; Identity. Female; Sexuality, Female.
Kennedy, A d r i e ~ e : Funnyh e of a Negro. % 1030: Bnmne~, Cornelia. "Roberta Sklar: ~oward Creating a Woman's Theatre," The Drama Review ,
XXN.2.1980.23-40. b
Feminist Process - in the Theatre; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Feminism, - Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Collectivity in Women's Writlng.
t. Sklar, Roberta, Clare Coss and Sondra Segal: The Daughters Cycle Trilogy.
103p Carter. $teven R "Commitment amid Complexity: Lorraine Hansberry's Life in Action." Melus , VII.3.1980. 39-53.
Black Women - Writers, Conditiorls - and Black Community; Political Activism. Women and; Theatre, Women in the. "I Theatre of the Absurd, Women and the; Fenfinism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Racism; Imperialism, Women ahd; Writers, Women - Conditions of (20th Century American); Literary Tradition - Women's Awnce from
. . Includes a chronology of Hansberry's work and activities *.
Hamberry, L o b e : The Sign in Sidney Bitcslein's Wi.&x ; What Use Are Flowers? ; "In Defense of the Guality of Men"; The Drinking G w d ; ",^tmone de S?auvoir and
-- 200 e
L - T
, . The Second Sex : Commentary" ; "The Arrival of Mr. Todog". LL +- e
Curb, Rosemary. "The de of Femihist Theatre in America," Chrysalis, 10,1980, 63-75. $
.I
Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's writing; Feminist Pr& - in the Theatre. i -
( Includes an annotated list of American feminist theatres, 1967-1575 ,
Curb. Rosemary. "An U ~ o n a b l e Tragedy of American Racism: AIice ~hildxess'i Wedding ' . Band ," Melus , W.4,1980,57-68. '
Theaue, Women in the; Black Women - and Black Feminism - Absenq: From Literary - Tradition - Relationships with Men - Qlation to While Women; Racism; Miscegenation; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Malefiemale r
Relationships. D
r
Childress. Alice: Hwence ; Trarble in M i d ; Wedding Band: A Love/Hizte Story in Black and White ; Wine in the Wilderness ; Mop: A Black Love Stwy .
Curb, Rosemaq K. "'Goin' through Changes': Mother-Daughter Confrontations in Three Recent pfays by Young Black Women," Kentucky Fdklwe Record: A Regional Journal of Fdklae and F d w e . XXV. 1979.96-102. [Citation Inc]
Black Women - Identity - MotherIDaughter Relationships - Sexuality; Adolescence; Rites of Passage; MotherAhughter Relationships; Sexuality, Female; Identity.
* Female.
Charles. Martie: Black Cycle ; Franklin, J. E: Black Girl ; Jackson, Elaine: Toe Jam .
Curb, Rosemary K. "Fragmented Selves in Adrienne Kennedy's Funnyhwe of a Negro and The Owl Answers ," Theatre Journal , XXXII.2.1980.180-95.
Black Women - Identity - MotherAhughter Relationships; Self, Divided; Androgyny; Imagej and Motifs in Women's Writing - Hair.- Skull - Blood - Birds - Entrapment; Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Miscegenation; Identity. Female;
. Mother/Daughter Relationships.
Kennedy. Admeme: Funnyhwe ofa Negro ; The Owl A n s w h . f
De Lauretis. Teresa. "The Left Hand of History," Heresies, I.%. 1977/78,23-26
Forms, Innovative, in Womes's Writing; Feminist Process - in the Theatre; FemaleLFeminist Aesthetic; Public and Private. Separation of; Political Activism,
Women apd; Love, R d t i c - Destructive Power of: Self-sacrifice: Madness, Z / -
Women and; I U a n Literature. Women and.
Describes play &d prose piece based on Gramsci's relationships with the Schucht sisters.
Cambria, Adele: Amore come rivduione ; ~onostante Grainsci . 'h
1037. DuPlessis, Rachel Blau "In the BosoB of the Family: Contradiction and Resolution in Edward Albee," Minnesota Review. 8,1977.133-45.
- Public and Private, Separation of; Sex Roles; Masculinity; Family, Women and; Powe~, Male; Power. Female - Lack of; Images of Women - Castrating Bitch - Sex Object - Shrew.
Albee, Edward: Who's Afiaid ofVirginia Wodf ; A Delicate Balance ; The American Dream ; Tiny Alice ; The 200 Story.
1038. Dworkin, Susan. "Whose Role Is It Anyway?." Ms. . IX.2. 1980. 81-82.
Theatre. Womer ;r, the; Sex Roles - Rejection of.
M b e s current productions of the plays cited below in which parts w&en for men ire played by women. Article is followed on page 8F by a brief discussion by four American actresses of male roles they would like to play
7
Beckett Samuel: Waiting f a Gaiut ; Clark, Brian: Whose Life Is It Anyway?.
a"
1039. Eliot, Jeffrey. "Ntozake Shange: Genesis of a (%oreopoem," Negro History Bulletin . XLI. 1978. 797-800. [Citation Inc.]
Feminist Process - in the Theatre; Collectivity in Women's Writing; Black Women - Writers, Conditions of; Writers, Women - Conditions of.
Shange. Ntozake: /or c d a e d girls who hove considered suicide/when therainbow is enuf.
d
1040. Fifer. Elizabeth. "Put Languagein the Waist: Stein's Critique of Women in Geography and Plays ," University of Michigan Papers in Women's Studies. II.1.1975.96-102.
Lesbian(s) - Sexuality; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Clothing - Food; Love, Romantic; Revision - of Stereotypes; Sexuality. Female.
\
Steh, G e h d e : ~ e o & h ~ and Plays .
Fleming. Martha. "Lisa Steele: Hearing V ,
-
Oral Tradition. Women and - Storytelling; Autobiography, Women's; -?hlegtity,- - -
Female; . Narrative Strategies iq Women's Writing - Circularity; Theatre, Women in the.
Indud? texts of two of Steele's performance pieas @p. 21-29): Mrs. Pady , and Hello, My Name Is Sandy
Steele. Lisa: The Ballad of Dan Peoples ; Birthday Suit ; Scars and Deficts ; A Very Personal Story.
Flowers, Sandra Hollin. ."Colored Girls: Textbook for the Eighties," Black American Literalwe F m . XV.2.1981.51-54.
Black Women - and Black Consciousness - and Black Community - Relationships with Men; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Male/Female Relationships.
- 7 Shange. Ntozake: fop cdwed gitls who have considered slu'cide/when the iainbow is e m f .
Forsyth, Louise. "First Person Feminine Singular: Monologues by Women in Several Modem Quebec Plays," Canadian Drama, V.2.1979,189-203.
~ u e b s o i & Writing by and about; Alienation, Female; National Liberation, Wcmen and; Power, Female - Lack of; Sexuality. Female; Images of Women - Victim; Revision - of Stereotypes.
Barbeau, Jean: Sdange ; Garneau, Michel: Quatre a quatre ; Germain, Jean-Claude:&s Hauts et les bas dla vie dune diva, Sarah M e w d par eux- memes. Une Mondoguerie bcufle ; Guilbeault, Luce, Marthe Blackburn, et al.: Lu Nef des Surcieres ; Maillet Antonine: Lu Sagdne ; ~ e r q r x e r g e : EUe ; Roussin, Claude: Une J& ; Tremblay, ' Michel: A Tai, pacr t ~ ~ j w s , ta Marie- Lac.
Friedman, Edward. "The Thonis on the Roses: A Reading of Benavente's Rosa de Otono ." Internatid /burrurl of Women's Studies. IV.2.1981,168-72.
Images of Women oral C&todian - Mediator; Self-sacrifice; Revision - - of Stereotypes; Spanish Literature, Women and.
Benavente. Jacinto: Rams de Otono . -
Gottlieb. Lois. "Obstacles to Feminism in the Early Plays of Rachel Crothers," University of Michigan paPrs in Women's Studies ,1.4.1975,71-84.
Malefiemale Relationships; Independence. Female; New Woman, The; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Money, Women and; Work, Women and; Love. Romantic - Destructive Power of; Motherhood
- -- Twentieth -- Century Drama
e y
Crothers, Rachel: Criss Cross ; The ~ e c t k ; The Three ofUs ;MyselfBetting : A Man's .
Wwld ; He and She ; Ourselves ; Yatng Widom .
1046. G W e b , Lois C. "The Perils of Freedom: The New Woman in Three American Plays of the 1900's." Canadian Review of American ~tud&s;-Tfl.l: 1975.84-98.
a Feminism, Twentieth Century - influence on Men's Writing; New Woman. The; Images of Women - Adventuress - Careet Woman - Fallen W o w - Moral Inferior3 Temptress; Sexuality. Female; Divorce. 5
m
Fitch. Clyde: The C i t y ; Moody. William Vaugh: The Faith Healer ; Walter. Eugene: The Easiest w a y . > . ' %
Grant, Diane. "Nellie McClung and the Red Light Theatre." This Magaiirre . VI11.5/6.1975, 1w. -
' a
Feminist Process - in the Theatre; Political Activism. Women and; Theatre. Nomen in the; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing.
Grant Diane: What G l w i m Times They Had ; McClung. Nellie.
1048. Greenfield, Myrna. "Acting. Pregnant?," Spare Rib. 110.1981.6-8.
Theatre, Women in the; Feminist Process - in the Theatre; Pfegnancy/Childbirth; Work, Women and.
Interviews with members of Beryl and the Perils, a British feminist theatre group. two of whom were fired when they became pregnant - Author interviews both the two women fued and the women who fired them - -
- 1049. Greiner, Norben "Mill, Marx and Bebel: Early Influences on Shzw's Characterization of
Women," Shaw Review. XVIIL1,1975.10-17. -
Feminism. Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Men's Writing; Family. Women and- - as Agent of Women's Oppression; 'Socialism, Women and; Marriage - as Entrapment - as Economic Necessity; Prostitution; Sex Roles.
C Shaw, George Bernard. 0
1050. Holledge, Jules and Jane Comfon "The Lost Theatre," Spare Rib, 55.1977.33-36.
Feminist Process - in the Theape; Political Activism, Women and; Class Position. Women's.
Anonymous: The Wavnan With a Pack ; An English woman's Home ; True W m A shod ; f
. - . . -- Twentieth Century Drama B
4 . - en' €low& Street .; P h r d Force ; Briem: .A Womanm Her Own; B j o n k a : ~ - -
a
Gmurtlet ; Hamil,ton, Cicely: A Pageant ofireat W m e n ; Selfridges Employees: The Supage Girl.
*- - 1051. HopwwL Alison. "'Hey What's That From' - Edward Albee's Whds Ajilrd ofVirginia W d f ," I ."
Atlantis, m.2(Part l), 1978; IWlll. 7 h
Iniages of Women - Sexyally Devouring Woman - Witch - Animal - Earth Mother; Power. M e ; Marriage - and Male Authority. ,
Albee, Edward: Whds Afiaid ofVirginia W d f ; Shakespeare, William: Twelflh Night ; Strindberg, August: The h e of Death ; Thurber, James and m o t Nugent: The Male Animal.
% 1052. Kingsbury,,Marty. "Way Off Broadway: A Feminist R e s p l , ~ to Theatre." The Seco Wave, Y.3.1979.32-38.
Feminist Process - in the Theape; ~e-sm, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Forms. Innovative, in Women's Writing; Collectivity in Women's Writing. - .+ Profiles, including interview excerpts, of four women's theatre companies: Rhode Island Feminist Theatre. Circle of the Witch. Spiderwoman, and the Muse Concqtions Inc.
w
1053. Kishwar. Madhu et al. "A Women's Theatre Workshop," Manushi ,4,1980,24.
Feminist Process - in the Theatre; Indian Literature. Women and; Theatre, Women in the.
1054. . Kolb. Deborah <-"The Rise and Fall of the New Woman in American ma Emccational Theatre Jrownal . XXVII.2.1975.149-60.
New Woman, The; Eeminism, Twentieth C e n v - Influence on Women's Writing - Influeace on Men's Writing; Divorce; Independence. Female; Money, Women and; Sexuality. Female - and the Double Standard; Marriage -and Male Authority; Work, Women and.
Crothers. Rachel: A Man's Wwld ; He and She!; Mwy the Third ; When Ladies Meet ; Heame, James: Margaret Fleming ; Shwe Acres ; Kelly, George: Craig's Wifi ; Williams, Jesse Lynch: Why Marry'.
1055. Kxouse, Agate Nesaule. "Doris Lessing's Feminist Plays," W d d Literature Written in Engllih , '
XV.2,1976,305-22.
Male/Fcmale Relationships; Masculinity; Male Characters in Women's Writing;
Motherhood; Independence, Female. P
- - -
Lessing. DO&: Play With a Tiger ; Eoch His Own Wilderness. '?
Lebowitz, Andrea P. "Jackie Crossland: West Coast Woman of Theatre." C - d i a n Drama . V.2, 1979,83-93. * -. - .
A Feminist Process - in the Theatre; Writers. Women - Conditions of; Pacifism, Women and; Theatre, W m e n in the.
Crossland, J&&: Orient Malone ; The Lust of the
Express ; Rinse Cycle ; The Passion of Rubella Mae Mucho Earl Grey Tea ; Ruins of S- Permar- . -. -
Lennox, Sara. "Women in Brecht's Work," New German Critique . 14.1978.83-96.
Images of Women - Child-Woman - Earth Mother - Other - Sex Object; Power. Female - Male Fear of; Public and Private, Separation of; Critical Schools, Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism - Marxist Criticism; German Literature, Women and.
' Survey of Brecht's work. A
Brecht, Bertolt
Mael, Phyllis. "Feminism and Theatre: A Drama of Our Own." Chrysalis, 10.1980.51-62. *
Feminist Process - in the Theatre; Literary Tradition - Women's; MotherIDaughter Relationships; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing.
Includes an extensive annotated bibliography of plays by women which reveal "Ihe impact of feminism".
Mael. Phyllis. "Beyond Hellman and Hansberry: The Impact of Feminism on a Decade of Drama by Women," Konws Q d e r f j r , XII.4.1980.141-44.
Feminist Process - in the Theatre; Literary Tradition - Women's; -Feminism, D
9 Twentieth Century -Influence on Women's Writing. d
Mann, Maureen. "AM Henry: A Canadian Paycock," Canadian Drama , V.2,1979,129-38.
FatherlDaughter Relationships; Family, Women and; Autobiography, Women's.
Henry, Arin: Lulu Street ; b g h , Baby, Lmcgh .
1061. Messenger. Ann. "Betty &bert's 'Sqrieux-de-Dieu'." Cunudiun Litemture .85.1980.16670.
D
% Twentieth Century Drzml ' , - - - --
+-
. . o
Sex RoLes; Sexuality. Female; Images of Women - Virgiq - Whore - m L M m e ~ < - Humour. Women's Use of.
G 3
Lamben Betty: Sqrieux- de- Dieu .
Miller. JeamtMarie A. "linag& of Bl@ Women in Plays by Bla& Playwrights," CLA . I k
/ a r r d , XX.4.1977,494-507. , e .
, . .F \
Images of Women - Tragic Mulatto - Native ~notiz Black Mammy - l?dthfid Sewanl - Black Mauiarcb - Black Woman as Bkarer of Culture; Revision - oCStereotypes; -. \ . Black Women - and the Family - Motherhood - and Religion - and B4cL Consdousnes~ q . - ; 7 '
, $7 - Relationships with Men - Identity - Lesbians - and Work; Racism; Sh%ery; Class Position, Women's; Miscegenation; Suicide, Women and; Family, Women and; Motherhood; Religion, Women and - Christianity; MatelFernale . / . Relationships; 1dentity;i;emale; Work, Women and '
Baraka, Imamu Amiri (LeRoi Jones): A Black Mass ; Experimental Death Unit # I ; Madheart: A Mwdity Play ; Bullins, Ed: Gain' a BuHo ; In the WineTime : IR New England Winter ; The h $ e x ; The ~abtr lks Miss Marie ; The Gentleman Caller ; Childress, Alice: Flmence ; T r d e in Mind ; Wine in the Wilderness ; Wedding Band: :
A Lme/Hrrte Stary in Black and White ; Franklin, J. E: Black Girl ; Hansberry, Lorraine: A Ruidn in the Sun ; The Drinking G d ; Kennedy, Adrienne: Funnyhouse of a Negro ; The Owl Answers ; Milner, Ron: Whds Got His Own ; The Warning - A Theme IQr Linda ; What the WineSeIlers Buy. 0
+
A4oleac. Barbara. "They Spgk: Who Listens? Black Women ~ la~wr i~h&," Black W d d , XXV.6 1976.28-34.
Black Women - Absence from Litemry Tradition - Writers, Conditions of: ~acism; Revision - of Critical Tradition - of Stereotypes; Publishing, Women and; Theatre. Women in the; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Writers, WomZL Conditions of. b
0
Burrill. Mary: They Thuf Sit in Darkness ; ChildreB;Alice: Wedding Band: A LmeIHate Stay in Black and White ; Grimke, Angelina Weld: Rachel ; Hamberry, ' Lorraine: A Raisin in the Sun ; The Drinking Gaud ; Miller. May: Graven Images ; Thompson, Eloise Bib: "A Reply to the Clansmen".
&
Moore, Honor. "Theatre Will Never Be the Same," Ms. , VI.6,1977,36-39,7475.
Feminist Process - in the Theatre in Rm31 - 'ngMrriting Groups; Forms. Innovative, in Women's Writing; Collectivity in Women's Writing; RGvision - of Stereotypes.
Bm. Anne; Curran, Leigh; .Enquis~ Per Olovf ~ o r t s o n , ~ ~ c b & &owe. ~inai Jackerv @rime; Jackson, Elaine; Kernochan, !kah; mb, Myma, btman.Loretta; Merriam, Eve: Viva Reviva ; Menger, Deem, Jeremy Blahnik, et al.: Iht As &eepwdken ; W e r , Susan: 27ux ; Rahman. Aishah: Unjinished W@& Cry in No Mads'Land While a Bitd t/ J ' i . - --
**'.;- - % . -
7 .
9 * 6 . ._ " \+ t
a . p.7
, - ,
287 - - + - * '<x ----% . . s - ", V
4 - , . . - ?f. ' L
-,. .' - . ? 1 -
C -
Dies in a Gilded Cage ; -Rw. Judith; Shange, Nto&e; Sharp Saundra; S t e m Zlr; Stone, Fmncine: D d Sure ; ~wadm.,.Elizabeth; Teny, Megan; Wasserstein. Wendy: Uncommon Women and Others ; Wersba, Barbara; Wolff. Ruth.
e
d Q 1065. Niemi. Irmeli. " ~ o d e r n women Playwrights in ~ in lah&"~ ~ r i l d U te raue Today. IJV. 1. 1980.
54-58. i
Family. women and; Male/Female Relationships; Identity, Female; Madness. Women and; Scandinavian Literature, Women and. - 3 *
+ J&04 &o: Ulabyes jk lltgitimate Children ; Koskiluomq Maaria: The l j f i o/ Fredtikrr Runeberg ; Manner, Eva-Liisa: Burnt Orange ; Suosalmi. Kem-Kaarina: The Old Bride .
I - v
1066. Perindolo, Lillian "Feminist Theater: They're Playingin ~ t o r i i " Ms. . IV.4. 1975. 1 0 l y .
Feminist Proms - in h e Theatre.
h x k l i s t of American women's theatre groups 9
1067. Rahmarl Aishah. "To Be Black Female and a Playwright," Freedmways. XIX.4.1979.25660.
Black Women - A d @lack Community - w r i m : Conditions o< Images of Women - . Black &fattiarch; Writers, Women - Conditions of (20th Century Ameri~an); Theatre; Women in the.
Rahman, Aishah; Hansbeny, Lsrraine; Kennedy. Adrienne. 1
1068. - Rich, Adrienne. "The Problem withvlorraine Hansberry." Freedmways . XIX.4.1979. I&-55. . i
Black Women - Writers, ~ o n d i t i o h of - and Black Feminism - Relation to Whiw .Feminism; Biography, Women's; Writers, Women - Conditions of (20th Centur). American); Feminim Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Tticoluc, . Women in the.
Hansbeny, Lorraine: Les Blancs ; To Be Young, Gijied and Black ; A b u n in the' Sun ;" The Sign in q n e y Bncrtei<s Window ; "In Defense of *e'E.quality of Men".
1069. Rogers. Elizabeth S. "The Abandoned Woman as Subject for Comedy: In'bpez Rubio and ,Mihura," Lmguuge Qltarterly , XX.1/2,1981,44-48.
Humour, Women as Objects of; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Images of Womcn - Waiting Woman - Victim; Revision - of Stereotypes; Madness, Women and; Spanish Literature, Women and. I
9
0 *-*
1 f
' I 4.
i 5
288
1G72. Wusbim An&a 3enttx~ 'For Color& Girlt. Suicide or Smrgete.g Musachwfls Revlcw , sxii.;. lu~. seja.
C
&k W m n - and t he Farnit) - and Rtltgion - Relatiomhips with Ma; Suidde. -
W m and; Wurk, W m e a and; Aticx~tidn. Fanale; Communiti& of Wmm; b5m; W e f F d e R&iti&ips; - . Rcli&+r~ Women and - Christianit)-; . " .
- -* Funily. U'omtn md.
6. t'milv I- 'Notes rn Lesbian Theatre.' The Drraa Rnms . XXV.1.1981.41-56.
FMtiarst Rorrs - in the Theam; Labis@) - Qmmg Out - Relahnships - Litcrar): Tndrtion: Wocdvity in Woanen's Writing; Feminism. Twentieth mtufy - - iafluemx cm W-mwnas Writing; tirtrarf fmditid - Wam,ni's; Tbeam, Women in
7
209
4
- . $.
t . 3 -
< - - - - - - %eatietltu+~)ramp a
\ - the. " '
--
includes' overview of contemporary lesbian theaue companies and collectives, prirnarilv Amerim - -
Chambers. Jane: A Lute Snuw ; Summer a Bluesfish Cove ; Kasten, Kate: On the Neuata ; SLlar. Robem, Clare Coss andSondm S e a : The Duughlers Cycle Tnlogy ; Suncirde, Par, Cory. 4
i
J - 1075. Spunaer, Qwame. sin^ Betty Jumped: Theatre and Feminism in Melbourne." Meanpn .
XXXWII 3,1919,368-77. 1 .
~eminist Process - in the Theatre; Feminism Twentieth Century - Influence on Womcn's Writing; Collectivity in Women's Writing; --Australian Literature. Women
- M . , \
B&&cs Ausualiar~ feminir~ theatre. primaril? The Women's Theatre Group in Melbourne, and the impact of feminist theatre on mainstream theaue
. >
4
1076. Sutherland, Cynthia. "American Women Playwrights as Mediators of the 'Wo.m Problem'," , Madern Dmma . XXI.3.1978.319-36.
J
Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Seh Roles - ~ejectiob ' * of; Marriage - and Conflict with Career; Work. Women and; Male/Fer~ale
Relationships. . e
Makes paning reference to additional ~mericanbornan playwighb. and ad.dhona1 Qorka by .the authors cited below t
Crothers. Rachel: A Man's Warid ; He and She ; Mary the Thtrd ; When Ladles Meer ; .SixQne- Act Plays ; Gale. Zona: Miss Lulu Bet; ; Glaspell. Susan: Woman's Honor ; , Trifles ; The Verge . .
Talben Linda Lee. "Ntozake Shange: Scar19 Woman and Witch P o e ~ " Umop , IV.1,1980, 5-10.
hagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Witches/W~tchnafi - Muse Rebirth; Images of Women - Fallen Woman - Witch; Revision - of Stereotypes - of iulyth; Power. Female; Black Women - Identity - Sexuality; Forms. I~ovat ive, in Women's Writing; identity. Female; . Sexuality. Female. .-
0
S b g e . NtozaLe: fi cdared grls who have con@kred surcrde/ when the rcunbow 1s enuf.
8. 1078. Tener, Roben L "Theatre of Identity: Adrienne Kennedy's Portrait of the Black W Studies in Back Literatwe . VI.2.1975.1-5.
Black Women - Identity; Self, Divided; Miscegenation; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Birds.
-
Kennedy, Adrienne: The Owl Answers.
-- P
1079. Vanita. Ruth. "Strengthening the ' S 6 g Man - Helpless Woman' Stereotype," Manushi, 5. 1980.26-27. ,
-
. Indian Literature, Women and; Images of Women - Victim; Violence against Women; -Feminist Process - in the Theatre.
Manch, Jan Natya: Pdice Charitram .
1080. Venables, Clare. "The Woman Director in the Theatre." Theatre Quarterly, X.38. 1980.3-7.
Theatre. Women in the; Work, Women and - Professional Careers; Power, Female - . -- Women's Ambivalence toward; Artist. Woman as; Family, Women and; Images of
Women - Earth Mother.
1081. Wandor, Michelene. "Positive Discrimination," Spare Rib, 39,1975,37-39. ,, Feminist ProceG - in the Theatre; Fernale/Feminist Aesthetic; Political Activism,
- women and; Theape, Women in the.
Churchill, Caryl: Objections to Sex and Vidence ; McGrath. John: Fish in the Sea.
1082. Wandor, Michelene. "Women Are Uncharted Territory," Spare Rib, 62.1977.10-13.46
Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Feminist Process - in the Theatre; Theatre. Women 'in the.
9 Gens. Pam: Queen C h r i s t i ~ ; My Warren ; Ajler Birthday ; Dusa, Fish, Star and Vi .
- 1083. * Waterman, Arthur. "Susan Glaspell's The Verge : An Experiment in Feminism." Great Lakes
Review . VI.1. 1979, 17-23. --- --
Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; New Woman, ,The; Artist. Woman as; Madness. Women and; Violence, Female.
Glaspell. Susan: [nheritws ; The Verge .
4 Weinnub. Rodelle. "The Irish Lady in Shaw's Plays." Show Review . XXIII.2, 1980.77-89.
Bla&-Wom - Nriters. Conditions of - and fjlack Feminism; Revision - of st~~types; . bower. F m e ; Racism - Relation to Sexism; ' Thba~e. Women in the; fit.&. Wornen - Conditions of (20th Century American).
Hansberry'. b W e : A Raisin in the Sun ; The S ~ g n in Sidney Brusteln's Window ; The Drinking G d d ; L ~ s BlanQ.
%
1086. Wolff. Ruth. " f i e hQtbetic5 of Violence: Women T e Rough .- Stuff." Ms. . VI1.8. 1979. 30-36.
Violence ~g&St Women; Violence. Female; Feminist Process - in the Theatre; GllectivifY in Warnen's Writing.
plays belob are coUaboratively authored works; article cites names of directors and/or o f i ~ b f i O ~ Y
~ - Johnson PeaP~r and Judah Kalatoni: A Girl Stms Out . . . ; Miller, Joanna: Infernal -
Inprry ; bkRcYbolds. Janet: Hey, Rube.
-- XXIV. TWENTIETH CENTURY MISCELLANEOUS - - -
Popular Culture - Magazines; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Sex Roles - Rejection of. - e w
I
1088. Anonymous. "A Brief History of Feminist ." ~eminia' , International 2.1980.1W5. [Citation
Japanese Literature. Women and; ~ e h n i s t Process - in Publishing.
1089. Ban. Sharon. "Feminist Pubhhq: Where Small Is Not So Beautiful." Resuurcesfbr Feminist Resetarch. IX.3,1980,1414.
Feminist Process - in Publishing; Publishing, Women aqd; Popular Culture - Magazines
1090. Bracken, Jeanne and Sharon Wigutoff. "Sugar and Spice: That's What Children's Books Are Still Made of." Women's Studies Newsletter ..V.3,1977.18-20.
Childhood; Sex Roles; Feminist Process - in Publishing; Feminism. Twentieth : Century - Influence on Women's Writing - Influence on Men's Writing.
Discusses results of a study conducted by the Feminist Press of the influence of feminist publishing and the women's movement on publishers of children3 books
1091. Brady. Kate. "From Fantasy to Reality: Magazines for Women," Feminist . International 2, 1980. 5-8. [Citation Inc.]
e2
Japanese Literature. Women and; Popular Culture - Magazines - Comics; Physical Appearance; Love. Romantic; Images of Women - Career Woman - Happy Housewife.
. Overview of contemporary Japanese girls' and women's magazines
4
,. ' 1092. Brown, Linda J. "Dark Horse: A View of Writing and Publishing by Dark Lesbians," ~ i n i k e r Wisdom ,13,1980.4450.
- 0
Black Women - Lesbians; Lesbian(s) - Publishing - Writers, Conditions of; Feminist " Process - in PubMmg; Writers, Women - Conditions of.
293
'+
B - - - - - - - - Twentieth, Century Miscellrunous
Contains infomktion on black lesbian publications, political groups, writing and performing groups, and self-published writers
Bryant, DOrothy. "My PublisherlMyself," Frontiers. IV.1.1979. 35-39. - -
Publishing, Women and; Feminist Process - in Publishing. - 0
Bryant, Dorothy: Ma Price's J w n a l ; The Kin of Ata Are Waiting* You ; Mrss Giardini, .
- - Bunch, Charlotte. "Feminist Publishing: An Antiquated Form?." Heresies. 1.3. 1977. 24-26.
-4
Feminist Process - in Publishing; Lesbian(s) - Publishing.
Notes for a talk at the Old Wives BooksGe, San Fmdsco, February 27, 1977
Cheda, Sherrill. "Small Mags: Feminist," Emergency Librarian , IV.5.1977,14. b
Feminist Process - in Publishing. \ i \
Gives information directed to 1ibradanS on the following feminikt periodicals: chrysalis . Heresies. Quest , Signs. and Women's Studies Abstracts
Cowan, Ruth Schwariz. "Two Washes in the Morning and a Bridge P& at Night: The American Housewife betwken the Wars." Women's Studies. 111.2.1976. 147-72.
I
Popular Culture - Magazines; Advice Literature; Familk Women and; Work. Women and; Motherhood
Discussion of American Home. The Ladies' Home J w n a l , and McCdl's magazines Q
Creighton, Jane. Joan Larkin, add Ellen Shapiro. "Out & Out Books," Srnister Wrsdom . 14, 1980,106-09.
Feminist Process - in Publishing; Lesbian(s) - Publishing. -- Dialogue among the editors of Out & Out Books, an American lesbian-feminist press.
Cruiksha.uk Peg. "The Sensitive Blue Pencil: One Journal's Approach to Feminist Criticism," Margins. 23.1975.37-39.
Feminist Process - in Publishing; Lesbian(s) - Publishing; Fernale/Feminist Aesthetic. .
6
* Description of So's Ymr Old Lady. a Minneapolis lesbian feminist jo-
Culley. ~ a r ~ a r e i "Dorothy Dix: The Thirteenth Juror." irucrnationnl J y n a l of Wanen's Studies ,11.4,1979,349-57.
a
crime, Women and; Violence. Female; Anger, Female; Violence against Women; Power. Female - Lack of; Poverty, Women and; Work, Women and. *
Discussion of Dorothy Dix's newspaper crime reportage ,
Gilmer. Elizabeth (pseud. Dorothy Dix).
Desmoines. Harriet "Women's Press Collective," Sinister Wisdom ,1.2,1976, 120-22.
Feminist Process - in Publishmg.
I n t e ~ e w with Martha Shelley of the Women's Press Collective
Doughty, Frances. "Charlotte Bunch on Women's Pu"blishing," Sinister Wisdom ,13,1980, 71 -77.
Feminist Process - in Publishing; Subculture. Female. /
Interview with Charlotte Bunch
Dyc, Gloria. "Women's Journals: An Overview," Margins, 16,1975.12-18.62.
Feminist Process - in Publishing; Communities of Women; Writers, Women - Conditions of (20th Century American); Collectivity in Women's Writing; Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Lesbian(s) - Publishing.
Acmunt of author's experience as p m of editorial collective of Moving 4 and review of history of American feminist periodicals in the early seventies
Elgie. Kae and Pat Smith. "Press Gang: An All-Women Print Shop. 'If Men Weren't Like They Are'." Hysteria. 1.1. 1980. 8-11.
Feminist Process - in Publishing; Politid Activism, Women and.
Interview with Pat Smith of Press Gang, a Canadian feminist print shop and ptess
1104. Farrington. Jean and Crisline C. RO;. "Feminist Periodicals." Seriafs kevier . V.4, 1979. 13-24.
Feminist Process - in Publishing.
- Contains four to five paragraph descriptions of twenty-three feminist periodicals
1105. Flor Cornelia Butler. "Women in Latin Yunerican Fotonovelas: From Cinderella to Mata % Hak, Women's Studies Internutional Quarterly, III.1.1980.95-104.
Latin-American Literature, Women and; Popular Culture - Fotonovelas; hve . Romantic; Sexuality, Female; Violence against Women; Pornography; Images . of Women - Virtuous Woman - Fallen Woman - Temptress; Class Position. Women's; Passivity, Female; Sentimental Fiction; Reader. Woman as; Incest
Overview of Latin-American fotonovelas including Cwin Tellado. Extaris. Los Q Addescentes , and Pecado Mortal
1106. Frank, Miriam. "Femjnist Publications in West Gennany Today." New German Critique .13. 1978,181-94.
Feminist Process - in Publishing; Feminism, ~wentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; -Socialism, Women and; Political Activis=. Women and; German Literature, Women and.
Survey of current West German feminist publications and presses -
-- 1107. Glazer, Nona. "Overworking the Working Woman: The Double Day in a Mass Magazine." Wmen's Studies International Quarterly, 111.1, 1980, 79-93.
Work. Women and; Popular Culture - Magazines; Images of Women. Theory of; Class Position, Women's; Images of Women - Angel in the House - Career Woman - Happy Housewife.
Examines twenty-six issues of Working Woman. which began publication in 1976
1108. Crier, Barbara "The Naiad Press," Sinister Wisdom. 1.2.1976.116-19.
Feminist Process - in Publishing; Lesbian(s) - Literary Tradition - Publishing; Literary Tradition - Women's.
I n t e ~ e w with Anyda Marchant and Muriel Crawford, founders of Naiad Press, an American lesbian-feminist press.
1109. Hamnann, Susan M. "Prescriptions for Penelope: Literature on Woman's Obligations to Returning World War II Veterans," Women's Studies, V.3.1978.223-39.
Advice Literature; Militarism, Women and; Popular Culture - Magazines; Sex
..
0 - - -- Twentieth Century MisceUaneous
Roles; Self-saerificc; Work, Women and; Independence, Female; Male .. P-
Bonding; Sexuality. Female. \
Overview of the following magazines: Harper's, Hacse Beauti@. Saturday Evening Pm . Ladies' Home Journal ,
Helterline. Marilyn. "The Emergence of Modem Motherhood: Motherhood in England 1899 to 1959." International &nu1 of Women's Studies , Jli.6.1980.590-614.
a -
Advice Literature; p"2 Culture - Magazines; Images of Women, Theory of; Motherhood; Childh Cult of True Womanhood.
Overview of the folloking &azines: The Lady's Realm, The Wcunan at Home, The Ludies Home Paper A Weekly Jwnal of Gentlewomen, Baby: The Mdher's Magazine, The Maher's Magazine and Baby, G o d Housekeeping, Woman, M i e s Home ~ o m b n i o n Hmehdd Series, No. I: All Abact Baby. Wlfe and Home, W m n ' s How, Woman's Sphere. Hwewue , W m n Today, Good Hwekeeping's Baby Book, Woman Herself
Higgins. Susan and Jill Matthews. "For the Record: Feminist Publications in Australia Since 1975." Meanjn . XXXVm.3.1979.321-33.
Feminist Process - in Publishing - in Research; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence On Women's Writing; Autobiography, Women's; Australian Literature, Women and
Contains discussion of current Australian feminist periodicals, presses, anthologies, '
publications, and research. Excerpt also published in Resources fw Feminist Research , IX.4. 1980. 16-17. - - -
d'Aprano, Zelda: Zelda.- The Becoming of a Woman ; Garner, Helen: Monkey Grip ; Jennings. Kate, ed.: Mother Pm Rooted ; Tomasetti, Glen: Thwaghly Decent People ; Wessoa. Gwen. ed.: Brian's Wifi, Jenny's Mum ; Zurbo, Sandra, ed: Stwies ofHer Life.
11 12. Ho, Mary Louise. "In the Tradition of the Wise Woman," S p r e Rib ,103,1981,31-34.
Popular Culture - Magazines; Advice Literature; Images of Women - Victim; Marriage - as Entrapment; Power. Male - and the Social Order -; Feminism,
-- Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing.
Examination of advice columns in popular women's magazines Woman . Woman's Own, . and Carmopditan
1113. Honey. Maureen. "Images of Women in The Saturday Evening Post 1931-1936." &d of '
Popular Culture , X2.1976.352-58.
- Popular Culture - Magazines; h&es of Women - m e e r Woman - GM-Next-Doar - - - --
Immoral Working-Class Woman; Work. Women and; Independence, Female; Marriage - and Conflict With Career. I
Overview of Saturday Evening Post short fiction
1114. . Honey. Maureen. "~ecruitin&omen for War Work: OW1 and the Magazine lndustry during World. War H." Jaitnal of Americun Culiure -47-53. [Citation Inc.]
Popular Culture - Magazines; Work, Women and; Militarism, Women and; C Images of Women - Happy Housewife.
Documents use of popular culture for propagainda purposes through the American Office of War Information during World War 11.
11H. Jay, Karla "A Look at Lesbian Magazines." Margins. 23,1975.-19-21.
Lesbian(s) - Publishing - Identity - Positive h g e s of; Feminist Process - in PublisMng; Identity. Female.
\ 1116.' Jones, Janet "The Amazing Women's Weekly Juggling Act" Refractory Girl. 17,1979,Xi-30.
i
Popular Culture - Magazines; Images of women - Liberated Woman - Happy Housewife; Re-vision-ofstefeotypes; P h y s i d ~ e a r a n c e ; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; ~ u s n d i q Literature. Women and.
Discussion of Australian Women's Weekly, Clio .'and Cmmopditan 3
1117. Kaiser. Kathy. "The Nzw Women's ~ag&nes: It's the w e Old Story," F~intiers , IV.1. 1979. 14-17. *
. Popular afiture - Magazines; Advice Literature; Physical Appearance; Work. Women and - Professional Careers - Need for Useful Occupation; .Family. Women and; Money, Women and; Images of Women - Career Woman.
Discussion of five contemporary women's magazines: Working Woman , The Executive Female Digest , Self, Women T d a y , and New Woman
. . " ~ a l i a , Narendra Nath. "Images of Men and Women in Indian-Textbooks." ~ a b a t l v e Education Review . XXTV2(Part 2). 1980.209-23.
Indian Literature, women and; Sex Roles; Language, Patriarchal - and Sexual Stereotyping - Generic Masculine; Images of Women - Submissive Wife - Jealous Woman - Parasite - Irrational Woman - Child-Woman - Narcissist - Deceiver; * Power,
Content analysis of 41 Indian textbooks. 20 Hindi and 21 Enghsh language*
Kemedy. Susan Embrook. "The Want It Satisfies hnonstrates the Need of It': A Study of Life and Lobor of the Women's Trade Union League," In te r~~iona l Jart'nul o m e n ' s Studies. III.4.1980.391-406.
Work, Women and -; Industrialization, Women and; Political Activism, Women an4 Class Position, Women's; Working-class Women, Writing by and about
Discussion of Lifi d Lubor , j o d of the National Women's Trade Union League (U.S.). published from 1911 to 1921.
Field, Amy W.; Franklin, Stella hiaria Miles (Miles Franklin); Henry. Alice; Robins, Margaret
/
Kinard, Lee. "Timely Books," Sinister Wisdom ,13,1980,86-87.
- -Feminist Process - in Publishing; Lesbian(s) - Pubtishbg. X
Interview with Celeste Charles, pubicist for Timely Books, an American lesbian-feminist Press t
Kirby. Linda and Cristine C. Rom "Signs ." - ~e@s Review. V.4.1979.5-8.
Feminist Process - in Publishing - in Research; Academia, Women in
Discusses editorial decisions regarding j . goals, smkture and format of the American feminist journal Signs .
+ /
Klepfisz, Irem "Spinsters. I&" Sinister Wisdom. 13,1980,77-80.
~ e k h i s t Process - in Publishing; Lesbian(s) - Publishing.
Interview with Maureen Brady and Judith McDaniel, pub ber ican lesbian-feminist press
1123. '
Lanyi, Ronald Levin "Trina, Queen of the Underground Cartoonists: An Interview," Jaunul of Popular Culture . XII.4.1979.737-54.
Popular Culture - Comics; Artist Woman as; Independence, Female; Sexu_ality. Female; Violence against Women; Pornography; Revision - of Stereotypes; - Anger, Female; Lesbian(s) - Sexuality. -
Robbins, Trina. - -
k
Lazer, Charles and S. Dier. "The Labor Force in Fiction." J w n a l of Cmmunication . XXVIE1.1978,174-82.
Popular Culture - ~ a ~ a z h e s ; Work, Women and.
Content analysis of American magazine fiction, 1940-1970 for depictions of working women, arid comparison with U.S. census figures on Women's employment
1125. * Le&%y. "'The Advice of a Real Friend': Codes of Intimacy and Oppression in Women's Magavnes 1937-1955," Women's Studies International Quarterly. III.1,1980.63-78.
P.opular Culture - Magazines; Work, Women and; Advice Literature; Reader. Woman as; Images of Women - Career Woman - Happy Housewife; Class Position. Women's; Public and Private, Separation of. -
Discussioa of Hwne Char . Peg's Paper , Woman . Woman's Friend , and Woman's Own
I
1126. Lippit, Noriko Mizuta. "Seito and the Literary Roots of Japan? Feminism" InternafiomI Jownal of Women's Studies. 11.2,1979,155-63.
~ e Japanese Literature. Women and; Feminist Process - in Publishing; Feminism. . Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Love. Romanuc; Writers.
Women - Conditions of (20th Century Japanese): Sexuality. Female - and theSDouble Standard; Confessional Mode in Women's Writing; Political Activism. Women and. - Discussion of Seito , Japanese feminist literary journal. 191 1-191 6
6
Haruko, Hiratsuka (pseud. Hiratsuka Raicho); Noe. Ito. * -
* 1127. McCallum, Pamela . "World without Conflict: Magazines for Working Class Women," The Canadian F m . LV.654.1975.42-44.
4-'- --, /
,
Popular Culture - Magazines; *~orkifi~-Class Women, Writing by and about; Class Pdtion, Women's; Domestic Fiction.
Overview of True Confessions wries 4
1128. McDowell. Margaret B. "The Children's Feature: A Guide to the ~ditors' Percqtions of Adult ~eaders of Womenls Magazines." Midweg Quarterly. XIX.1.1977.36-50.
Popular Culture - Magazines; Family. Women and - as Woman's Sphere; Sex .. Roles; Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment; Physical Appearance; Images of . Women - Happy Housewife; Work, Women and - Domestic Labour; Advice
"
I - A- - Twentieth Centmy h&c6llanedus -- ,,
Literature. - A- - A-L-
0
Examination &,The Delineutor from 1906 to 1911 and McCdPs from 1954 to 1958 , 0
Manushi Collective. "The Media Game: Modernizing Oppression, Reporton the Big Business of 'Women's Magazines'," Manushi. 5,1980.37-46.
. " . Popular Culture - Magazines; Indian Literature. Women and; Images of WO& -
- Sex Object - Submissive Wife - Fashion Plate - Happy Housewife - Intellectual Inferior ' - Superwoman; Humour. Women as Objects of; Advice Literature; Work, . Women and - Domestic Labour; Class Position, Women's; Political Activism, Women an&
Study of F e m i ~ . Eve's Weekly and Scrita over a one year period
P
Mitchel. Delores. "Wpmen Libeled: Women's Cartoons of Women," J w d of Popdm Cultwe, XN.4.1981.597-610. -
Popular Culture - Comics; Humour, Women's Use of; Physical Appeamvx; Power, Female; Sex Roles - Rejection of. --
Brand, Michele; Chevli, Lyn; Gregory, Roberta; Kominsky, m e ; Lyvely, Chin; Milrs, Lee; Noomin, Diana; -- Robbins, Trina; Rudahl, Sharon; Sutton, Joyce (pseud. Joyce Farmer).
Mijarnoto. Ken. "Ito Noe and the Bluestockings," The kpa~ interpreter. X.2.1975.190-204. , .
Writers. Women - Conditions of (20th Century Japanese); Japanese L i t e m e . Women and; Feminist ProcessOCeSS- inrPublishing; Political Activism, Women and; Feminism, " Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing.
History of the Japanese feminist magazine Seito which began publishing in 1911, particularly the involvement of Ito Noe - Haruko, Hiratsuka (pseud. Hiratsuka Raicho); Noe. Ito.
Modleski. Tania "The ~karch for ~ o m \ h o w in Today's Soap Operas: Notes on a Feminine Narrative Form," Film Quarterly. XXIII.1,1979,12-21.
Popular Culture - Soap Operas; Images of Women - Waiting Woman - Schemer - Virtuous Woman; Reader, Woman as; Language. Patriarchal. - as Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience.
1133.- Perebinossoff. Phillippe. " m t Does a Kiss Mean? The b v e Comic Formula aW the Creation of the Ideal Teenage ~ 3 1 , " hnud of Popular Culture, Vm.4,1975,825-35. . .
,
i u
/
-* - - - - - - Tweo~_Ceohrrp M m . -
popular Culnve - Comics: Adolescence; Lwe. Romantic; Images of Women - . Fashion Plate - ~ a r e k r Woman - Submissive Wife; Physical Appearance; Self-sacrifice; Rivalry. Female; Masculinity.
4 4" 1134. Prince, Gerald. "Narratives with a DifTerence." Diorritics, VI.2.1976.49-53.
Popular Culture - ~ a ~ a z i n e s ; Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment; h v e . Romantic; Difference. Theory of; French kiterawe, Women+and.
S w e y of Elle magazine L
1135. Rich, Cynthia. "Persephone Press," Sinister Wisdom .13.1980.81-85.
Feminist Process - in Publishing; Lesbian(s) - Publishing - SubcuIture; Subculeurc. Female. "
- Interview with Gloria Greenfield, Pat McGloin and Deborah Snow, publishers at. Persephone Press, an American lesbian-feminist press
1136. Rom, Cristine C. "Feminist Little Magazines," Serials Review. V.4. 1979,31-37.
Feminist Process in Publishing; Images of Women - Liberated Woman - Girl-Next-Door. --.
Three to four paragraph descriptions of eleven small feminist publiotio&: ~ f a k Maria. Calyx, Chomo- yri . Conditions. M y , Mdherwl lavnal. Paw , Room of One's Own . . Sibyl- Child . Sing Heavenly Muse!'. Women Talking. Women Lisrening
a 1137. Rymell. Heather. "Images of Women in the ~ a & n e s of the '30s and '40s" C d m Wancnrr Studies, 111.2, 1981, 96-99.
Popular Culture - ~ a ~ a z i h e s ; Images of Women - Happy Housewife - Child- Woman; Work.Womenand; Family,Womenand; SexRoles; Physical Appearance.
1138. Seaton, Esta. "The Pragmatic Woman in Edward Bok's Ladies Home kuunal." San h e '
Studies, V.l, 1979.30-45. 3
- Popular Culture - Magazines; Cult of True Womanhood; Work. Women and;
Money. Women and; Images of Women - Happy Housewife - Submissive Wife; Revision - of Stereotypes.
/J' Examination of Ladies Home Jaunal wing the years of Edward Ebk editorship. 1889-1919
i
302
Smtrh. G ~ e r i n c F. 'PuMishers on Books in Women's Studies.' Women's stlodies. mE, J975,
S ~ = R ~gru. 'HC ~ d m i l s . . . but Shc Conies~s.' Wanm's Studies InterMona[ w e d y . .
E'cminia Roam - 13 Publishing: Academia. Women in.
In Aurlbmn 1V5. the frm isw 6f Signc h m d of Wanen in Culture and Society appurcd GWrinc Stimpon. editor. rlkwss development of the prindplcs that prescndy govern the publication '
n
- . Femirun & - in PuMlrhing: ~pknh. Womm in: Obj&vit).. Myth of.
1 . Suncrmh ii@ter. 'Wommvs Mqazmu: Smiq up the 'New Woman' in the Same Old Ways,' (
- 3 t -
- - - - - - - - - - - pp i E e n l u w -T-
e * + . " S e d s Review 3 . 4 . I979.25-B. - -- A
a Popular Culture - Magazines: Images of Women: Liberated W o q n - Superwhan; Work, Women and; Famil}. A- Woihen and; Feminism, Twentieth Century - lnfluencr
/
on Women's Writing. . ,
,Discusses fepinist and traditirrnal content of domestic magazines such as Redbobk , &ies$me Jacrnal , McCdYs as well as new women's raaggzines such as Ms. and Waking Wo~non
h
1146. Smdeehd, JL~. "Aumalian Feminist Periodicals in the ~&enties," Hecure. V.2.1979.22-30.
Feminist Pr& - in Pu'blshtng; Australian Literature. W ~ m e n and.
O v e d e w of feminist newsle.nersy newspapers. magazines and j o ' d s (approximately 30) publihed in Australia in the seventies. Includes list of those currently publishing.
1147. Tilchen, MaiQ " H e m Vicm@Press." Sinister Wisdum , 13.19%. 87-90. - - -
Ferniqist &ocer~ -+f?hbiishing. , d
Interview with fiancy Taylor. Victoria ~ o o r e and Jocelyn Helaine Cohen 0: Helaine Victoria Press, an American feminist press
4
-77-
1148. Van Gelder, Limy, "Ho~off the Feminist Presses: New Journals." Ms. , V1.5, 1977, 95-98:
Feminist Process - in PubiishingP d
1149. West Celeste. "The Literary-IndWrial Complex." Chrysalis ,8.1919.95-103.
Publishmg, Women and. ?
Describes the increasing control by conglomeriites of the publishing industry in the U.S. Includes list of publishers owned by conglomerates (and other invesunen of these giant& e.g. defence) as wellbas a list of publishers acquired by other publishers. e article is .excerpted. from The Passionafe Perils of Publishing, Booklegger Press, $8.
5
1150. Williams, Brooke, "The Chador of Women's Liberation: Cultural Feminism and the Movement Press," Heresies 9. IIL1.1980.7O-74.
'. Political Activism. Women and; Feminist Process - in Publishing; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Great Goddess; Spirituality, Women and.
Dixusses the pervasive and negative ipfluence of 'cultural feminism' on the women's movement in particular on movement publications
I
b . .
*
L - - Twentieth Century Miscellaneous
1151. Wilson, Swamah J. "The Chaxlging h g e of Women in Canadian.Mass Circulating Magazines, 1930-1970." Atluntis . II.2(Part 2). 1977, 33-44.
Popular Culture - Magazines; Images o< Women. Theory of; Images of Women - Career Woman; Work. Women and; _ Motherhood
- - Content analysis of 50 years of Chatelaine and Maclean's ?
w & n t Fran. "Lesbian Publish Lesbians: My Life and Times with Violet Press." Margins .23. 1975.62-66.
Feminist Process - in Publishing; L&bian(s) - Publishing.
P P
1153. Winkler, Karen. "Signs of Change in Women's Studies: The Success of an Uncommon Journal," Chronicle ofHigher Education, XXI, September 15.1980.23.30.
- -
Academia. Women in; Feminist Process - in Publishing.
Discusses history, publication statistics and editorial policies of Signs
1154. Wolfe, Margie. "Feminist Publishing in Canada," Canudian Women's Studies, II.2,1980,11-14.
Feminist Process - in Publishing. -
a
1155. Yafie, Phyllis. "Canadian Feminist Publishing," Emergency Librarian , IV.5,1977,6-7.
Feminist Process - in Publishing.
Discussion of feminist presses and major feminist periodicals in Canada
XXV. TWENTIETH CENTURY CROSS-GENRE
Allen, Carolyn. "Margaret A t w d : Power of Transformation. Power of Knowledge." Eswys'on Canadian Writing. 6,1977,517.
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Transformation - Wilderness - Quest; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Circe; Male/Female Relationships; Revision - of Myth.
Prose and Poetry
Atwood. Margaret: jhe Jaunais of Susunnu M d t e ; S w - d n g ; Y ar Are Happy.
Allen, Carolyn. "Failures of Words. Uses of Silence: Quna Barnes, Adrienne Rich and Margaret Atwood," Regionalism and the Female Imagination. IV.1.1978.1-7.
Writers, Women - and Silence; Language. Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse; Language. Paniarchal - as Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience - Dualism; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Film-making. ,.
4 Prose and Poetry
Atwood, Margaret. Sw@ing ; Barnes, Quna: Nlghtwad ; Rich, Adrienne: The Will to Change ; Diving info3the Wreck. Y
Armatage, Kay. "Gertrude Stein and the Nineteenth C e n t w Women's Movemenl" R m of One's Own . IH.3, 1977. 28-36.
Feminism. Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Politid Activism, Women and.
Prose and Drama C
Stein, Gemude: Fernhurst ; The Mother of U s All. .
Bayard, Caroline. "Subversion Is the Order of the Day." Essays on Canadian Wrrtlng ,718. 1977.17-25.
Quebecoises, Writing by and about; Language. Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse - Syntactical Experimentation; Motherhood.
Prose and Poetry
Brassard, Nicole: Mwde en sa Choir ; Le Centre Blanc ; French Krsr ; M e w q u e Jingleuse ; L' Arner . - . -
1160. B e l 1 , R m P . "TheAbsenceoftheAftimWomanWriter,"€LAJaaMk,X-XE.4,lV8;-- -- -
491-98.
African Literature. Women and; Black Women - Absence from Literary Tradition - Literary Tradition; lmages of Women - Submissive Wife - Black whore - Animal; Work. Women and; Class Position, Women's; Racism; Literary Tradition - Women's - Women's Absence from.
Rose, Poetry and Drama v
Aidoo, Ama Ata: Dilemma of a Ghmt ; Amadi, Elechi: The C d i n e ; Gashe, Marina: "Village of Toil"; Ogot, Grace: "The Other Woman"; "The Family Doctor"; The
o R e d fund ; Land withour Thunder ; Pereira, Francesca Yetunde: "Two stranke ~ o r l d s " ; Sousa, Noemia de: "Appeal" ; Sutherland, Efua: Edufi ; "New Life at Kyerefaso". %f
Q
1161. Bell, Roseann Pope. "Gayle Jones: A Voice in the Whirlwind," Studia Afiiccna ,1.1,1977, 99-107.
Black Women - and Black Community - and Black Consciousness.
Prose and Poetry
Jones, Gayl: Cwregidora ; Evds Mun ; Almeda ; "The Roundhouse"; "Sentences: A Story"; "The Gathering" ; Beywrd M p l f (The Midright Confission) Far B r ~ h e r Ahh :
1162.r Blicksilver, Edith. "~raditionalism vs. Modernity: Leslie Silko on American Indian Women," Sacthwest Review. XLIV.2,1979.149-60.
North American Indian Womeq Writing by and about; Racism; ~ a t u r e , Women _ and; Love Poetry, Women's; Religion, Women and - North American Indian; Oral Tradition. Women and; Ethnicity in Women's Writing. - Prose and Poetry. Makes passing reference to Silko's poetry
Silko, M i e Marmon: "Lullaby "; "Yellow Woman"; "The Man to Send Rain Clouds".
1 163. Brown, Lloyd W. "Mannequins and Mermaids - the Contemporary Writer and Sexual Images in "' the Consumer Culture." Wmen's Studies . V.I. 1977.1-12. a
Images of Women - Sex Object; Sexuality. Fernale; Money. Women and; Physical Appearance; Racism.
Rose and Poetry
bye. ramata: The Rrrdionce of the King ; Lessing, Doris: A A.sp Maniage ; The Gdden Ndebodc ; Marshall, Paule: B m n Girl, Bnnvnstcmes em, Am: "In Darkness " P'
4
307 O
and Confusion"; Senghor, Leopold: "New York".
1164. Dean, Sharon and Erlene Stetson "Flower-Dust and Springtime: Harlem Renaissance Women." - Radical Teacher, 18,1980,l-8. --
Images of Women - Black Matriarch - Black Whore - Tragic Mulatto; Revision - of Stereotypes; Black Women - and Harlem Renaissance - Sexuality - Identity -
fl%otherhood - Passing - Relationships with Men - and Black Consciousness; Imagery I
and Motifs in Women's Writing - Enclosure; Motherhood; Sexuality, Female; Identity, Female; Male/Female Relationships.
Prose and Poetry -- /
l-
Hurston, Zora N e a k 2 1 k i r E j s W a c h i n g God ; Johnson, Georgia Douglas: The Heart of a Woman ; Bronze ; Larsen. Nella: Quicksand ; Spencer, Anne: Cardmg Dusk .
0
1165. Edward, Sister Ann "Three Views on Blacks: The Black Woman in An;erican Literature." CEA Critic . XXXWA, 1975.14-16. -
Black Women - Writers, Conditions of and Harlem Renaissance; Artist, Woman as; Images of Women - Blues Singer; Re-vision - of Stereotypes; Writers, Women - Conditions of.
Prose. Poetry and Drama Includes passing references to works of authors below not cited here by title, as well as other passing references to writing by and about black American women
3 Brooks. Gwendolyn; Evans, Mari; Hansberry. Lorraine: A Raisin in the Sun ; Hughes, Langsto?: "Mulattow; Hunter, Kristin: God Bless the Child ; Hurston. B r a Neale; Toomer, Jean: Cane ; Wheatley. Phillis. *
1166. Fonseca, Mary Lydon. "The Case of the Three Marias," Ms. ,III.7,1975,84-85,108.
Pomguese Literature, Women and; Feminism, Twentieth Cenhry - Influence on Women's Writing; Collectivity in Women's Writing; Forms. Non-Canonical - -- Letters; National Liberation, Women and. .
0 Prose and Poetry
Barreno, Maria Isabel, Maria Teresa Horta, and Maria Fatima Velho da Costa: New Portuguese Letters .
1167. Gates, J m e E "Elizabeth Robins: From A Dark Loritern to The Convert - A Study of Her Fictional Style and Feminist Viewpoin~" Masuchwets Studies in English . VI.3/4. 1978.25-40.
- Eerninism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Political Activism.'
~ o m e n and.
Prose and Drama
Robins. Elizabeth: A Dark Luntern ; Votes fw Women ; The Convet? .
Gilbert, Sandra M. '~ostumes of the Mind: Traqvfftism as Metaphor in Modem Literature," Critical Inquiry, W.2,1980,391-417.
-- Transvestism; Sex Roles; Androgyny; Power, Male; Power, Female - Male Fear of; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Clothing; Revision - of Myth; Pornography; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing.
Barnes. Quna: Nightvml ; Dmlittle. Hilda (H. D.): Helen in Egypt ; Eliot, T. S.: The Waste Lord ; Joyce, James: Ulysses ; Lawrence. D. H.: "The Fox"; Plath, Sylvia; Woolf, Virginia: Orlando ; Between the Acts.
1169. Gould, Karen. "setting Words Free: Feminist Writing in Quebec." Signs , VI.4.1981.6f7-42.
Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women'sWriting; Quebecoises. Writing by and about; Colonialism, Women and; National Liberation, Women and;
d Language. Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse - Naming - Reclaiming - 1'Ecritu.e Feminine - Syntactical Experimentation; Deconstruction, Feminist; Sexuality. Female; Writers, Women - as Subjects of Womenrs Writing; Mothermughter Relationships; Revision - of Myth; Collectivity in Women's
I Writing; Language, Patriarchal - as Dominant Discourse.
Prose and Drama
Amyot Genevieve: Jwrnal de Pannee parsee ; Bersianik, Louky: L'Euguelionne ; Le Pique- nique sur P Acmpde ; Boucher, Denise: The Fairies Are Thirsty (Zes fees on? sa$ ; Cyprine ; Brassard. Nicole: L'Amer ; French Kiss ; Cloutier, Cecile: "Utinam!"; Gagnon, Maqeleine: Luew ; Antre ; Guilbeault, Luce, Marthe Blackbum, et al.: Lu Nef
I des Sarcieres ; Mailhot, Michele: Lu Mort de Paraignee ; Savard, Marie: Bien a m d ; Theoret, France: Une V d x pour Odile ; Vezina, France: Les Jaunees dune anthropophage .
1170. Hoder-Salmon, Marilp, "The Intimate Agony of Mary McDougal Axelson's U@ Begins ," American Studies, XWI.2.1977,55-69.
Motherhood; PregnapcyXhildbirth; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing.
3
Prose and Dmma ~ i h o n of play, film and novel versions of Life Begins. Play's original title was Birth . changed to Li f i Begins for Broadway production, filmed in two
~wdntieth Century Cross-Genre - - - - - --
versions under the titles Lifi Begins and A Child Is Bwn . then~rewritten by Axelson as a novel entitled A Child Is Born
-
Axelson, Mary McDougal: Birth &fe Begins) ; A Child 1s Bwn . 9 *
Irvine, Loma.. "Surfacing, Surviving, Surpassing: Canada's Women Writers." Jaunal of Popular Culture, XV.3.1981.70-79. -
Literary Tradition - women's; Feminism, Twentieth Century - influence on Women's Writing; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Masculinity; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Enclosure; Motherhood; Family. Women and; Nature. Women and
Prose and Poetry. Makes passing reference to other contemporary Canadian women writers
Atwood, Margaret: Power Pditics ; The Journals of Susanna Maadie ; Surficing ; Engel. Marian: Sarah Bastard's N d e b d ; Laurence, Margaret: The Diviners ; The Fire- Dwellers ; Munro, Alice: Lives of Girls and Women ; Who Do Ym Think Ym Are?.
Ladenson; Joyce R. "Marge Piercy's Revolutionary Feminism." Society fw the Study of Midwestern Literature Newsletter. X.2,1980,24-31.
. . Utopias; Socialism, Women and; -ntieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Madness. Women and.
Prose and Poetry
Piercy, Marge: To Be of Use ; Dance the Eagle to Sleep ; Small Changes ; Woman on the Edge of Time .
Le Clezio, Marguerite. "Mother and Motherland: The Daughter's Quest for Origins," Stanfbtd French Review. V.3.1981.381-89.
Mother/Daughter Relationships; Identity, Female; Madness. Women and; Pregnancy/Childbirth; Language. Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse - Syntactical Experimentation; Phallogocenmsm; Images of Wdme_n: Other - Victim; Critical Schools, Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - Freudian/Psychoanalytx Criticism; French Literature, Women and.
Prose and Poetry %
Cardinal. Marie: Les Mots pour le dire ; Hyvrard. Jeanne; Les Prunes de Cphere: ;=Mere la mwt ; Irigaray, Luce: The Sex That Is Not One (Ce Sexe qui n'en est pa. un) ; Speculum of the Other W m n ( S p e c d m de I'autre femme).
- - - -- - - Twentieth Century Cross-Genre
1174. Orbh, Margaret "Maori Women's Writing: An Introductory Survey." World Litercrtwe - -
Written in English , ~m.1,1978,252-56.
Writers, Women - Conditions of; Maori Women. Writing by and about
prose and poetry %
Blank, Arapera: "One Two Three Four Five"; Grace, Patricia: ~aiuriki ; Kereama, - Matire: The Tail of the Fish: Mawi Memories of the Far North ; Makereti: The Old- Time Mami ; Mataira, Katarina: M m . Legends fbr Y ortng New Zealanders ; Paki. Rora; Penfold, Merimeri; Stirling, A. M.: A M 0 : The Lifi Stwy of Q M w i Woiman ; +
Sturm, Jacqueline.
r3
Pan, Carmen S a l w . "Surrealism in the Work of Estela Portillo," Melus , W.4,1980,8492. .
Chicanas. Writing by and about; Surrealism, Women and; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Independence, Female; Lesbian(s) - Relationships; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Moon - Light - Water; Suicide, Women and
Prose and Drama
Tramblay. Estela Portillo: "The Paris Gown"; "If It Weren't for the Honeysuckle"; "The Trees"; The Day of the Swallows. - -- -
PyneTimothy, Helen. "Perceptions of the Black Woman in the Work of Claude McKay," CLA J w n a l . XIX.2.1975.152-64.
Images of Women - Black Matriarch; Black Women - Relationships with Men - Sexuality; Self-sacrifice; Masculinity; Racism; Poverty, Women and; Prostitution; Miscegenation; MalelFemale Relationships; Sexuality, Female.
Prose and Poetry
McKay, Claude: Dialect Pmtry ; 'Home lo Harlem ; Banp ; Banana Bottom ; Selected Poems. ,
Reardon, Joan. "Fear of Flpng : Developing the Feminist Novel," international /acrnal of Women's Studies , L3,1978.306-20. -
Bildungsroman, Female; Feminism, Twentieth Cenhuy - Influence on Women's Writing; . Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship - as Subjects of Women's Writing; Female/Feminist Aesthetic; imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - l o h e y - Dreams - Circles - Blood - Time; Images of Women - Child-Woman - Idealized Love O b j h , Revision - of Stereotypes; Menstiuation.
Prose and Poetry
- --
Roe. Jill. "The Significant Silence: Miles Franklin's Middle Years," Meanjn , XXXIX.l. 1980. 48-59.
Writers, Women - and Silence - Conditions of; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Colonialism. Women and; Militarism. Women and; Political Activism, Women and; %male Relationships; Australian Literature. Women and.
- +
Prose and Drama. Lndudes information on many of Franklin's Gublished works written between 1909 and 1931
-- Franklin, Stella Maria Miles (Miles Franklin): The Net of Circumstance ; On Dearbwn Street ; Sam Price fiom Chicago ; Prelude to Waking.
Shockley, Ann Allen. "The Black Lesbip in American Literature: An Overview." Conditions, II.2.1979.133-42. '
Black Women - Lesbians - Writers, Conditions of; Lesbian(s) - Writers. Conditions of , - Wfiters, Silences of - Relationships; Heterosexism; Images of Women - Lesbian as . PseudwMale; Writers, Women - and Silence - Conditions of.
Prose and Poetry \
Angelou, Maya: I Know W h y the Caged Bird Sings ; Bogus. 5. Diane; Brown. Rita Mae: In Her Day ; Guy. Rosa: Ruby ; Jones. Gayl: Corregidwa ; Eva's Man ; White Rat ; Lorde. Audre; Parker, Pat; Shockley, Ann hlen: loving Her ; Suxkircle. Pat
Simon, Sherry. "Feminist Writing in Quebec," The Canadian Fwwn . LX.701,1980.5-8.
Forms. Innovative, in Women's Writing; Language, Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse - Syntactical Experimentation; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Quebwises, Writing by and a k u t
* i
Prose and Drama
Bersianik, Louky: Le Pique- nique sur PAcropde ; Boucher. Denise: The Fairies Are Thirsty (Zes fies ont st@ ; Brassard. Nicole; Gagnon. Madeleine; Lamy, Suzanne: D'Elles ; Marchessault, Jovette.
Smart. Patricia. "Voices of Commitment and Disuwery: Worcen Writers in Quebec," R m oj: One's Own. IV.1/2.1978,7-18.
Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Colonialism, Women
- and; National Liberation, Women and; Writers, Women - Rediscovered; Motherhood; Revision - of Stereotypes; Forms, hnovative, in Women's-W-; Quebecoises, Writing by and about
&ose and Poetry
Befsianilr, Louky: L'Euguelionne ; Blais, Marie-Claire: Nights in the Underground (Zes a
Nuits de I?UndergraUui) ; Conan, Laure: Angeline de Montbrun ; Dessaulles, Henriette: Fadette, /ownat &Henriette D e d e s ; Gagnon. Madeleine; Giguere. Diane;
4
Guevremont, Gennaine: The Orttfunder (lk Stmenant) ; Marie D i h e ; Hebert, Anne: "Eve "; Julien, Pauline; Laionde, Michele: "Speak white"; Martin, Claire: In un Imn Glove (Duns un Gant de Fer) ; Ouvrard, Helene: L'Herbe et la Vurech ; Roy, Gabrielle: The Tin Rute @onhew &Occasion).
Toth, Emily. "Dorothy Parker. Erica Jong. and New Feminist Humor," Regionalism aizd the Female Imagination, IIL2/3,1977/78,70-85. --
Humour, Women's Use&, Satire, Women's Use of; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Sexuality, Female; Anger, Female; Love, Romantic - Destructive Power of.
Prose and
Jong, Erica: "The Commandments"; Fruits & Vegetables ; Hdf Lives ; h e r o d ; How to Save Your Own Lijk ; Parker. Dorothy: Enacgh Rope ; Constant Reader ; "The Waltz"; "Big Blonde" ; Sunset Gun ; " A Telephone Call"; "The Wonderful Old Gentleman" ; "Little Curtis" ; "The Custard Heart" ; "The Banquet of Crow".
- i
Washington, Mary Helen. "New Lives and New Letters: Black Women Writers at the End of the Seventies," Cdlege English , XLm.l,1981,1-11.
0
Black Women - Identity - Literary Tradition - Suppressed Artist - and Black Feminism; lndependence. Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Rebirth; Anger, Female; Power. Female - Lack of; Racism - in Women's Studies; Identity. Female; Literary Tradition - Women's; Artist, Woman as.
Prose, Poetry and Drama
Bambara, Toni Cade: "Medleyw; Brooks, Gwendolyn: " M a u d ~ " ; Childress, Alice: Wedding Bond: A Lme/Hcrte Stwy in Black and White ; Deveawr, Alexis: "The Riddle " of Egypt Brownstone" ; Marshall, Paule: "Reena" ; B m n Girl, Brownstones ;-Morrison, Toni: Sula ; Song of S d m n ; The Bluest Ew ; Petry. Ann: The Street ; Shange, Ntozake: fi cdored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is e m f ; "Cornin to Terms"; Walker. Alice: In Lave and Trouble: Stcries of Black Wamen ; "Advancing Luna - and I& R Wells" ; White, Paulette! "The Bird Cage" ; Williams, Sherley Anne: "Meditations on History".
L
Wolf. Donna M. "Women in Latin American Literature," R m of One's Own. 1.3.1975.73-83.
- Tmtieth Century Cross-Genre , h
images of Women - Virgin - Madonna - Witch - ~oral~ustodian; Writers. Wo~llen- - - - Conditions of; Latin-American Literature. Women and.
Amado. Jorge: The V i d e g Land (Terra do sem Fin) ; Gabriela. Clove and Cinnamon (Gabriela, Cravo e Canela) ; De La Cruz. Sor Juana: "Reply UI Sor Filotea"; Gallegos. Manuel: Dona Barbara ; Marquez, Gabriel Garcia: One Hundred Years of Sditude (Cten Anos & Sdedad) ; Paz, Octavio; Stomi. Alfonsina: "Little Man".
XXVI. INTERVIEWS i - -
$ - . -
1185. Anonymous. "Inteniew: Dorothy Hewett,: Meanjin , XXXWI.3.1979.350-67. -
Writers, Womexi - Conditions of; Socialism, Women and; Political Activism, m e n and; Australian Literature, Women and.
Hewett, Dorothy: Bobbin Up ; Pandmis Cross ; Greenhme . .
0
Y
1186. Anonymous "An Atlantis Interview with Margaret Atwood,^ Atlantis. ~.2,1980,202-11; /
Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Womeh's Writim; Literary Tradition - Women's; Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Political Activism, Women and
* 9
Atwood, Margaret: fifi befm Man.
1187. Arizpe. Lourdes. "Interview with Carmen Naranjo: Women and Latin American Literature," Signs, V.1.1979.98-110.
*
Latin-American Literature, Women and; Writers, Women - Conditions of; politic$ ~ctivisxri Womm and; Soddism, Women and; Imperialism, Women and; National Liberation. Women and
5
Naraqjo. Carmen.
0
1188. Barber. Marsha. "An Interview with Dorothy ~ i v e & ~ . " Rmm of One's Own, V.1/2.1979,13-34. fa
Writers, Women - Conditions of; Aging. Women and; Political Activism, Women -
and
Livesay. Dorothy.
1189. Bernikow. Louise. "Muriel at 65: Still Ahead of Her Time." Ms. , VII.7.1979,14-18.
~ o l & ~ o d e l s , Female; Mother/Daughter Relationships; ~ a t h e r h u g h c e r '
Relationships; Political Activism, Women and; Artist, W o w as.
Rukeyser. Muriel. a %
1190. Blackwell. Henry. "An Interview with Ntozake Shange." Black American @eralure Fwwn . XIII.4, 1979.134-58.
Black Women - Wrikrs. Conditions of; Female/Ferninist Aesthetic; Black Feminist B
+ Literary Criticism. Theory of; Raeism: Wdtess. Women - Cenbitiom of. - Shange, Ntozde.
1191. Brissenden, Constance. "Erika Ritter: 'The very fact that I s w i v e is encouraging'," Firewed . 'i. 1980.68-70.
Artist Woman as; Theatre. Women in the.
Ritter. Erika: Automatic Pilot . - L3
1192. Bulkin, p l y . "An Interview with Adrienne Rich: .part I," Condition$ , I. 1.1977,W-65. i ri
L I
Lesbian@) - Invisibility of - Goming Out - Writers, Conditions of - Writers, Silences of; Writers, Women - and Silence - Conditions of; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; H e t e ~ x i s m : Teaching - Lesbian Writing: Lesbiankm - Previously Unrecognized - -
-- Rich. Adrientle: Snapshas of ti Dmcghre~ irr- Law ; OfWaonan Born .
1193. B u l b El l . "An Interviek with Adrienne bch: Pan 11." Conditions. 1.2, 1977. 53-66. -
Feminist Process - in Publishing; Collectivity in women's' writing; bb ian(s ) - Love Poeq; Literary Tradition - Women's; Language. Women's Use of - Naming; Subculture. Female; Revision - of Critical Tradition; Love Poetry. Women's.
Bulkin, Elly and Joan Larkin, eds.: Amazon Paetry: An Anrhdogy ; Grahn, Judy: "A Woman Is Talkipg to Death"; Rich. Adrienne: Twenty One Love Poems.
1194. Demeron, Pierre. "Interview with Violette Leduc," trans. Hazel Rowley. Hecate . 1V:E; 1978, 47-56.
- W nters. Women - Conditions of; Autobiography. W omen1$ other/ Daughter Relationships; Frencb Lite-e, Women and.
Leduc. Violette: La Batarde .
1195. Denne. Constam Ayers. Katharine M. Rogers. Elilabeth Hardwick Erica jonk N ~ K ) . Mifiord. and Elaine Showalte.~. "Women Novelist A Distinct Group?," Women's S ~ f r e s , Ul.l.1975, 5-28.
Writers. Women - Conditions of; Motherhood; Sexuality. Female; Suicide. Women and; Death, Women and; Publishrag, Women and; Subculture. Fernale; Literary Tradition - Women's; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Heroine's Marnage as Closure; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; Thoughr. Modes of,
0
Wdkcr. Marparc~ I
-+
f.miscs, Robin Rftmk). 'Firms towards an Androgynous Thcsut : Self-&ofiie," Fireweed . 7 , 1980.6-13.
Fraser, Kathleen. "On Being A West Coast Woman Poet" Women's Stud~es . 1'2. 1977. 153-60. + L - - -
Writers, Women - Conditions of - Anxiety of Authorship; Regionalism in Women's Wripng; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from.
Fraser, Kathleen, C
Gerson, Carole. "Who Do You Think You Are? Review-Interview with Alice Mumo." &XWTJ of - One's Own, FV.4, lg9 .2-7 . . -
Class Position, Women's; Identity. Female. \
b MUNO, Alice: w h o Do Yar Think Yac Are?.
c/ F
)
Gidlow, Elsa "Footprints in the Sands of the Sacred," Frontiers. IV.3.1979.47-51. - h l s ' i ( s ) - Writers, Conditions of - Love Poew, Spirituality . Women and; Work, Women and - as EGonomic Necessity; Writers. Women - Conditions of (20th Century American).
Tfie author discusses her life as a poet
Gidlow, Elsa
Godwin, Gail. " A Writing Woman." Atlantic Monthly , CCXLIV.4, 1979, 84-92.
Writers. Wometl - Conditions of - Anxiety of Authorship; Mother/Daughter Relationshid+ -;
Godwin descnk her development as a writer
Gordirner. Nadine and Susan ~&dner . "'A Smry for this Place and Time': An Interview with Nadine Gordimer about Bwger's Dnughter ." Xwpip .II1.2.1981.99-112.
Feminism. Twentieth Ccn&v - influe& on Women's Writing; FatherlDaughter Rclationsh~ps; Politid Activism Women and: Racism; African Literature, Womm and
* Gordimer. Nadine: Bwgefs Daughter.
G o d e y , Joanne. 'Talking to Pol PeIletier," firegeed ,7,1980,81(-96.
- ' I b t a t ~ e , Womm in rhe; Feminist Proctss - in the Theatre; Power. Female;
\
- - - - -- - - - - - - Interviews
Separatism and Feminist Literary Criticism; Quebecoises, Writing by and abut
Pol Pelletier reveals the story of her break with Le Theatre Experimental and the creat of Le Theatre Experimental des Femmes, which has produced Celebraions , La percr surt&. and Puce que c'est la nuit
Hamrnond, Karla. "A Margaret Atwood Intentiew with Karla Hammond," Concerning Pmtry . XII.2, 1979, 73-81.
Writers, Women-~:*@nditions of; . EducaTjon of Women; Feminism, Twentieth * Century - Influence 'n Women's Writing; , Gothic, Female. .P
~ t w o a i , hiargaret I
?=
/ ~a&ond, Karla "An Interview with Audre Lorde," American h e t r y Review. IX.2.1980. 18-21.
Black Women - Identity - MotherLDau$hter Relationships - Lesbians - Writers, Conditions of; Lesbian(s) - Writers, Silences of; Language. Women's Use of - Naming; Writers, Wane$ - and Silence - Conditions of; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Woman Warrior - Philosopher-Queen; Racism; Power. Female; Anger, Female; Black Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of; Identity. Female; Mother/Daughter Relationships.
h
Lorde, Audre.
Hamrnond, Karla "An Interview with Marilyn Hacker," Frontiers , v.3: 1980.22-27. 9
%nguage..Women's Use of - Reclaiming; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Literary Tradition - Women's; Revision - of Myth; Artist, Woman as;
Hacker. ~ a r i f i i-
h r d e : An Interview," Denver Quarterly. XVI.1,1981,10-27.
Lesbians 7 and Black Consciousness; n - Conditions of.
Harris, Valerie. "Power Exchange 2: Barbara Am Teer," Heresies. II.4,1979,42-44.
&ck Women - Writers, Conditions of - and Black Comrnunir);; form^ Innovative, in Women's Writing; Theatre. Women in the; Writers, Warnen - Conditions of (20th
r
Century American).
Teer, Barbara Anrl: Sojlly Comes a Whirlwind ; The Rlrual; W e Real Cad . ' . -/- -
Harris. Valerie. "Recycling: ~elf-Profile." Fireweed . 8. 1980. 12-18.
Theatre. Women in the; -Black Women - Writers. Conditjons OR Writen. Women - . Conditions of (20th Cennuy Canadibn).
Self-profile. journal format, includes excerpts from Hams' plays /
- 1
Harris, Valerie: Ice Game ; Nights Alone ; Redesther Play.
> n
Healey. Claire. "An Interview with Diane Wakoski." Contemporary brerafure . XVIII. 1. 1977, 1-19.
writers. Women - Conditions OR Confessional Mode in Women's Writing; Identity. Female; Publishtng, Women and
Wakoski. Diane: V i r t u m Literaturefi Two and F a u Hands.
Hebert. Dagiel, trans. "Simone de Beauvoir at 70: An Interview with Simone de Beauvoir." Atlantis, III.2(Pm 1). 1978, 2-20.
Sex ~016s; Independence. Female; Socialism. Women and; Violence against Women; Education of Women; Work, Women and - Professional Careers - Domestic Labour; Abortion; Prescriptive Criticism; French Literature, Women and
Beau+&. Sirnone de.
Hewen Dorothy. "Creating Heroines in Australian plays." Hecute . V.2. 1979.73-80.
Feminist Process - in the Theatre; Writers. Women - Conditions of; Revision - of Stereotypes; Australian Literature. Women and.
~ e * e ~ Dorothy: This Old Man Comer Rdling H m c ; The Man firm ~ u h h p i n ; .The Chapel Perilacs ; Mrs. Pwter and the Angel ; The Tatty Hdlow Stwy ; Joan ; Catspaw ; Pandwds Crass ; The Beautifkl Mrs. Podand,
1216. Husserl-Kapif Susan. "An Interview with Marguerite Duras." Signs .I.2. 1975.423-34.
Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Language. Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse - I'Ecriture Feminine; Thought, Modes of, Female vs. Male; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Language. ~amarchal - Linearity; Masculinity - as fkstructjve
- -- --
Inte!rvkm
Force; Power, Female -; Madness, Women and; Motherhood; French - - --
Literature;Women and
m, Marguerite: The Square ; Maderato Cantabile ; Destroy, She Says (Detruire: Dit- eUe) ; The S d m j i o m Gibraltar ; The Sea Wall on "Barrage contre le Pacijque) ;
- The Vice- C o r d .
Hynes. Jo. "interview: Megan Teny." Christopher Street , II.12.1978.33-35.
Writers. Women - Conditions of; Feminist Process - in the Theatre; Separatism and Feminist Literary Criticism; Artist Woman as.
Terry. Megan 8 '
Jay. Karla. "Carol Graberg on Lesbian Theane," Margins ,23.1975.55-57.
Feminist Process - in the Theaue; Political Activism. Women and; Lesbian(s) - Literary Tradition; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Literary Tradition - Women's.
Gmberg is a member of the .Wornanspace Theatre Workshop which produced, wrote and performed the play Cycles
Grosberg. Carol. - . -
Jordan. June. "Thinking about My Poetry," Chrysalis, 4,1977,105-09.
Black Women - Writers, Conditions of - and Black Consciousness; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; Writers, Women - Conditions of.
Jorcib, June.
-
Kaminski. Margaret "An Interview with Marge Piercy." Margins. 16.1975.9-10.69. - '-3
Feminism, Twentieth Ce~tury - Influence on Women's Writing; Writers, Women - Conditions of (20th Century American); Publishing, Women an&
-
Piercy. Marge: Dance the Eagle to Sleep ; Small Changes. - > ' I.
K i r k w m Hilda. "Revolution and Resolution: An Interview with Margaret Laurence," The '
C d i a n F m . LIX.697.1980,15-18. Wriurs. Women - Conditions of; Independence. Female; k l e / ~ e m a l e Relationship ' . \
b A - - - - - -- - - -
interviews
Laurence, Margaret -
1222. ,, Lever, Bernice. "An Interview with Dorothy Livesay." The Canadian Fmnn . LV.654.1975. 45-52.
Writers. m e n - Conditions oT: Socialism. Women &d; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing.
'
Livesay, Dorothy.
1223. 'vesay, Dorothy. "Women as Poets." Room of One's Owe .1.1.1975.12-13. # Writers, Women - Rediscovered; Publishing, Women and.
Discussion of process of editing Forty Women Pwts of Canada
Livesay, Dorothy. ed.: F w y women Poets of Canada .
1224. Livesay, Dorothy, Miriam Waddington, et al. "'My Craft and &;lllen Art': The Writers Speak." .Atlantis. IV.1. 1978, 143-63. -
Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Literary Tradition - Women's; Writers. Women - Conditions of; T h m e , Women in the; . Political Activism, Women and. /
Addresses by a number of Canadian women writers at the 1978 Conference of Inter-American Women Writers in Ottawa. Speakers include Margaret Atwood Elizabeth Brewster, Beth Harvor, Dorothy Livesay. Gwen Pharis Ringwood. Carol Shields. Audrey Thomas, and Uiriam Waddington.
Atwood. Margaret; Barnes. Quna; Bolt. Carol: Red Emma ; Boothe, Clare: The Women ; Bowles, Jane; Brewster, Elizabeth; Bfooke. Fmces: The History of Emily Montague ; Duncan, Sara Jeannette; French. Marilyn: The Women's Room ; Glaspell. Susan: Trifles ; Gowan, Elsie Park; Harvor, Beth; Hellman, Lillian: The Children's Hour ; Lessing. Doris; Livesay. Dorothy; Martin, Claire: In an Iron Glove (Dam un Gant de Fer) ; Moodie. Susanna; Munro, Alice: Lives. of ~itis'and Women ; "Boys and Girls" ; Nin, Anais; Rh ys, Jean; Rmgwood, Gwen Pharis; Shields. Carol; Stein. Gemude; Thomas. Audrey;
, Waddington, Miriam; Woolf, Virginia.
1225. Lorde, Audre and Adrienne Rich. "An Interview with Audre Lorde." Signs, V1.4,1981,713-36. b
Black Women - Writers, Conditions of,- &d Black Consciousness - and Black Feminism - Lesbians - Relation to White Women; Racism -; Rationality. - Male; Intuition. Ternale.
h rde . Audre.
B* - -- Interviews
I
1226. Lushingtoh, Kate, "Linda Griiiths: An Eye to Listen," Fireweed, 8,1%0,64-71.
Forms. Innovative. in Women's Writing; Feminist Process - in the Theatre; Images of Women - Narcissist; Male Characters in Women's Writing.
Griffiths describes the process of researching to write her play, Maggie and Pierre
Griffiths. Linda: Maggie and Pierre.
1227. Maitland, Sara. "Silences Unsilenced . . . Tillie Olsen," Spate Rib . 102, 1981, 31-33.
Writers. Women - and Silence - Conditions of (20th Century American); Political Activism, Women and; Working-class Women, Writing by and about.
Olsen, Tillie.
1228. Mezei. Kathy. "Inteniew with MicheIe Lalonde." Room of One's Own, IV.1/2.1978,19-29.
Writers, Women - Conditions of; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; . = ~ s m , Women and; Quebecoises, Writing by and about
- *
Lalonde. Michele.
1229. Mohin, Lilian. "Margaret Atwood: 'You Can't Be Exclusively Feminist'," Spate Rib, 83,1979. 35. .-
Power, Male; Regionalism in Women's Writing; Nationalism, Women and.
Atwood Margaret
a
1230. Morley, Patricia "Talking with Aviva Ravel. on Priorities. Fairness, and Being Human," Canadian Drama, V.2,1979,179-88.
Writers. W~men - Conditions of; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing.
' P
/- -. Includes cliecklist of Aviva Ravel's plays
Ravel, Aviva
i 1231. Mutch, Karl and Riemke Ensing. "Scarified with aR Oyster Shell," hnd jd l , XXXm.2.1979, "s' 149-53. -
Femalefieminist Aesthetic; New Zedand Literature, Women and
Riemke Ensing is editor of Privafe Gardens, an anthology d New Zealand women pa%
Ensing, Riemke, ed: Private Gardens.
Nazareth. Peter. "An Interview with Sahar Khalifeh." The Iowa Review . X1.1.1980.67-86.
Writers. Women - Conditions of (20th Century Palestinian); Class Position. Women's; Imperialism, Women and; Independence. Female; Socialism, Women and; Money, Women and; Palestinian Literature. Women and. '
R '
Khalifeh, !Mhr.
Oreistein, Gloria. "An Interview withKaren Malpede." Fireweed, 8,. 1980, 89-97.
Feminist Process - in the Theatre; Fernale/Feminist Aesthetic; Lpsbian(s) - Relationships; Working-class Women, Writing by and about; Male Characters in 4.
Women's Writing.
Malpede, Karen: Lament fw Three Women ; Rebeccnh ; The End of War ; Making Peace .
Orenstein. Gloria Fernan. "The Salon of Natalie Clifford Barney: An Interview with Berthe Cleyrergue," Signs, IV.3,1979,484-96.
Lesbian(s) - Subculture; Friendships, Female; Communities of Women; Subculwe, Female; Literary Salons. Women and; French Literature. Women and.
Interview with Berthe Cleyrergug, long-time friend and employee of Natalie Barney. Makes reference to many members of Barney's social/literary circle_ -
Bamey, Natalie.
Packwood. Marlene. "Adrienne Rich." Spare Rib. 103,1981,14-16. 3 .
Political Activism, Women and; Lesbian(s) - Corning Out; Spirituality. Women and; Black Women - and Black Feminism - Relation to , White . Feminism; Racism - Relation to Sexism.
Rich, Adrienne.
Parker, John. "Towards Leela," C a ~ d i a n Theatre Review . 9, 1976, 21-27.
Writers, Women - Conditions of; Male Characters in Women's Writing. *
Simons. Beverly: k e l a
1237. Porter, Pip. "Dorothy Hewett: An Intemiew." Hecate, IIIJ, 1977, &lI,
?olitical Activism, Women and; Writers, Women - Conditions of (20th Century *
&stralian); Theatre, Women in the; Australian Literature, Women and.
Mewett, Dorothy: This 016 Man Comes Rdiing Home ; Bobbin Up ; The Chapel Perilous ; The Tatty Hdlow Story.
.".
1238. Poteef Susan H. "An Interview with Denise Boucher." ~irewehd .5/6.1979/80.71-74.
Quebecoises. Writing by and about; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on
. . Women's Writing; Religion, Women and - Christianity; Independence, Female.
An excerpt of the *la+ translated into English. follows the interview, pp. 76-83.
Boucher, Denise: The Fairies Are Thirsty (Zes fies ont s@.
i
1239. Preussner, Dee. "Talking with Margaret Dr@bleTm Modern fiction Studies, XXV.4,1979/80, $63-77.
Writers, Women - Conditions of; Literary Tradition - Women's; Motherhood; Class Position, women's.
Drabble. Margaret
1240. Randall. Margaret "Truth Is a Convincing Answer. . . ! Conversation with Three Vietnamese Women Writers," LejZ Curve. 3,1975.30-35.
Vietnamese Literature, Women and; Writers, Women - Conditions of (20th Century Vietnamese); Imperialism, Women and; Por ih l Activism, Women and; Marriage - and Polygamy; National Liberation, Women and. 'h Hang Phuong; Cam Thanh; Anh Tho.
1241. Rowley. Hazel and Renate Reismann. "Interview with Simone de Beauvoir," Hecate, W.2, - 1981.90-96.
1
Writers, Women - Cbnditions of; Malefiemale Relationships; Political Activism, Women and; Power, Female; French 'terature, Women and. Y Beauvoir, Simone de.
1242. Rorenmajg, &~nteniew with Margaret Babble." Women's Studies, V1.3.1979.335-47.
Literary Tradition - Women's; Motherhood; Work Women and; Writers, Women
- Conditions of.
Drabble, Margaret
Scampa, Harriet Jackson. "Lucille Clifton: Kakifig the World 'Poem-Up'." Ms. . V.4.1976. 118-23.
Black Women - Writers, Conditions of - and Black Consciousness - and the Family; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Family. Women and
Clifton, Lucille.%
Shange, Ntozake. "Ntozake Shange Interviews Herself," Ms. . VI.6,'1977,35,70-72.
Black Women - Writers, Conditions of - and Black Idiom: Collectivity in Women's Writing; Writers, Women - Conditions of.
Shange, Ntozake.
Shelley. Dolores. "A Conversation with May Sarton." Women and Literature, VII.2.1979. 33-41. f
t .
Writers. Women - Conditions of; Artist, Woman as; Marriage - and Conflict with Creativity; Lesbian(s) - Coming Out
S m n , May.
Showalter. h i n e and Carol Smith. "An Interview with Erica Jong." Cdumbia Fmm , IV.l, 1975,12-17.
Writers. Women - Conditions of; Independence, Female; Humour. Women's Use of; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing.
Jong, Erica: Fear of FlNng ; h i t s & Vegetables ; Half Lives.
Showalter. Elaine and Carol Smith. "A Numuing ~&ttionship: A Conversatiun with Anne . Sexton and Maxine Kumin, April 15,1974," Women's Studies, IV.1.1976. 115-36.
Writers. Women - Conditions of; Friendships. Female; Motherhood; Madness, Women and
Sexton, h e ; Kumin, Maxine.
1248. Smyth. Donna E " ~ n t e h e w with Myrna Kcstash - A Westem. Uhnh, Regionalist, Feminist.
writ&, Women - Conditions of; Feminism, ~ w e n t i s t u r y - Influence on Women's Writing; Feminist Process - in ReadingrWriting Groups.
Kostash. Myma
Tate, Claudia C. "An Interview with Gayl Jones." Black American Literature Fmwn . XIII.4, 142-48. C
/
Black Women - and the Family - and Black Consciousness - Oral Tradition; Style, Female vs. Male; Artist, Woman as; Family. Women and; Oral Tradition, Women and
Jones, Gayl: Cwregidwa ; ~vds Man. / - X I
Susan Allen. "Fresh Air in the Garret: A Visit with Maxine Kumin," Ms. . 1978, Toth, '
32-38. e
Nature, Women and; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Frienwps, Female.
Kumin, Maxine.
b
Van Varseveld, Gail. "Talking with Atwood," ' R m of Om's Own. 1.2.1975.66-70.
Revision - of Myth; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Birth - bbyrinths; Phallic Criticism. I
Atwood, Margaret
I
Wachtel. Eleanor. "Miriam Waddington in Vancouver," R a m of One's Own . III.l.1977.2-7.
Writers, Women - Conditions of; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence on ' Women's Writing.
Waddington, Miriam
Wachtel. Eleanor. "Politically Incorrect: An &tenriew with Anne Cameron." R m of One's Own, VI.4.1981.35-44.
~&ninism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Writers. women - Conditions of; Regionalism in Women's Writing.
Cameron, Anne (pseud Cam Hubert and Cam Cameron).
- - - Int-
Wandor, Michelene. "Michelene and or on Michelene Wanda" ReaZettets. 194 14-42- -+
[Citation Inc.]
Writers, Women - Conditions of (20th Ckntury British); Theatre. Wmncn in the; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Po!itical Activism.
Feminist Process - in the Theatre; Marxist-Feminist Literary Criticism. Theory of; emale/Femi~list Aesthetic
md; 4 P
Wandor, Michelene. *
Woodwornan, Libby. "Pat Parker Talks about Her Life and Her Work." Murgins .23.1975. 60-61.
Black Women - hnd Black Community - Writers. Conditions of - and Black Consciousness; Political Activism, Women and; . Writers. Women - Conditions of
,* (20th Century Amkrican).
Parker, Pat
Wyse. Liz. " Bruinchild : Eve Croft Talks about Her Novel." S e e Rib .109.1981.16-17. I
Working-Class Women, Writing by and about; Lesbian(s) - Relationships; Violence. . Female; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing.
Croft, Eve: Brainchild.
@ , J'
-- - - - - - - - - e
. ' y+- U V R CROSS-TIME PROSE
+
1257. Abartis. Caesarea. "?he ~ g I ~ - ~ r e t & . Dull-Bright, Wd-Strong Girl in the Gothic Mansion," Jacrnal ofPopub Cultwe, XIII.2.1979.257-63.
Gothic. Female; Popular Culture - Modern Romances; Marriage - as Exnomic Necessity; Money, Women and; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Houses; . , Passivity, Female.
19th and 20th Centuries
Bronte, Charlotte: Jane E y e ; Du.Maurier. Daphne: Rebecca ; Holt, Victoria: Kirkland Revels ; Nicole, Claudette: House at Hawk's End. ,
. 1258. Apstein, Barham. "Madame Bovary and The Man Who loved children ." Intkrnational Ficrion '
Review , VII.2. 1980, 127-29. w
3
language. Patriarchal - and Female Invisibility - as Dominant Diqurse; power. b
Male; French Literature, Women and; Australian Litehture, Women and. , a
19th and 20th Centuries
Flaubert, Gustave: Modame'Bovary ; Stead. atistina: The Man Who Lav8d Children . Z '
' L
1259. Auerbach. Nina. "Women on Women's Destiny: Maturity as Penance," Masmhusetts Review , XX.2.1979.326-34.
'7
Literary Tradition - Women's; Feminism. Twentieth Century - 1kuence on Women's Writing; Marriage - as Eatrapment; Renunciation; Pov 5J;emale - h n e n ' s Ambivalence toward; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Enclosure; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Antigone. I
19th and 20th CenturieS
Alwtt, Louisa May: Little Women ; Eliot, George: Middlemarch ; Gissing. George: The Odd W m e n ; Godwin, Gad: The Odd Wtxqn ; Hardy, Thomas: M e the Obscure ; James. Henry: The Pwtrait of a Ludy .
1260. Backscheider, Paula R "Woman's Influence," Studies in the Novel, XI.1.1979.3-22. I
Power, Female; Anger, Female; Violence. Female; Suicide. Women and; Masochism, Female; Marriage - and Counship; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Heroine's Death as Closure - Punishing Heroine. .
4
17th. 18th and 19th &nturies
329
Austeri, Jane: Love d Friedship ; Barker. h e : h v e Iwtgues ; E k b . A m : Tke Fair Jilt, or The Amaus of Prince Twquin and Mimnda ; Agnes de C m ; The Histtry of the Nan, w The Foir Vow- Breaker ; The Lucky Mistake ; Brooke. Franc&: The History of Emily Mantague ; Buhey, Fanny: 8 v e l i ~ ; CoHyer, Mary: Feltcia to Charlotte ; Defoe. Daniel; Fielding. Henry; Haywood, b: Philidae rutd Placcntia : Agreeable Caledonian ; The Adventures of Eouaai ; The Histwy oJJernmy and knny J e m y ; The Mercenary Lover ; Love in Excess ; Inchbald, Elizabkth: A Simple Stwy ; Lemox, Charlotte: The Female* Quixote ; Ric&udson. W u e l ; Scott Sarah and Barbara Montagu: Millenium ~ d l .
1261. Barre& Phyllis W. "More American Adams: Women Heroes in American Fiction," Markham Review , X. Spring, 1981,39-41.
Self-realization; Independence. Female; Rites of Passage. I
1
19th and 20th Centuries
Chopin, Kate: The Awakening ; Fhwthome, Nathaniel: The Scarlet Letter ; James. ~ e & : The Portrait of a Lady ; Porter, Katherine Anne.
1262. Berke, Jacqueline. "'Mother I Can Do It Myself?': The Self-Sufficient Heroine in Popdar Girls' Fiction," Women's Studies, VI.2,1979,187-203.
e Mother/Daughter Relationships; Narrative St~ategies in Women& Writing - Absent Mother; Poverty, Women and; Childhood; Adolescence; Independence. Female.
19th and 20th Centuries -
. \ Burnett. Frances0Hodgson. The Secret Gar&3 ; Keene. Carolyn: The Hidden W i n d m Mystery ; Montgomery, Lucy Maud: Anne of Green Gables ; Porter. Eleanor H.: P d y r u t ~ ; Spyri. Johanna: Heidi ; Wiggin. Kate Douglas: Rebecca ofsunnybrwk Farm . ,
1263. Brydon, Diana, "The Colonial Heroine: The Novels of Sara Jeannette Dunm and MIS Campbell Praed." Canadian Literature .86. 1980.41-48. A
Cdlonialism, Women and; Imperialism, Women and; Regionalism in Women's Writing; Class Position. Women's; Australian Literature, Women and.
19th and 20th Centuries
Dunca Sara Jeannette: Carsin Cinderella ; Praed. Rosa Caroline (Mrs. Campbell Praed): Pdtcy and Pasion ; An AurtrrJion Herdne .
1264. Butler, Marilyn. "The Woman at the Window: Ann Radcliffe in the Novels of Mary Wollstonecraft and Jane Austen," W a e n and btemture . I (New Series). 1989.128-48.
330
f 979,A347-7~. - , - - ;&
h q c s of Women - &gel in the How; Family. Women and - as Agent of Women's Oppression - as Woman's Sphere; Marriage - as Entrapment; Artist, Woman as: Public and Private, Separation of; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Heroine's m e a s C I m ; Working-Cb Women Writing by and a b u t ; Political Activism, Womtn and. , < , . ,
= b
Aiuokpning.; I)ribbblt. Margaret: The Miitsrwre ; Eliot George: Middlemarch ' ; Hardy. Thomas: M e rke Ubfcwc ; Lcssing. Doris: The Memoirs ofa S w i v w ; Rercy. Margc: S d Changes ; Sayers. DoroPhy L: G d y Night ; Srnedley, Agnes: h g h t e r of b t h ; Woalf, Virginia: Mrs. Ddtbway; To the L t g h t f r a ~ ~ e .
Fairbanks, Carol. "Lves of Girls and Women on the Canadian a$d American b i o e s . " . I ~ e r M t i d kwnrrl of Wacn 's Stuciies . IL5.1979,451-72.
R t g i d m in Women's Writing; Menation. Fernale; Isdation of Women; Father/DaughterRdafionships; N a m , W o m e n a n d ; Masculinity; Poveny. W m c n and
19th and 20th centuries
Cather, Wilta: My ANW ; Cwper , James Fenimore: The Prarne: A Tale ; Donovan. Josephine: Black S d ; Garland, Hamlin: A Son ofrhe MCddie Border ; Grove. Frederick Phtlrp: FNfts of the W h ; Laurence. Margaret: The &inen ; Maynard. FredeIle Bruser: Raisirtr cutd Almonds ; Muilenberg. Walter 3.: Prmrre : Ostenso. Martha: Wild Geese ; .Rolv= 0. E: Giant$ in the Eorth ; Pcder Victwious ; Stockwell. Nancy: Our Sanewhere and Bock Ag& .
Flavell. M. Kay. "Women and Individualism: A Re-examination of SchlepeI's 'Lucinde' and Gunkow's 'Wally die Zwtiflerin'," Modern Lcvrguage Review . LXX.3, 1975.550-66.
Fcnrinism. Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Men's Writing; Images of Women - Inte~lectd iiiftdor - Ternptres - Idealized t n v e Objett - Virtuotts Woman; Revision - of Stereotypes; Education of Women: Male/Female Relationships; Love, Romantic;, Rationality, Male; intuition. Female; German Literature. Women and.
18th and 29th Qnnuies
Gutzkow. Karl: W d l y die Zweijlertn ; Schle~el. Friedrich: Lucinde .
1271? Gelfan& Eiissa 'Lmprisoned Women: Toward a Sodo-Literary Feminist Analysis.' Yale French Studies ,621981.185-203. L
-
. -
- --- - - - - -C3os+T~FVose -
Crime, Women and; Prison Writing, Women's; Style, Female vs; Male; Images of Women - Fhllen Woman - Moral Inferior - Hysteric; Sexuality, Female - Male Fear of; F o m , Non-Canonical - Diaries/Journals; French L i t e w e , Women and.
18th, 19th and 20th Centuries . .
g4
CappeileLafzge. Marie: Heaues de prison ; Phlipon, &on (Mme. Roland): Appd a Pimpruvtrale jwsterite ; Sarrazin. Albertine: Jaunal de prison 1959 ; Steinheil, Marguerite: Memoires .
1272. Ginsberg, Elaine. "The Female Initiation ?%erne in American Fiction," Studies in American Fiction ,111.1, 1975, 27-37. -
Rites of Passage; Adolescence; Seduction; Sex Roles; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Clothmg.
19th and 20th Cenniries - f
4
Crane. Stephen: Maggie: A Girl of the Streets ; McCullers, Carson: The Member of the Wedding ; The He& Is a Lonely Hunter ; Porter. Katherine Anne: "The Grave"; Rowson, SLWUM Haswell: Charlate Temple ; Welty, Eudora; "A Memory"; "At the Landing".
2 -
1273. Goodman, Charlotte. "Pomaits of the Artiste Manque by Three Women Novelists," Frontiers , V.3, 1980; 57-59. 4
Working-Class Women, Writing by and about; Artis5 Woman as; Poverty, Women and; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Enclosure.
19th Ad 20th Centuries
Arnow, Harriette: The Ddlmaker ; Davis.-Rebecca Harding: Life in the Iron Mills ; Kelley, Edith Summers: Weeds.
1274. Hankin, Cherry. "New Zealand Women Novelists: Their Attitudes toward Life in a Developing Society," World Literature Written in English , XN.1,1975,144-67.
#
Marriage - as Entrapment; Class Position. Women's; Independence. Female; Pregnancy/Chiidbirth; , Isolation of Women; Single Women; Male Bonding; New Zealand Literawe, Women and.
19th and 20th Centuries
Ashton-Warner. Sylvia: Spinster ; Barker, Lady Mary: Station Life in New Zealand ; Duckworth. Marilyn: The Matchbox Harse ; Over the Fence Is Out ; A Barbcum 'Tongue ; Escott, Margaret: Show Dawn ; Frame. Janet: Owls Do Cry ; Grossman, Edith
, Searle: The H e m of the Bush ; Hyde. Robin: The Godwits Fly ; Mander, Jane: The
, 333
* - - _Cr-
Story of a New Zedand River ; Allen Aduir ; Mansfield, Katherine:-"The Woman at the Storen; "Preluden; "At the Bay"; Watson, Jean: Stand in the Rain .
9
1275. ' Horton, Susan R "Desire and Depression in Women's Fiction: The Problemtics and the Economics of Desire," Madern Fiction Studies , XXIV.2, 1978.181-95. '
\ Power, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; - Love. Romantic - Destructive Power of; selfLabnegation; Self, Divided; Alienation. Female; Reason vs. Passion.
19th and 20th Centuries
Cather, Willa: 0 Pioneers! ; Chopin, Kate: The Awakening ; Drexler. Rosalyn: 1 Am the Beautijid Stranger ; Glasgow, Ellen: Barren Grand ; Jong. Erica: Fear of RNng ;
. Lessing. Doris: The Gdden Nctebwk ; Milleg Kate: RHng ; Wharton. Edith: The Hacse of Mirth .
-
Jones. Betty H. and Alberta Arthurs. "The American Eve: A New Look at American Heroines and Their Critics." International Journal ef Women's Studies .I.1.1978; 1-12.
- P r Revision - of Critical Tradition; Phallic Criticism; Alienation. Ferfiale; Cult of True Womanhood; Images of Women - American Girl - Moral Custodian - Angel in the House - Fallen Woman - Forsaken Woman - Castrating Bitch; Artist Woman as.
19th and 20th Centuries. Makes passing reference to many other 19th and 20th century male and female novelists, predominantly American
Glasgow. Ellen: Virginia ; Glaspell. Susan: Fidelify ; Hawthorne. Nathaniel: The Scarlet Letter ; James, Henry; Stowe. Harriet Beecher. . t
Kahane. Claire. "Gothic Mirrors and Feminine Identity." C e n t e n d Review . XXIV.l. 1980. 43-64. -
0 /-
Gothic, Female; Idmtity. Female; Narrative Smtegies in Women's Writing - Absent Mother; Sexuality, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Motherhood - Women's Ambivalence toyard; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Houses - Mirrors - Labyrinths - Enclosure - Birth; Androgyny .
18th and 20th Centuries
Jackson. Shirley: The Haunting of Hill Haue ; ~ c ~ k l e n . Carson: The Ballad of the Sad Cafi ; O'Connor. Flannery: Wise Blood ; " A Stroke of Good Fortune"; "A Temple of the Holy Ghost"; Radcliffe. Ann: The Mysteries of Uddpho .
lander. Dawn. "Women and the Wilderness: Tabus in American Uterature." Universiry of Michigan Papers in Wmen's Studie3.11.3. 1977.62-83.
e
- - - -- Cross-Time Prose
Images of Women - Mord Custodian - Native Exotic; Sexwhy+ Female - Male Fear of; Racism; Miscegenation; Masculinity.
19th and 20th Cennuies B"
Fiedler. Leslie: The Return of the Vanishing American ; Gutluie,'A. B., Jr.: The Big Sky ; Hawthorne, Nathaniel: The Scarlet Letter ; Hemingway, Ernest: "Fathers and Sons" ; Kemble. Frances Anne Butler: hunal of a Residence on a Geargia Plantation in 1838- 1839 ; Kirkland. Caroline M: A New Hume - Who'll Fdlow? ; Marriott, Alice: Hell on H m s and Women ; Smedley, Agnes: Dmcghter of Earth ; Smith, Martha L: Gdng to G a f s Country.
Leventhal; Ann Z "The Changing Heroine: From Emma to A Weave of W m e n ," M a e ~ d , 1.2, 1981.63-77.
Passivity. Female; Sexuality, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Subtext; Motherhood; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Sea - Housekeeping - Weaving; Fonns, Innovative, in women's' W ri ring.
Austen, Jane: Emma ; Broner. F, M.: A Weave of Women ; Chopin, Kate: The Awakening ; Olsen, Tillie: "I Stand Here Ironing".
Lockwood, Betty. "AndJ&en, There Were Women. . . Part 3." Womanspeak, IL1.1976.12-13.
Writers, Women - Rediscovered; Australian Literature. Women and.
See also: Part 1, Womanspeak, 1.4.1975.22-23; Part 2, Womonspedk ,IS, 1975.12-1 3 . Part 4. Womanspeak, 11.2 1976.12-13: Part 5, Wmnspeak . II.3,1976,12-13; and Pas 6. womanspeak .II.4,1976. 20-21. 19th and 20th Centuries.
Couvreur. Jessie Catherine (pseud. Tasma): Uncle Piper of Piper's Hill ; A Sylney Sovereign ; Gun, Jeannie (Mrs. Aenas GUM): Uttle Black Princess ; W e of the Never, Never ; Lyuleton. Edith (pseud G. B. Lancaster): Pageant.
McMullen, Lorraine. "The Divided Self," Atlantis, V.2.1980.52-67.
Narrative Smtegies in Women's Writing - Doubling; Self, Divided; Writers. Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Literary Tradition - Women's.
18th. 19th and 20th Centuries
Atwood, Margaret: The Edible Wwnan ; Brooke, Frances: The History of Emily Montague ; Duncan, Sara Jeannette: C w ' n Cinderella ; Thomas, Audrey: Mrs. B i d .
-.- Maio. Kathleen L "'A Strange and Fierce Delight': The Early Days of Women's Mystery
Fiction," ~ h r y h s . 10.1980.93-lbS. -
Popular Culture - Detective Fiction - Dime Novels; Crime. Women and; Writers. Women - Rediscovered; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Doubling - Maiming Hero; Independence. Female; Single Women; Friendships. Female; Yiolence. Female; kI@ery and Motifs in Women:s Writing - Disguise; Male Characters in Women's Writing.
19th and 20th Centuries
Braddon, Mary Elizabeth: M y Audley's Secret ; Thac Art the Man ; Evereg Carolyn Kane (pseud. Elizabeth Kent): Who? ; The Horcse Opmte ; Green, Anna Katharine: Cynthia Wakeham's Money ; The Leavenworth Case ; Miss Hurd: An Enigma ; The Chief kpatee ; Behind Clmed Doous; The Gdden Slipper and Other P d l e m s f i Videf Strange ; In Larr Man's h n e : A Second E p i d e in the Lifi of Amerlia Butterworth ; Three Thciusand Ddiars ; Hatch, Mary R P.: The Upland Mystery: A Tragedy of New England ; The Bank Tmgedy ; The Missing Man ; The Strange Disappearance of Eugene C ~ o c k s ; Lmg, Zily Augusta (pseud. Roman Doubleday): The Hemlock Avenue Mystery ; Perkis, Catherine Louisa: A Red Sister ; Turner, Bessie: A Woman in the Case ; Circwnstantial Evidence ; Van Deventer. Emma Murdock (pseud Lawrence L Lynch): Shadowed by Three ; Victor, Metta Victoria (pseud Seely Regester): The Dead Letter ; Webster. Jean: The Ftw Pods Mystery ; Wilkins. Mary E: The Long Ann ; Wood, Ellen (Mrs. Henry Wood): Emt Lynne .
*
Malrnsheimer. Lonna. "Daughters of Zion: New England Roots of American Feminism." New England Quarterly. L3.1977.484-504.
Religion, Women and - Puritanism; Images of Women - Temptress - Madonna - Virtuous Woman - Submissive Wife; Public and Private, Separation of; Advice Literature.
17th and 18th Centuries
Chase, Amos: On Female Excellence: w a Discarrse . . . Occasioned by the Death of Hls Wife ; Colrnan, Benjamin: The Duty and Honau of ~ ~ e d Women. A Sermon on the Death of Madam Abigail Foster ; Cotton, John; Fox'croft, Thomas: A Sermon Preached . . . ajler the Funeral of Mrs. Elizabeth Foxcroj ; MatheH3tton: Ornamentsfiw the Daughters of Zion, w the Character and Happiness of a Virtuous Woman ; Tabitha Redivivc An Essay to the Memwy of . . . Mrs. Elizabeth Hutchinson ; Robinson, John.
Mukherjee, Meenakshi. "Deadweight of Tradition: The Sati-Savim Ideal." M a w h i .2,1979. 10-11. * r
a
Indian Literature. Women and; Images of Women - Submissive Wife - Virtuous . Woman - Earth Mother.
19th and 20th Centuries
#
-- -- Cross- T i e Prose --
Chatmjee. W n Chandra: Debi Chaudhareni ; Chatterjee. Sarat Chandra: Letter-fim a Wif i (Tagwe: Streer Patra) .
1285. Pickle, Linda Schelbitzki. "Woman as the Outsider: Implications for the Development af Literary and Social Attitudes as Seen in Arcs Cuter Familie and Nachdenken uber Ch~ista T. ," Universit'y of Dapon Review . XIV.2,1980,101-11.
Family, Women and - and Parental Authority; Self-sacrifice; Class Position, Women's; Sexuality. Female - and the Double Standard; Marriage - as Economic Necessity - and Woman's Fulfillment; Independence. Female; Artist, Woman as; Alienation, Female; German Literature. Women and
Reuter, Gabriele: Aus guter Fcunjlie ; Wdf. Christa: The Quesr fot Christa T . flachdenken uber Chn'sta T.) .
1286. Poovey. Mary. "Fathers andDaughters: The Trauma of Growing Up Female," Women and Literalure, 11 (New Series), 1981.25-38.
- Father/Daughter ~eiationships; Rites of Passage; Marriage - and Courtship; Power, Female; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Narrative Stzategies in Women's Writing - Absent Mother; Power, Male.
18th and 19th Centuries
Bmey, Fanny: E v e l i ~ ; Shelley, Mary: Fdkner .
1287. Porter, Dennis. "Of Heroines and Victims: Jean Rhys and Jane E y e ." Massachusetts Review , '
XVII.3, 1976, W 5 2 . \
Colonialism Women a d ; Class Position. ~or&n's; . yoney. Women and; Alienation, Female; Racism; Slavery; POL$?&&.^&; Madness. Women and; Independence. Female; Sexuality, Male; Se&dity, Female - Male Fear of.
7.
19th and 20th Centuries 1
Bronte. Charlotte: k n e E y e ; Rhys, Jean: Wide Sargclsso Sea.
1288. Richmond. Velma Bourgeois. "Sexual Reversals in Thomas Hardy and Ellen Glasgow," Southern Humanities Review. XIII.1. 1979. 51-62.
Sex Roles - Rejection of; Maniage - as Entrapment; Masculinity; Self-sacrifice.
19th and 20th CenMries
Glasgow, Ellen: In This Orcr L i f i ; Hardy, Thomas: M e theb O b w e .
Cross- Time Prose
Rooke, Consfance. "Beauty in Distress: Daniel Deronh and The H w of Mirth ." Women and Literatwe , IV.2,1976,28-39.
>
Physical Appearance; Work, Women and; Marriage -'as Economic Necessity; Literary Tradition - Women's. 1
19th and 20th Centwries
Riot, George: Daniel Deronda ; Wharton, Edith: The H w e of ~ i i h - .
Rosowski, Susan J. "The Novel of Awakening." Genre. XII.3.1979.313-32.
Bildurrgsrornan, Female; Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment - as Entrapment; Love, Romantic - Destiuctive Power of; Passivity, Female; Self. Dwided; Suicide, Women and; Poverty, Women and; Political Activism. Women and; Independence, Female; French Literature. Women and.
l!lth and 20th Centuries
Cather, Willa: My Mwtal Enemy ; Chopin, Kate: The Awakening ; Eliot George: Middlemarch ; Flaubert, Gustave: Madame Bmary ; Smedley, Agnes: Daughter of Earth ,
Rubinger, Catherine. "Some Fioneer Women Writers of French Canada," Canudian Wmen's Studies. III.1.1981.37-39.
-
Quebemises. Writing by and about; Writers, Women - Rediscovered; Nature, Women an$ Motherhood; Forms. Non-Canonical - Letters.
17th. 18th. Nth, and 20th Centuries
Begon, Elisabeth; Conan, Laure; Marie de 1'Incarnation; Vercheres, Madeleine de.
1292. Sargent. Lyman Tower. "Ambiguous Legacy: The Role and Position of Women i i the English , Eutopia," Extrapdufion , XIX.1, 1977.39-49.
Utopias; Sex Roles; Images of Women - Earth Mother - Submissive Wife .- Intellectual Inferior.
19th and 20th Centuries. Makes passing reference to other 19th and 20th century British , utopias
Bellamy, Edward: Lodring Backward ; Devime, Paul: Th"e Day ofhospetity ; Hamilton. Cicely: "Women in the Great State"; lawrence. James; The lmpiie of the Ndm; ma. The Rights of Women ; More, Sir Thomas: Utopia ; Petzle& John: fifi in Utopla ; Wells, H . G.: A Modern Utopia .
1293. Showalter, Elaine. "The Greening of Sister George," Nineteenth Century Fiction . XXXV.3. 1980.292-311. -
Literary Tradition - Women's; Writers, Women - Conditions gf; Role-Models, Female. -
\
19th and 20th Centuries. Inidudes overview of feminist criticism of Ge6rge Eliot
Beauvoir. Simone de: Memairs of a DutiN Daughter ; All Said and Done ; Cheever. John: Falconer ; Cheever, Susan: W n g & Wwk ; Drabble, Margaret: The Waterjhfl ; Eliot. George: Adam Bede ; The Mill on the Ross ; Middlemarch ; Godwin, Gail: The Odd Woman ; James, P. D.: Inwent B i d ; Oates, Joyce Carol: Do with Me What Ym Will ; Woolf, Virginia: "George Eliot".
1294. Sizemore, Christine W. "Attitudes toward the Education and Roles of Women: Sixteenth-Century Humanists and Seventeenth-Century Advice Books," UnivetEOL0,flDayon Review, XV.1.1981,57-67.
_- : -- - - Education of Women; Advice Literature; Religioq Women and - Puritanism;
Marriage - and Equality/Mutuality. ,'
16th and 17th Centuries b
Becon, Thomas; Joceline, Elizabeth: The Mahers kgacie to Her Vnbarn Child ; Leigh. Dorothy: The Mothers Blessing ; Makin. Bathsua; More, Sir Thomas; Vives, Juan Luis.
1295. Smyth, Donna E "Metaphors of Madness: Women and Mental Illness," Atlantis, IV.2(Part 2), 1979,287-99.
Madness. Women and; Images of Women - Madwoman; Revision - of Stereotypes; Sexdty. Female - Male Fear of - Repressed; Rationality. Male; Language. Patriarchal - as Dominant Discourse - Dualism.
lu and 20th Centuries I
Atwood Margaret: Surfbcing ; Bronte. Charlotte: h e E y e ; Gilman, Charlotte Perkins: The Yellow Wallpaper ; Lessing, Doris: The F w Gated City ; Piercy, Marge: Woman on the Edge of Time ; Rhys, Jean: Wide Sargczsso Sea .
1
12%. Spacks, Pamcia Meyer. "Women's Stories, Women's Selves," Hudson Review . XXX.l, 1977, 29-46.
Autobiography, Women's; Forms, Non-Canonical - Diaries/Joumals; Self-abnegation; Identity. Female; Independence, Female.
and 20th Centuries
- /- - - --
Cross- Time Prose \
Alcott, Louisa May; Ashton-Warner, Sylvia; Beauvoir. Simone de: Memdrs of a Dwi@ Daughter ; The Prime of Lifi ; Burney, Fanny; Crawford, Joan: My Way oJL@ ; Fleming, Marjory; Kollwitz. Kathe; Millett, Kate: Flying ; Nin. Anais; Willis. Ellen.
Stoeltje, Beverly J. "'A Helpmate for Man Indeed': The lmage of the Frontier W o r n " Jaud . . of American FdWwe , LXXXW1.347.1975.25-41.
Popular Culture - Westerns; Folklore; Cult of True Womanhood; Masculinity - and Heroism; Male Bonding; Images of Women - Other - Idealized Love Object - Southern Belle - Frontier Woman - Superwoman - Whore - Fallen Woman.
19th and 20th Centuries
Anonymous: "Bud's Letter"; Bunton. Mary Taylor: A Bride on the Old Chisbdm Trail in 1886 ; Jenkins. John Holmes, ed: Recdlec&ns of Early Texar: The Memdrs of John Hdland Jenkins ; Lewis, Willie Newbury: Between Sun and Sa f ; McDowel, Catherine W., ed: Now You Hear My H m The J w n a l of James Wilson Nichds, 1820- 1887 ; McMumy. Larry: Leaving Chepnne ; Rolvaag, 0. E: Giants in the Earth .
Thomas. Clara. "Heroinism, Feminism and Humanism: Anna Jameson to Margaret Laurence." Atlantis, IV.l, 1978.19-29.
Literary Tradition - Woqen's; Self-realization; Feminism. Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Feminism. Twentieth Century -- Influence on Women's Writing; Education of Women; Didactic Literature; Power. Female.
19th and 20th Centuries
Atwood, Margaret: d y OracleP; Duncan, Sara Jeannette: The Imp&rialist ; A Daughter of T d a y ; A Social Departure ; Simple Adventures of a Memsahib ; Jameson, Anna Brownell: Winter Studies and Smrner Rambles in Canada ; Characteristics of Women ; Diary of an Ennuwe ; Memairs ofthe Loves of the Poets ; Memairs ojCelebrated Female Sovereigns ; Laurence, Margaret; Moodie. Susanna: Racghing It in the Bush ; Stael, Mrne. de: Cosinne .
Tiger, Virginia "The Female Novel of Education and the Confessional Heroine." Dalharsie Review, LX.3.1980.472-86. \
Education of Women; Confessional Mode in Women's Writing; Literary Tradition - Women's; Didactic Literature; Reason vs. Passion. 1 18th and 20th Centuries
Lessing. Doris: he Gdden Nosebwk ; Wollsmnecraft, Mary: Mary, a Fiction .
Toth, Emily. "The Independent Woman and 'Free' Love," Maswchusetts Review. XV1.4,1975,
Cross-Time Prose
Independence, Female; Marriage - as Entrapment; Sexuality, Female - and the Doub?e%tandard; Love. Romantic - Destructive .Power of; Renunciation; Nep Woman, The: Single Women; Friendships, Female; African Literature, Women and; Russian Literature, Women --- and
1% and 20th Cenauies
Bremer. Fredrika; Bronte, Charlotte: hne Eyre ; Villette ; .Shirley ; Chopin, Kate: "Wiser than a God"; "The Maid of Saint Phillippe"; "Madame Celestin's Divorce""; "Athemisen; "The Storm"; The Awakening ; Eliot, George: The Mill on the E2w ; Hamidah; Kollontai, Alexandra: "The New Womann; "A Great Love"; Red Love (also trans. Free b e ); "Sisters" ; "The Loves or Three Generations": Sand, Ckkrge: Indiana ; h q u e s ; Mauprat ; Elle et Lui ; Lelia ; Schreiner, Olive: The Story of an African F m .
,. Travitsky, Betty S. "The New Mother of the English Renaissance (1489-1659): A Descriptive Catalogue," Bulletin of Research in the H-ties , LXXXII.l.1979.63-88.
I
Motherhood; Work, Women and - ~ k e s t i c Labour; Education of Women; Religion, Women and - Christianity - Protestant Refonnation; Power. Female; Marriage - and Woman's Fulfillment - and Male duthofity; Family, Women and - as Woman's Sphere; Class Position, Women's; Writers. Women - Conditions of (15th a
Century British) - Conditions of (16th Cennuy - Brjtish) - Conditions of (17th Century - British); Advice Literature.
15th. 16th. and 17th Centuries Includes catalogue of English ~enai&ce h c t s d e f d g the New Mother ana a bibliography of writings of Renaissance women identified as New Mothers
Abergavennie. Lady Frances; Ascham, Margaret; Askew. AM^; Audeley. Lady Eleanor; Bawn, Lady AMa; Basset Mary; Boleyn, Anne; Carey, Elizabeth, Lady Falkland; Clifford, Lady AM^; Clinton, Elizabeth. Countess of Linwh; Dacre, h e . C o u n k of Arundel; Devere, Anne; Egerton, Elizabeth; Elizabeth of Bohemia; Grymeston, Elizabeth; Herbert, Mary (Sidney); Joceline, Elizabeth; Kelio. Esther; Leigh, D6rothy;-Lumley, Lady Jane; Melville, Elizabeth; Mildmay' Lady Grace; Pan, Katharine; Roper, Margaret More; Russell, Lady Elizabeth; Stuarf Mary. Queen of Scots; Wroth, Lady Mary. .
*
Ulrich, Laurel Thatcher. "Vertuous Women Found: New England Ministerial Literature, 1668-1735." American Quruterly , XXWI.1,1976,2&40.
Religion, Women and - Puritanim Death, Women and; Pregnancy/Childbirth; Motherhood; Marriage; Education of Women; Sex Roles; Advice Literature.
/ &lman, Beqiamin: The D w y Md HDMV of Aged W m e x A Sermon on the Death 0)-
- - - - - - -
Cm-Time Prose m
i Modam Abigoil Fbter ; Danforth, John; Fitch. James; Flauell, John; Foxcroft Thomas; Mather. Cotton: Ornaments fi the Daughters ofZon, ar the Clitu@erLaSljyap~nCss of
-
a Virtuacs Wwuzn ; Mather, Increase: The Lifi-and Death of Richad Mother ; Sermon Concerning Obedience ; Oliver. John: A Present fi Teeming Americun W m e n ; Peter. '
Hugh: A Dying Faher's Last Legacy ; Schurrnan, Anna Maria van: The Learned Maid ; Seeker. William: A Wedding ring ; Smith, Grace: The DHng Mother's Legacy ; Sprint, John: The Bride- Woman's Counsellor ; Wadsworth, Benjamin: The Well- Ordered F d y ; Willard, Samuel: A Complete Body of Divinity in Two Hundred and Fijy Expmitwy Lectures.
1303. Weissman, Judith. "Women and vampires: Dracula as a Victorian Novel." Midwest Quarterly. XVIII.4,1977,392-405. %
Images of Women - Virgin - Sexually Devouring Woman; Sexuality. Female - Male Fear of; Chastity, Female; Power, Male. \
18th and 19th Ce&uies
Bronte. Charlotte: Jane E y e ; Fielding, Henry: T m Jones ; Richardson, Samuel: - o CIarissp ; Stoker. Bram: Dracule .
d l
fhmsme, Aliki. "Women and the Garden: Andrew Mmell, Emilia Lanier, and Emily Dickinwn," W m e n and Literature, 11 (New Series), 1981,147-67.
+ Religion, Women and - Christianity; Revision - of Myth; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Eve; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Garden - Father - Male Deity - Paradise; Nature, Women and; Sexuality, Female.
16th. 17th and 19th Centuries s\
, Dickimn, Emily: "The Bible is an antique Volume -" (J 1545); "Who were 'the Father and the Son'" (J 1258); "What is - 'Paradise' -" (J 215); "Not seeing, still we know -" (J 1518); "A Word made Flesh is seldom" (J 1651); "The Brain - is wider than the Sky" (J 632); "Of Consdousness, her awN Mate" (1 894); "There comes an hour when begging stops" (J 1751); "God is a distant - stately Lover -" (J 357); "Unable are the Lbved to die" (J 809); "Wild Nights - Wild Nights!" (J 249); "Come slowly - Eden!" (J 211); "Heaven is so far of the Mind" (J 370); "Sweet Mountains - Ye tell Me no lie -" (J 722); "There is a mom by men unseep -" (J 24); "God is indeed a jealous God -" (J 1719); Lanier. Emilia: "Salve Deus Rex Ju&eomn ; Marvell, Andrew: "The Garden".
H m ~ i e n , Elizabeth. "Pettiant Authors: 1660-1720," Women's Studies, W.1/2,1980,21-38.
Writers. Women - Conditions of (18th Century British); Literary Tradition - Women's -
Absence from; Phallic Criticism; Language, Women's Use of - Parody; Imagery and Motifs in Women's %biting - Firk - Water - Spiders - Pain - Death; * Mythological ,
Figures in Women's Writing : Salome.
17th and 18th Centuries .
Cavendish. Margaret: Poem and Fancies ; Donne, John; Dryden, J o h An Eswy of Dramatic Poesy ; Finch. Anne. Countess of Winchilsea: "Song" ; "Spleen" ; "No Grace ";
"Free-Thinkers"; Killigrew, Anne; Pope. Alexander: W a d ; Thomas, Elizabeth: i Poems on Several Occasions. +
i
Hull, Gloria T. "Black Women Ptxts from Wheatley to Walker," Negro American Literuture Fwum . IX.3.1975.91-96.
Black Women - Literary Tradition - Writers, Rediscovered - Oral Tradition - and Harlem Renaissance - and &ck Idiom; Slavery; Re-vision - of Critical Tradition; Political Activism, Women and; ' Racism; Literary Tradition - Women's; Writers, Women - Rediscovered; Oral Tradition, Women and
18th. 19th. and 20th Centuries 4
Beme& Gwendolyn; Dunbar-Nelson, Alice: "Sonnetw; "I Sit and Sew"; Fauset, Jessie
Redmond; Grimke. Angelina Weld: "Tenebris"; Hagper, F m a s W.: "Bury Me in a Free Land"; " A Double Standard"; Sketches of Sarthern L I + ; Johnson. Georgia Douglas: "The Heart of a Woman"; Johnson. Helene: "Poem"; "Bottled" ; ?Sonnet to a Negro in Harlem"; "Magalum; Newsome, Effie Lee; Spencer, Anne: 'Letter to My Sister"; "For
" Jim. Easter Eve"; Terry. Lucy: "Bars Fight, August 28 1746"; Walker. Margaret: Far My People ; Wheatley. Phillis: Poems on Variacs Sub#cts, Rdigiars and Mwd .
1307. Nunbaum, elicit^. "Juvenal. Swift, and The Fdly of Love ." ~lghtienth- Cenfwy Stu&er.
&- * IX.4,1976.,540-52.
Images of Women - Narcissist - Deceiver - Fashion Plate - Unclean Woman; Humour. Women as Objects of; Misogynist TraStsz,
*
Classical and 18th Century
Ames, Richard: The Fdly of b e ; Juvenal: Sixth Satire ; Ovid: Remedia Amwu ; Swift Jonathan: "A Beautiful Young Nymph Going to Bed" ; "The Lady's Dressing Room". J -
C
1308. Spivak, Gayatri. "Finding Feminist &tjings: Dante - Yeats," Socid Text ;III.l@, 73-87. [Citation lnc]
Critical ~chtkls, Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism - Structuralism/Post-Structuralism; Deconstmctioa Feminist; Images of Women - Idealized Love Object; Italian Literature, Women and ' --
Pre-16th and 20th Centuries.
Dante: La Vita Nuova ; Y eats, William Butler: " B o Dominus Tuus" ; A V~sion .
aiw, H a )(&. 'An v u u n B u r i h : The Role of Women in hmzrilnn Tbbm.' The I I
' D P ~ R x r b i . XXIl'.L 1980.3-10.
frme f - tk'tlantn'r; W r i m W m a - @&ti- dl; Imes of Wamm '
- Fatlea Woman; Feminist h & c s - in the Tfrcatrc; ' ncaetc. W ~ c n intht.
19&iursdX&hCen~a. * W % b ~ w ~ i n p o s s i n g
Hums. Roben D 'M& f)rscofd in Cnncdy from Drydm to Fielding.' Modem - 1 I
Phiidagy. LXXJV.3,1??7,2lts-n. ' I
BW. Cdlq: b e ' s trrrl SlfilQ ; Thr Cwtf+.$s N@arpG ; The BuvaKd Hr/sibcvad ; ~ ~ e . W & h ; Dydcn, M n : A- &- Mcdr ; FarquBax,G-ea@c: The Beaw Strrpf- ; Fielding. Hmt).: 71rr Madcrp Hrrsband ; k d m ~ ~ Chute; South'~hl~, 7?mmm: The W ~ Y C Z EXLY~: Or, C&& M& Themdves : Vmb*Ng.h. Jdra: The 2 R&w ; T h t h a k ' d Wijk ; A krowyfo h d m ; Wycheficy, William,
- - --Ap--
XXX CBOSS-TIME MlSCEUANEOUS
1312. . Scaton. Erqr 'Sex and the Nubile Girl in Edward Bok's Lodies Hae J W ~ ' 1890-1919.* Uaiuersity of Michigan Papers in Women's Studies. 11.4. 1978. 31-54.
Popular- Cidcurc - Magazines; Advice Literature; Cult of True Womanhood; Images of Women - Virgin - Coquette; Male/Femaie Relationships. I
19thaand 20th Centuries. Discussion of K i e s J Home larrnal
1313. ,Skidmore, Patricia. " S ~ L and Song: Roles and Images of Women in Poplar Music at the Turn of the Century." Atlohtis, II.Z(Part 2). 1977.22-32.
~6u iar Culture - Songs; Images of Women - Girl-Next-]Door - Martyr - Cbquette - ~ o r d -, - Whore; Wtherhmd; Ntw Woman The; Sexuality. Female - and the Double S(an@d; Family. Women and - as Agent of Women's Opprmio~.
C
, 19th and 20th ,Centuries
4
XXjU CROSS-TIME CROSS-GENE *
c. ,'
1314. Daghistany . Ann. "The Picara Nature." Women's Studies , V.l, 1977.51-60.
Images of Women - Adventuress - Deceiver - Whore - Witch; Sexuality, Female - and the Double Standard; Independence. Female; PhysicaI Appearance; Power, Female; Sex Roles; Transvestism; Money, Womed and.
Classical, 16th. 17th and 18th Centuries. Prose and Poetry.
Apuleius: The Gdden Ass ; Defoe, Daniel: M d l FZanders; Grimmelshause~ : Ccnuizge ; Lesage, : GI1 Bl& ; Petronius: The Satyricon .
i 9 r
131 5. Dash, Irene. "The Literature 6f Eiirth and Abortiok" Regionalism and the Female Imagirugi~~i . \ , III.1. 1977, 8-13. * .
6
Abortian; Pregnancy/ChiIdbirth; Motherhood - Women's Ambivalence toward; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Wridag - Dead Child; Self-sacrifice;
. Self-realization.
17th. 19th and 20th Gnturies, Prose and Poetry /'
&adsmet. Anne: "Before the Birth of One of H L-Gh 'ldren"; Brooks. Gwendolyn: "The *
Mother"; Chopin, Kate: The Awakening ; Sexton, Anne: "The Abortion".
U s 1316. DuBois, Page. "Tristes ~ r o ~ i ~ u e s : Framing the Woman Question." Massachusetts Review , XX1.2. 1980.33442.
Images of Women - Temptress - Virgin - Native Exotic - Object; French Literature, Women and.
Classical. 16th and 20th Centuries, Prose and Poetry
. Apuleius: The Gdden Ass ; T b , Torquato: Genrsalemme Liberata ; Levi-S-uauss, Claude: Tristes Tropiques .
13 17. Giddings, Paula. "A Special Vision. A Common Goal." Encwe . XU, June, 1975.44-48.
Black Women - Writers, Conditions of - Literary Tradition; Literary Tradition - . Won?en 's; Writers. Women - Conditions of.
and 20th Centuries. Prose and Poetry. Overview .. Q
Angelou Maya; Brooks, Gwendolyn; Clifton. -Lucille; Evans, Mari; Fauset, Jessie Redmond; Giovaani. Nikki; Grimke. AngeTha Weld; Harper, F~ances W.;.Hurstox~'Zora '
- *-
-
-
Cross- Time Cross-Gaue
3 Neale; Johnson, Georgia Douglas; Larsen. Nella; Lorde, Audre; horrissn, ~ o n i ; Nelwx. Alice Dunbar; Petry. Ann; Walkr. Alice; Walker, Margaret; Wheatley. Phillis.
1318. Gubar, Susan. "Mother. Maiden and the Marriage of Death: Women Writers and an Ancient Myth," Women's Studies., VI.3. 1979. 301-05.
lmagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Birth; Mythological Figures in Women's ' Writing - Demeter - Kore - Oedipus - Sphinx; Revision - of Myth; Motherhood;
" Nature. Women and; , Power, Female; Identity. Female.
19th and 20th Centuries, Prose and Poetry.
Atwood Margaret: S w j ~ c h g ; Barren Browning. Elizabeth: Awwa Leigh ; Doolittle, Hilda (H. D.): Helen in Egypt ; Lessing. ris: The F a u ~ Gated City ; Momson, Toni:
6 The Bluest E y ; Oates. Joyce Carol: Wher 9 Are Y GU Gdng, Where Have Y ar Been? ; Rich, Adrienne: Diving into the Wreck ; Rukeyser. Muriel: *MythN; Shelley. Mary:
. , Proserpine ; Woolf. Virginia: To the ~rghthaue t
L
1319. Jacqueline. "Comic Vision in the Literature of New England Wonien before 1800.. and the Female Imagination. II1.2/3.1977/78. IP19.
& f r
>eligion, Women and - Puritanism; H(toour. Women's Use ol; Saure. Women's Use of; Language, Women's Use of - Punning - Parody; Political Activism, Women and; Motherhood '
17th and 18th Centuries. Prose. Poetry: and Dr&k
Bradstreet, Anne:'"In Reference to Her Children"; "To Her Book"; Knight. Sarah Kernble: The Joo(rnal of M a d p Knight ; Murray, Judith Sargent: Virtue Trrumpharr~ ; The Traveller Returned ; Rowson. Susanna Haswell: Sla~es in Algrers; or a Struggle fbr Freedom ; Warren. Mercy Otis: The Gracp. A Pditical Comedy ; The De/ear ; The Blockheads w, The Amghted Oflcers. A FwceL( m e Squabble of the Sea Nymphs: or
' the Sacrifice of the Tuscaritloes". , O t
4
1320. Kroller. Eva-Marie. "Resurrections: Susanna Moodie, Catharine Parr Traill and Emily Can in Contemporary Canadian Literature." J w d of Poplar Cdrure . XV.3.1981.N-46.
Literary Traditiin - Women's; Role-Models, Female; Nature. Women and; Identity, Female; Artist, Woman as; Self. Divided;. * Autobiography, Women's.
a . 1% and 20th Centuries. Prose: Poetjl and Drama
Atwood. Margaret: The J w d s of S u r a n ~ M d i e ; Can. Emily: Hundreds and T h d s ; Daviec, Robertson: At My Hem's Cove ; Laurence, Margaret: The Diviners ; Livesay. Dorothy: "The Three Emilys"; McNeil, Florence: Emily ; die. Susanna: Racghing It in the Bush ; Lif i in the Clearings ; Shields. Carol: Small Ceremonies ; Traill, Catharine Parr: The Buckwads of Canada ; Voaden, Herman: Emily
.d Carr ; Watson, Wilfied: "Emily Can".
1321. Lajoy. Maureen. "No Laubing Matter: Women and Humor." W a e n . V.13 1976,6-9. D
Humour. Women's Use of; Satire. Women's Use of; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Writers. Women - Rediscovered; Images of Women - Bluestocking/ Learned Woman.
17th. 18th. 19th and 20th Centuries, Pruse and Poetry ,
Austen, Jane; Bradsueet. Anne; Burney. Fanny; Cary, Phoebe; Eliot. George; Fuller, Margaret; Gaskill, Elizabeth; Holley. Marieaa; Knight. &ah Kemble; Lamb, Mary; Laos. Anita; MacDonald Betty; McKenney, Ruth; Montagu, Lady Mary Wortley; Parker. Dorothy;. Rowlandson, Mary; Skinner. Cornelia Otis; Stein, Gertrude; Welty, Eudora; Whicher, Frances. -
7
1322. ' McClung. Ellep. "For Love or Convenighce: Women on Marriage in Literature. 1670-1750.' Atlantis, H II.1,1976,67-78:
\ -
Marriage - Arranged - and Equality/Mutuality; Family. Wopen and +d Pirental %
Authority;. Si@e Women; Love. Romantic;. Seduction.
. 17th and 18th Centuries, Prose and Drama
Addison, Joseph. Richard Steele, et al.: The Spectutor ; Astell, Mary: A Serious Propawl to the U i e s j r the Advancement ofTheir Tme and Greatest Interest ; Blackamore, Arthur: Luck a Lost: a The Happy UngWwrate ; Cibber. Colley: h e ' s Lcut Shifl; Fielding, Henry: Ameiiu ; Tam h s ; Johnson, Samuel: Rasseius ; Montagu, Lady Mary Wtiftley: The Cmjdete Letters of Lady Mary Watiey Montagu ; Richardson, Samuel: Clarispll ; Rowe, Nicholas: The Foir Penitent .
1323. McNelly. Cleb. "Natives, Women and Claude Levi-Smuss: A Reading of Tristes Tropiques as Myth," Massachusetts Review, XVI.l, 1975.7-29.
Images of Women - Angel in the House - Native Exotic; French Literature, Women and.
19th and 20th C e n m j Prose, and Poetry
Baudelaire, Charles; Conrad, Joseph: The Hem of Drukness ; Levi-Strauss. Claude: Trvpiques .
1324. MakwarQ Christiane. 'Quebec Women WritersB' W m v n ond Literature. w.1: 1979.3-11.
Literary Tradition - Women's; Quebecoises. Writing by and about; Images of Women - Earth Mother - Terrible Mother; Revision - of Stereotypes; Religion,
- . --- Cross- Time Cross- Genre m
Women and - Christianity; Alienation, Female; Language. Women's Use of - I'Ecriture Feminine - Creating a New Discourse - Irony; Humour. Women's Use of; Satire. Women's Use of. 4 -. 17th. 18th. 19th and 20th Centuries. Prose and Poetry
lkrsianik, Louky; Begon. Elisabeth; Blais. Marie-Claire; Bosco. Monique; Boucher. Denise; Brassard, Nicole; Conan. Laure; Gauthier. Xaviere; Guilbeault Luce; Gagnon, Madeleine; Guevremont, Germaine; Hebert, Anne; Lasnier. EM; Loranger. Suzanne; Mailhot, Michele; Martin, Claire; Morin. Sister Marie; Marie de I'lnmmation; Roy. Gabrielle; Vezina, Medje.
Middlebrook, Diane. "M&kg Visible the Common World: Walt W h i m and Feminist Poetry," K e n p Review, II.4.1980,lil-27. .- t
FedeIFeminist Aesthetic; Subculture. Female;, Communities of Women; Ord Tradition, Women and; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Weaving - Nature; F o m , Inno~ative, in women's Writing; Language. Women's Use of - Creating a New Discowse.
0
19th and 20th Centuries, Prm and Poetry
Griffin, Susan: Women and N a v e ; Rich. Adrieniie: The Dream o)a Common Language ; Whitman. Walt: "Song of Myself".
Perry, Ruth. "Two Forgotten Wits," Antioch Review, XXXIX.4.1981.431-38.
Writers, Women - Rediscovered - Conditions of (17th Century British) - Conditions of (18th Century British); Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Cennuy - Influence on Women's Writing; Literary Tradition - Women's; Publishing, Women and.
23
17th and 18th Centuries. Prose and Poetry.' Includes discussion of untitled poetry by Mary Astell.
Astell. Mary: A Serious Propcud to the Lodies* the Advancement of Their T w and ' Gredest Interest ; Some Rejections upon Mqniage ; Montagu, Lady Mary Wordey: "Turkish Embassy Lettersw. ~ f /'
d d
./ $327. ' Poston, Carol H. JfiGhildbirth in Literanye." Feminist ~ t r d i e s . IV.2. 1978. 18-31.
r
RegnancylChildbirth; Imagery and Motifs in ~ o m e & writing - Genitals - Womb -' Birth; Images of Women - Animal; Self, Divided; Rites of Passage; Communities of Women; ' Isolati~n of Women /
&
' 19th and 20th Centuries, Pryse and Poetry " ./
9 l o
' Betts. Doris: >till Life kith Fruit": Dabble, Margaret: The Wafer$dl: Gordoi Mary:
cross-TL cross- enr re -
"Nancy Creighton" ; Hemingway, Ernest: "The Indian Camp"; Lasing, Doris: A. Proper Marriage ; LeW, Sinclair: Ann Vickers ; Nin, Anais: "Birth"; Pastan, Linda: "Notes from a Delivery Roam"; Plath. Sylvi~.: The Bell Jw ; Singerman, Davida: "The Labor"; Undsei, Sigrid: Kristin Luvanrdatter , Zola, Emile: LA Terre .
7 1328. Sims, Edna N. "Notes on the Negative Image of Woman in Spanish Literature," CLA J w n u l , XIX.4,1976, f68-83.
Images of Women - Temptress - Whore - Terrible Mother - Gossip - Shrew - Intellectual Inferior - Fashion Platg - Undean Woman - Angel in the House - Moral Custodian; Spanish" Literature. Women and; Mmgymst Tracts; Religion, Women and - Christianity; Money, Women and; Folklore; Sentimental Fiction; Advice
. . Literature.
14th. 15th and 16th Centuries. P r k and Poetry 8
Alfonso. Pedro: Discipha Clericalis ; Anonymous: Lazarillo de Twmes ; Delihdo, Francisco: La Locam Andalua ; Flores. Juan de: Grisel y Mirubella ; Leon, Luis de: La PerfictarCPwda ;LMartinez,'~lfonso: C h h o ; Ruiz, J w - The Book of True Love (2lbro de Buen Amor) ; San Pedro. Diego de: Camel de Amar ; Villalon, Crist~bal de: El Crrrtalon ; EI Schdadico : El Viak de Twquia .
- 1329. Zirnmennan, Eugenia Noik. "The Proud Pripcess Gets Her Comeuppance: Structures of Patriarchal Order," Canadian Review of C m p a t i v e Literature, III.3,1976,253-68.
' ! Power. Male - and the Social Order; Power. Female - Male Fear of; Images of Women - Shrew - Castfating Bitch - Submissive Wife; Marriage - and Male Authority; Class Position, Women's; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Didactic Literature.
1 a
lbth and 19th Centuries. Prose and Drama
Amten, Jane: E m h ; Grimm, Brothers: "King Thrushbeard"; Moliere. Jean: Les Precieuses &dicules ; Shakespeare. William: The Taming of the Shrew .
Beck, Brenda E F. "The Role of Women in a Tan84 Folk Epic." C a d t o n Fdklwe C a m d e n . II.1/2,1980,7-29. &+
Indian Literature, Women and; Folklore; Religion, Women and - Hinduism; Power. Female; ?4otherhood; Marriage; Nature. Women q b ; Death. Women ". and; Class Position, Women's; Images of Women - Object - Animal - Virgin - , ,
Wisewoman/Seer; , Sibling Relationships. . Anonymous: The Stwy of the Brdhers.
Blake, C. Fred "The Feelings of Chinese Daughters towards Their Mothers as Revealed in Marriage Laments." Fdklwe . XC.l, 1979.91-97. V
Mother/Daughter Relationships; O@ Tradition, Women and - Song; Power. F e d e - Lack of; Chinese Lite;rature. Women and.
Examines contempor& marriage laments from Sai Kung. China 0
Browberg-Ross, JoAnn. "Storying and Changing: An Examination of the ConsciousnessRaising Process," Fdklwe Feminists' Communicutlon .6, 1975,9-11, +.,* , ,+ . ,,- ,. - , . . .
Oral Tradition, w omin and <torytelling. *
Brief description of work in prsgresS. looking at relationship between storytelling in CR groups. Worneri's social identity and social change
'c
Bruner, Edwqd M. and Jane Paige Kelso. "Gender Differences in Graffiti: A Semiotic ',
Perspective," Women's Studies International Quarterly. IXI.2/3,1980: 23F-52.
Popular Culture - Graffiti: Style. Female vs. Male; Speech Patterns, Female v;. Male; Power, Male; Subculture. Female.
,'
Cantor. Joanne. "What Is Fumy to Whom? The Role of Gender." Juknal of C m w . c a t i & n , ' XXVI.3,1976,164-72.
Humour, Women as Objects of. Y
Compares responses to jokes with male and f e m e targets of ridicule
Caaveli-Chava, Anna. "Bridge between Worlds: The reek women's Lament as Comfnunicative Event" Jaunul of American Fdklme , XCW 368.1980.129-57.
L
- - -
Folklore and O& Tradition ,
k
Oral Tradition, Women and - Song; Greek Literature. Women and; Artist, Woman as; Imagery and Motifs in Wqmen's Writing - Pain - Death - Healer; Subculture. . Female; Pregqancy/Childbirth; Motherhood; ' Mother/Daughter Relationships; CoHectivity'in Women's Writing. I .
Kalliakati, Chrysa; Pateraki. Alexandra i
1336. ~ a r d o z o - ~ r ~ m a n , Inez. "serpent Fears and Religious Motifs among Mexican Women," Ftontiers . 111.3. 1978. 10-13,.
,
Oral Tradition, Women and; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Snakes; Mythological F' es in Women's Writing - Chicomecoat. (Seven Snakes) - Cihuacoatl (Serpent Woman? Coatlicue (Serpent Skirt) - Virgin of Guadalupe - Tonantzin (Our Mother); Prepmcy/Childbirth; Mexican Literature. Women and; Chicanas, Writing by and about .,
!
' ~a r~en te r . AML "'The Burglar and the Old Maid': A Note on an Anti-Female Ballad," Fdklpre Feminists' Communication, 6.1975.67.
Humour. Women as Objects of; Images of Women - Old Maid - Shrew; Oral Tradition, Women and - Song; Sexuality, Female - Male Fear of.
Anonymous: "The Barring of the Door"; "The Farmer's Curst Wife"'; "Johnny Sands"; "The Old Maid Song"; "The Burglar a d the Old Maid".
i
/ 1338. Connier, Holly Hendricks. "Women in Folk Song." Heresies , 111.2, 1980,46-.48.
Oral Tradition, Women and - Song; Forms, Non-Canonical - DiariedJournals; Folklore; Passivity, Female; Sex Roles - Rejection of.
1339. Farrer. Claire R "Introduction: Women and Folklore: Images and Genres," Jacrnul ,of American FdWwe . LXXXVIII.347.19'15. iii-xv.
Folklore; Feminist Process - in Research; Public and Private, Separation ot'; Images of Women - Other; Oral Tradition, Women and
4
Introduction to speual issue on women and folklore
1340. Green, Rayna. "The Pocahontas Perplex: The Image of Indian Women in American Culture." ~ ~ h y & k e v i e v . XV1.4.1975.698-714.
North American Indian Women, Writing by andhout; Images of Women - Squaw - Foreign Exotic - Indian PrincesslQueen - Earth Mccher; Imperialism. Women and
Surveys traditional songs, stories and popular pictorial representations of North American
Indian women, particularly during European settlement of North Arne* - --
t 1341. Green, Rayna. "Magnolias Grown in Dirt TheBawdy Lore of Southern Women." Rudicd
Teacher', 6,1977,26-31.'
Oral Tradition, Women and - Bawdiness; Humour, Women's Use of; Regionalism in Women's Writing; Sexuality. Female; Folklore.
1342. Gunner. Elizabeth. "Songs of Innocence and Experience: Women as Composers and Performers of Izibongo ,'Zulu Praise Poetry," kesebch in Ajircan Literrrtures , X.2.1979.239-67.
I
African Literature, Women and; Oral Tradition, Women and - Song; Identity. Female; Communities of Women; Motherhood; Rivalry. Female; Black Women - and Black Community - Identity - Oral Tradition - Motherhood.
MaCele of Zenzele; Magogo, Princess; MaHlabisa of Hlabisa; MaJele of Hlabisa; MaMpaza of Hlabisa; MaNgwane of Empongolwane; MaShezi of Embongolwane; MaZulu of Mlabisa.
ding, Susan. "Street shduting and Shunning: Conflict between Women in a Spanish Frontiers. IIL3, 1978. 14-18.
Oral Tradition, Women and - Gossip; Rivalry. Female; Family. Women and; Power, Female; Subculture, Female; Spanish Literature, Women and.
a 1344. Jackson, Irene V. "Black Women and Afro-American Song Tradition." Sing Dut! , XXV.2.1976,
10-13. . r
Black Women - Oral Tradition - and Work - Literary Tradition - Writers. Conditiosls of; Slaveg; Oral Tradition, Women and - Song; Images of Women - Black Mammy; Literary Tradition - Women's; Writers. Women - Conditions of (19th Centuq American).
Survey: "From traditional slave society to contemporary Black society. Afro-American women have created, nurtured and sustained vital song traditions"
1345. Japenga, Ann "Women of the ~1~4." Paid My Dues. 5.1975.12-14. 6 .
Oral Tradition, Women and - Song; Writers, Women - Conditions of (20th Century American); Working-Class Women, Writing by and about
Brief survey of blues tradition of American women and the way in which "women have set things right by making their sufiering a story"
-_ ' 2
Dickens. Hazel; Gerrard, Alice; Joplin, Janis; Nelson, Tracy; Raitf Bonnie; Smith. Bessie; ,
- - Few-o&'kadm-
Smith. Janet; Smith, Mamie; Wallace, Sippi. A
1346. Jaskoski, Helen. "',My Heart Will Go Out': ~ e d i n g Songs of Native Amer i~n Women," Internatid krncrl of Women's Studies. IV.2,1981,118-33.
North American Indian Women, Writing by and about; Oral Tradition, Women and - Song; Mysticism, Women and; Religion, Women and - No* American Indian; Rites of Passage; Menstruation; Death. Women and; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Journey; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Corn Goddd; Nature, Women and
Djun; Owl Woman (Jmw Manuel): Prettyshield; Sanapia.
1347. Jones. Deborah. "Gossip: Notes on Wolpen's Oral Cultme." Women's Studies ~nlerrkionul Qwrzerly . III.2/3.1980,193-98.
Oral Tradition, Women and - Gossip; Subculture, Female; Speech Patterns. Female vs. Male: Public and Private,'Separation of.
1348. Joseph. Tem Brint "Poetry as a Strategy of Power: The Case of the Riffian Berber Women," Signs. V.3.1980.418-34.
Oral Tradition, Women and - Song; AFrican Literature, Women and; Power, Female; Rites of Passage; Marriage - and Courtship.
Discussion of courtship songs of Rifian Berber women
1349. Kalcik. Susan "' . . . like Ann's gynecologist or the time I was almost raped': ~ers0xki.l Narratives in Women's Rap Groups," k n a l of American Fdklwe . LXXXVIII.347.1975.3-11.
--
Oral Tradition. Women and - Conversation - Storytelling; Speech Patterns, Female vs. Male; Humour, Women's Use of; Autobiography, Women's.
Analysis of narrative strategies based on the author's involvement in two consciousness-raising groups
1350. Kishwar, Madhu et al. "Hitting Out at Women: Humour as a Weapon of Oppression," M u m h i . 4.1980.12-15.
f Humour. Women Objects of; Images of Women - Shrew - Sexually Devouring Woman - Sex Object - Old Maid - Career Woman; - Violence against Women;. Poweg Male.
Survey of contemporary jokes directed at women
Folklore Ilad Om1 Tradition --- -
1351. Lee, Sonia. "The Image of the Woman in the African Folktale from the Sub-Saharan Francophone Area," Yale French Srudies ,53,1976,18-28.
African Literature, Women and; Oral Tradition. Women and; Folklore; lmages of Women - Jealous Woman - Terrible Mother - Shrew - Decejver.
Diop, Birago: "An Emimd" ; " Linguiani-Malgam " .
1352. Levine, Joan B. "The Feminine Routine," J a u r d of Communication . XXVI.3.1976.173-75.
Humour, Women as Objects of; Humour. Wonm's Use of; Oral Tradition, Women and; Selfabnegation; Theatre. W ~ m e n in the.
Compares routines of male and female staild-up comics
McDowell, Margaret B. "Folk Lullabies: Songs of Anger, Love and Fear," Women's Studies, V.2. 1977.205-18.
Oral Traditiorr, Women and - Song; Folklore; Motherhood - Women's Ambivalence toward; ~re~nancy/&ildbirth; work. Women and; Anger. Female; Death. Women and; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Dead Child - Birth; Money, Women and.
MitcheU. Carol. "Hostility and Aggression toward Males in Female Joke Telling." Fro~iers . III.3.1978.19-23.
Humour, Women's Use of; Oral Tradition. Women and; Power, Female; Male Characters in Women's Writing.
0 d
Mitchell. Carol A. "The Sexual Perspective in the Appreciation and Interpretation of Jokes," Western FdWore . XXXVI.4.1977.303-29.
Humour, Women's Use of; Humow, Women as Objects of; Violence against Women; Mger, Female; Sexuality. Male; Oral Tradition. Women and.
/
Monahan, Kathleen. "Union Maid," Puid My Dues. 4.1975.24-26.36.
Working-Class Women, Writing by and about; Oral Tradition. Women and - Song; Political Activism, Women and; Work, Women and; Poverty. ~ 6 m e n and; Violence against Women; Writers, Women - Conditions of (20th Century American). '
Anonymous: "The Death of Mother Jones" ; "Ma and Pa"; "Pistol Packin Mama"; Cothran, Kay: "Coal in the Stove" ; Dickens, Hazel; Geffer; Edward: "I'm a Union Gal" ; Guthrie, Wopiy: "Union Maidw; Hill. Joe: "The Rebel Girl"; Jackson, Molly; Oppenheim, James and Caroline Kohlsant: "Bread and Roses"; Provannitti. A r t - : "Pan
,c
- - -
- FoIIclore and Oral Tradition I
e Rose"; w i d . Ella May: "Chief Aderholt"; "The Mill Mothers ~ament".'
P
Oliver, Rose. "Whatever Became of Goldilocks." F m i e r s , II.3.1977.85-93.
. Critical Schools. Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism - Freudian/Psychoadytic Criticism; Images of Women, Theory of; Images of N b e n - Terrible Mother - Victim - Virgin - Witch; Sexuality, Female. - e
O w e w of popular fairy tales
Reich. Wendy. Rosalie Buss, Ellen Fein and Terry K u m "Notes on Women's Graffiti." J w n a i of rimetican Fdkdtre . XC.355.1977.188-91.
Popular Culture - Grafiti; i.esbian(s) - Coming out1- Positive Images of.
. Reia, Rosetta. "Mean Mothers: Independent Women's Blues," Heresies, III.2,1980,57-60.
Black Women - Oral Tradition - Literary Tradition - Writers. Rediscovered; Oral Traditi~n, Wgmen and - Song; Independence. Female; Power, Female; Racism; Writers. Women - Rediscovered; Literary Tradition - Women's.
Discussion of Black American women's blues tradition d
.m
Rowe, Karen E "Feminism and Fairy Tales." Wumen's Studies, W.3, 1979.237-57. . D
Love, Romantic - Destructive Power of; Marriage; Mother/fZaughter Relationships; Adolescence; Sex Roles; Sexuality, Female; Sex Roles; Rivalry. F d e ; FatherLDaughter Relationships; Passivity, Female; Gothic, Female; Popular Culture - Magazines - Modem Romances; Reader. Woman as; Images of Women - Witch - Crone. .
I
Beaumont Jeanne Marie Leprince de: Bema y crird the Beast (La Belle eS la Bete) ; Grimm, Brothers: "King Thrushbeard"; "Snow-Drop" ; " Aschenputtel" ; "The Twelve Dancing Princesses "; Perrault Charles: "Cinderella"; "Sleeping Beauty "; "Diamonds and Toads".
Russell, Michele. "Slave ( N e s and Liner Notes," Heresies. 111.2. 1980.52-56.
I Slavery; Racism; Black women - Oral Tradition - Literary ~raditick - Sexuality - and Work; Work, Women and; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; Oral Tradition, Women and - Song; Literary Tradition - Women's; Sexuality. Female.
Overview of blues tradition of American black women I
Holiday. Billie; Jackson, Bessie; PhilIps, Esther: Simone. Nina; Smith. Bessie.
. i <* -
- - Fnilrlnre--
1362. Ryder, Georgia A. "Blaek Women in Song: Some Soae-€dW Images," Negm H i s m y Bulletin, XXXIX.5,1976,601-03.
Black Women - Oml Tradition; Oral Tradition. Women and - Song; Language. Women's Use of - Encoding; Images of Women - Blues Singer.
' Anderson, Marian; Greenfield, Elizabeth Taylor; Holiday. Billie; Jackson. Mahalia; Smith, Bessie; Tubman, Hamet; Waters. Ethel.
P
>
1363. St John, Jacqueline D. "Sex Role Stereotyping in Early Broadcast History: The Career of Maq Margaret McBride," Frontiers, III.3.1978.31-38.
Oral Tradition, Women and - Conversation - Storytelling; Speech Patterns. Female vs. , Male; Writers, Women - Conditions of (20th Cennuy American); Work, Worhen
and.
McBride, Mary Margaret: Our of the Air .
, 1364. Stan. Elizabeth. "On Sexism in Folklore Scholarship." Fdklwe Women's Cmmuiu'cufion . 20.
1980.16-22.
Objectivity. Myth of; Phallic Criticism; Violence against Women; Oral Tradition. .Women and - Song - Storytelling; Folklore; Sexuality. Female - Repressed; . Racism - Relation to Sexism; Feminist Process - in Research.
Describes sexism of several folklore scholars, particularly in relation to female sexuality and violence against women
1365. Stone. Kay. "Thixqs Walt Disney Never Told US," J w n a l of American ~d&,, i I LXXXVIII.347. a , 1975.42-50.
Folklore; Images of Women - Idealized Love Object - Victim - Waiting Worn; Passivity, Female; Sexuality, Female - Male Fear of - and the Double Standard. P
u" Overview of versions of a large number of fairy tales, xh.a.~nly by Grimrn brothers;
-
emphasis on American variations
Disney, Walt; Grimm, Brothers; Perrault Charles.
'1366. T a m James M.- "Men's Changing lrnage of Women in Nahuat Oral Tradition." American Ethndogist .6.1979,723-41. , .
* . P
Family, Women and; Power, Female; Money. Women and; Oral Tradition, Women and - Storytelling; Folklore; % lmages of Women - Sexually Devouriag. Woman - Moral lnferior - A d - k i v e r - Fallen Woman; &ligion, Women anhi - Christianity: Mexian Literature. Women and; M a i e / F d e Relationships.
-4
t
Comparison of folk rale versions of story of Adam and Eve in two sierra -
- communities shows how storytellers alte: thcwmpetence and sexuality characters when women acquire more control over strategic resources in male-dominant family systems
? - Tiwar). K. M. "Tuneful Weeping: A Mode of Communication." Frmrers, 111.3. 1978. 24-27.
Oral Tradition, Women and; Speech Panem. Female vs. M J e ; Friendships, Female; Rites of Passage.
-
Waelti-Walters, Jennifer. . "On Princesses: Fairy Tales, Sex Roles and Loss of Self, " lntcroriimal k n o l o f W a e n 9 s Stdies. 11.2.1979.180-88.
I
v i Images of Women - Jealous Woman - Terrible Mother - Madwoman - Witch - Crone - Virgin - Victim; Sex Roles;' Identity. Female; Violence against Women; 'Madness. Women an$
% - Indudes critique of Bnqo Bettelheim's The Uses of ~nchgntmenr
e L '
Andexsen. Hans Christian; Grimm, ~rorhers 4
L -
Weigle. Maria "V(ornen as Verbal A;rtists: Reclaiming the Sisters of Eriheduarha," Frontders . 111.3. 1978. 1-9.
. Ural Tradition, Women and - Gossip - Conv&sation - Song - Storytelling - Oratory; Collectivity in Women's Writing; Humow. Women's Use of; Folklore; an is^ W o r n .as: Public and Pnvae. ¶tion of. .
Whitehouse, Jeanne. "Of Dsun women Entertaining." Fronrrers . 111.3, 1978. 28-30. . Oral Tradition. Women and - ?Storytelling; .Speech Panerns. Female vs. Male.
XWCIE LANGUAGE AND GENDER e *- s
P *
1371. . Bate,.Barbara. 'Nony*st Language Use.in Transition," aJaunal of ~mrnun i&im. X h I I . 1 . * 0
. 1978,13'9-;49. '* .
Language, Patriarchal - Gender-Specific Forms - Generic Masculine - and Sex@ Stereotyping; Speech Patterns, Female vs. Male:
*
Bate. Barbara A. "Generic M a s Invisible Woman: Language, Thought, and Sodal Change," University of Michigan Papers in Women's Studies, II.l,1975,83-95.
1 -/
A
Liqnguage, Patriarchal - as Dominant Discourse - Generic dine T and Female invisibility. b
Beck, Kay. " k x Differentiated S W Codes," International b n h l of Wmen's Studies,, L6. 1978.566-72. - \,
A
Ir,
Speech Patterns. Female vr Mbe; Subcultur~. Female.
Blaubergs. Maija S. "On the Usage of Ms.: Discovering Sexist hguage . " Fireweed, 5/6, 1979/80.180-88.
r ~
Language. Patriarchal - Gender-Specific Forms; Language. Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse.
Blaubergs. Maija S. "An Analysis of Classic Arguments against Changing Sexist Lhguage," Wanen's Studies Insernatid Qurvteriy , IIl.2/3.1980.135-47.
Language. Patriarchal - Gender-Specific Forms - Generic Masculine; Revision - of Critical Tradition.
C
Bodine, Ann. wAndrocentrism in Prescriptive Grammar: Singular 'they', Sex-Indefipite 'he', and 'he or she'." Language in Society. IV.2.1975, 12946.
Language. Patriarchal - Generic Masculine - Gender-Specific Forms
Includes review of history of personal pronoun usage in English
Gputi:lane E. 'The G ~ U T of Grammar.' Chrydu. 4.1977.35-43.
Images of Womm Theory oT: Images of Wdhlen - ~ i & ' Language. Patriar& - Gender-Specific Forms - and Female invisibility - as Inadequate for Expressing
p . Women's Experience : as Dominant~Discourse; Language, W6fl~n's ~ s e d .
" Reclaiming.
1378. Crosby. Faye and ~yn& Nyquist "The Female Register: 'An Anmcal Study of Lakofl's Hypotheses. " Lunguagt in Society. VI.3.1977.313-22. .
0 -. - I d ' Speech Patterns. Female vs. Male; Class Position. Women's; Feniinist Pro& - in
Research. -
1379. Cullen, Constance. "Sexism in Language." English Qumerly . VI11.4. 197V76.43-52. 8
I Speech Patterns, Female vs. Male; Language, Patriarchal - Gender-Specific Forms - Generic Masculine.
. I -
1380. Davy. Shirley. "Miss to Mn: Going. ~ o i n g . Gone!." Canadian W m e f i Studies . I$. 1978. 47-48. - -
Language. Patriarchal - as Dominan~Discourse; Language. ~ o m e k s Use of - Creating a NexDiscourse.
9
i381. DuBois. %try Lou and Isabel Crouch. "The Question of Tag Questions in Women's Speech: They Don't Really Use More of Them, They?," language in Society. IV.3, 1975, 289-94. '
Speech Patterns, Female vs. Male; Language, Women's Use of - Intonation; Feminist Process - in Research.
1382. Drenreich, Barbara "The Politics of Talking in Couples." Ms. . IX.ll. 1981.46-48.
Conversatiod Interaction. Male/Female. - - 2 -
1383. &mar. Virginia L "American M e n s w Expressions." Sex Rdes: A h'.lal of Reseurch . 1 . 1 . 1975,3-13.
I Mensuuation; Language. Patriarchal - and sex-& Stereotyping; 0 I Tradition. ,/ Women and t
Comparison of rnal'e and female Sla@ expressions for menstruation
1384. Fishman. Pamela M. 'Power and Powerlessness in Conversation: Some Speculations." Fireweed. 5/6.1979/80.49-53. A,
. -
.. Conversational Interaction. MaleIFemale; Power, Male; Power, Female - Lack of.
i
L 1385. Foote, Audrey C.. "Notes on the Di~taff Side," Atlantic. Monthly .~taffXX_M;l. 1917a91, - + d
, Images of w&en - Old Maid; Single Women; Language. Patdarchd - e
Otnder-Spd&c Forms -%and Sexual Stereotyping;- 'Powp, Female - Male F&o~: w r y and Motifs in Women's Writing - Sp-g. . "
? , - - Traces etymology of the word 'spinster'
+t "
* -
1386. French. Marilyn. "When'in Language," Scundings. LIX3.1976.329-44.
hguage.'~atriarchd'- and Female Invisibility and Sexual Stereotyping - Generic . MascuIine - Gender-S@fic Forms; Speech Patterns. Female vs. Male.
- 1387. Gearhart Sally Miller. "The Wonmnization of Rhetoric," ohe en's Studies International
Quarterly. II.2.1979. B5-201. 9
Langhge, Patriarchal - Rhetorical Tradition; Language, Women's Use of - Creating New Dimurse. a%
I
3 3 .,. -- -
? F
1388. George. Diana ~ u r n e , "The Miltonic Ideal: h Paradigm for the Structure of Relations between 'Men and Women in Academiaw Cdlege Fnghh. XL8.1979.864-70.
',
Academia, Wwen in; Images of Women - Intellectual Inferior; language, Patriarchal --RBetorical Tradition; Male Bonding; Rationality, Male.
I
A discussion of Ong, Walter J., S. J. "Agonistic ~tnktures in Academia: Past to Present" Daeddus , 103, 1974,229-238. George's article is followed by a response from Walter .
T I '
Ong. pp. 871-73. P
Milton, John: Paradise Losr . .
G \
George. Diana Hume. "Diana Hume George Responds," Cdlege English . XLI.4.1979.47'2-75. ~cade& Women in; Objectivity. Myth of: Language. ~atriar'chal - Rhetorical T r a d i t i r
Response to Farrell, Thomas J. "Fdr the Rise of Higher Masculinity: A Comment on ' t
Diana,.Hume George's 'The Miltonic Ideal'." Cdlege English . XLI.4.1979.468-72, an anti-feminist amck on George's article, which appeared in Cdlege English , XL8.1979. 864-70. . .I
I
Grkn, will& H. "Singula Pronouns and Sexual Politics." Cdle$e Cmptasition and. ("a Communication. XXWI.2,1977,15&53.
0 L - Laslguage, Paniarchal- Generic Masculine.
1391. Hanison, Linda. "Cro-Magnon Woman - in Eclipse," TheSeienee Teacher, XU4.4.l975. 8-11.
9
- < ~ Language. Patriarchal - GeneqT ~ a s c u l h e - and Female Invisibility.
Discussion of use of generic masculine in science textbooks and science teaching. Includes results of a survey of junior high school students and their responses to use of the generic . masculine
, -
1392. Helgeson, Candace. "The Prisoners of Texts: Male Chauvinism in College Handbooks and -- Rhetoricsw cd1eg( English . XXXVII1.4.1976.396-406.
Images of Women - Sex Object - Happy Housewe - Intellectual Inferior - Irrational Womah; Language. Patriarchal - Generic Masculine - Gender-Sp~cific Forms - and Female Invisibility - and Sexual Stereotyping.
Survey of college g r a m x ~ ~ and style handbooks
HiaK Mary P. "The Sexology of Style." Lunguage and Styie . IX.2.1976.98-107. 89
Style. Female vs Male; FemalelFeminist Aesthetic.
Hiatt, Mary P. "The Feminine Style: Theory and Fact" Cdlege Compition and Communication , XXIX.3,197?, 222-26.
Style, Female vs. Male; Language. Patriarchal - and Sexual Stereotyping; Masculinity.
Computer analysis of style in fifty contemporary novels by men and fifty contemporary novels by women
Hiatt, Mary P. "Women's Prose Style: A Study of Contemporary Authors." Longuage and Style , XIII.4.1980.36-45. - a
FemalelFeminist Aesthetic; Style. Female vs. Male.
Computer analysis of style in fifty contemporary novels by men and fifty contemporary novels by women
1396. Hoagland, Sarah &cia "Androcentric Rhetoric in Sociobiology," Women's Studies International Q 6 t e r l y . III.2/3,1980.285-93.
Language, Patriarchal - Rhetorical Tradition - &d Female Invisibility - as ~ominaht Discourse; Images of Women - Other.
Laoguage and Gender . . I
- Examines languagk usage in E 0. Wilson's Smiobidogy The New ~ynzhE(S
e
, b
Kitagawa, Chisato. "A Source of Femininity in Japanese: In Defense of Robin Lakoff s 'Language and Women's Place'," P a p s in Linguistics, X.3/4,1977,275-98. -.
Sfxech pane& Female vs. M e ; Language, Women's Use of - Intonation; -Power, Female - Lack of; h a g s of Women - Coquette; Language. Patriarchal,- and ' * Sexual Stereotyping.
Analysis of criticism of Lakoffs theory of women's language; applicationaf her . ,
hypotheses to Ja ese women's speech 7 & - --
Ehmer,o~heris, Bame Thorne and Nancy Henley. "Perspectives on Language and Communication," Signs, lII.3.1978.638-51.
Speech Patterns. Female 7s. Male; Language, Patriarchal - Gender-Specific Forms - and Sexual Stereotyping - as Dominant Discourse - Generic Masculine:
lnm&plete - check again for Intonation and CMversational heraction *I
Kuykendall, Eleanor. "Breaking the Double 'Binds," Longwge and StHe, XIII.4,1980,81-93.
Speech Patterns. Female vs. Male; Power, Female - Lack of.
Lakoff, Robin Tolmach. "Women's Language." Lunguage ond StHe , X.4,1977,222-47.
~ p e e b Patterns. Female vs. Male; Passivity. Female.
d McConnell-Gihet, Sally. "Our Father Tongue: Essays in Linguistic ~olitics," Diacritics, V.4. 1975.44-50.
Speech Patterns, Female vs. Male; Subculture. Female; Language, Patriarchill - arid - 6exual Stereotyping.
McComell-Ginet. Sally. "Intonation in a Man's World," Signs, IIL3.1978.541-59.
Speech Patterns. Female vs. Male; Language, Women's Use of - Intonation.
MacKay. Donald G.' "On the Goals, Principles, h d Procedures for Prescriptive Grammar: Singular they." Language i p Society, IX.3.1980.349-67.
Language, Patriarchal - Gender-Specific Forms - Generic Masculine.
I
. . - - d - - -- - - lAqpgeandctaha h , -,
1404. MacKay. Ibonald G. A d Tmhi Konishi. "Personification and the Ronoun Pr~blem." Wc&eds - studies International Quarterly. III:2/3.1980.149-63.
-7
Language, ~a t r i a rha l - Gender-Specific Forms - and Sexual Stereotypigg; Childhood.
P
1405. Martyna, Wendy. "What Does 'He' Mean? Use of the Geheric Masculine," launal of dmrnunication , XXVlII.l.1978.131-38.
I
Language. ~atrii irdal - ~ e n e i c ~ - a ~ c u l i n e . ~ ~
Martyna. Wendy. "-Beyond the 'He/ManV Approach: The Case for Nonsexist Language;"-Slgns . V.3. 1980,482-93.
Ci /
Language. Patriarchal - Generic Masculine - as Dominant Disoourse.
Miller, Casey and Kate Swik "Words and Women," Aphra . VI.3/4.1976,6- . ? speech Patterns. Female vs. Male; Language. Patriarchal - Obsanity L#-%WK Women's Use of - Obscenity; Sexuality. Female; images of Women, eory of;
- -Identity, Female; Masculinity; Violence against Women; - Sexuality. Male.
? Nichols, Pamcia C. "Planning for Language Change." Sun Jme Studies. VI.Z.1980.18-q. -
Language, Patriarchal - Generic Masculine - Gender-Specific Forms; Images of Women - Other: Speech Pgterns. Female vs. Male; Reader. Woman as; Academia, Women in.
Penelope, Julia "Language and Communication: Syntactic Euphemism." Papers in Lngtdstics, XIV.4.1981.473-85.
Objectivity. Myth of; Language. Patriarchal - and Sexual Stereotyping; Racism.
" . . . processes such as topicalization and the creation of surface 'subjects' and 'objects' can - - function to supress and 'distort information as well as maximize information. . . . ow descriptions of such phenomena, have, to date, neglected to account for the more insidious uses to which syntactic rules can be put" '
Penelope (Stanley), Julia and Cynthia McGowan. "Woman and Wife: Social/Semantic Shifts in English," Papers in Linguistics . ~11 .3 j4 , 1979. 491-502.
\ rJ _cP,
Language: Patriarchal ,- Gender-Specific Forms; Feminist Process - in Research; --- Objectivity, Myth of. - -
1 Discusses changes during Old a s h period in terms designating female and male human
Recious. Dorothy. "-h Investigation into the English System of Address: A Case of Linguistic Sexism," Athntis ,11.2, 1977.78-93.
3 - -
Language, Patriarchal - and Sexual Stereotyping; ~dentity. ~ e d e ; Popular Culme - Magazines. b
-- , C o n t analysis of six magazines, indexing terms of ad&=: ~ e w m k e k . Maclean's. Playboy, Ms. , Cmopditan , and Chatelaine
Punell, Sandra E "Politically Speaking, Do Women Exist?," JW& of Communication . XXWI.1.1978, 150-55. e
2
~ a n ~ u a g e , Papiarchal - and Female Invisibility - Generic -e - and Sexual Stereotyping. ? -
Rose, Maxine S. "Sexism in Five Leading Collegiate Dictionaries." Cdlege Campition and Cmmnication , XXX.4. -1979. 375-79. .
Language. Patriarchal - and Sexual ~tereorypin~ - as Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience.
Rysman. Alexander. "How the 'Gossip' Became "aoman." Jaunal of Communication , XXVII.l.1977.176-80.
Language. Patriarchal - and Sexual Stereotyping; Power, Female - Male Fear of; Images of Women - ~oss ip .
t : .
Traces etymology of the word 'gossip'
Schulz. Muriel R. "How Serious Is Sex Bias in Language," Cdlege Composition and Cmmunication , XXV1.2.1975.16367.
. . Language, Patriarchal - Gender-Specific Forms - Generic Masculine.
Scon Kathryn P. "Perceptions of Communication Competence: What's Good for the C~oose Is Not Good for the Gander," Women's Studies in ternat id Quarterly. IH.2/3,1980,199-208.
I+guage. Patriarchal - and Sexual S t e r w i n g ; Speech Patterns. Female vs. Male.
Silveira, Jeanette. "Generic Masculine words and Thinking. " Women's Studies internrrtioncrl m e r l y , m.2/3.1980, 165-78.
- - - - -- - - LPnmge Pod W e t
Language. Patriarchal - Generic Masculine; ~ h o u ~ h t Modsof:~-le us. Male; -
AlieMtion, Female. ,
. a Isdates issues involved in arguments for and against changes in generic masculine. Concludes that reduction in generic use of man" and "he" would result in lmg tefin reduction of sexist thinking 7
Smith, J. Jerome. "Male and Female Ways of Spealung: Elaborately Restricted OGiies in s CB *
Speech Community," Papers in Linguistics . XI1.1/2,1979.163-84. t
Oral Tradition, Women and; Sex Roles - Rejection of; Androgyny; Speech Patterns, Female vs. Male.
Stanley, Julia P. "Sexist G~ammar." Cdlege English . XXXIX.7, 1978.800-811.
- Language, Patriarchal - Generic Masculine - Gender-Specific F o m - as Dominant Discourse.
Overview discussion of English grammar texts from the 18th century to the r t @ %
Stanley, Julia P. and Susan W. Robbins. "Going Through the Changes: The Pronoun She in Middle English," Papers in Linguistics . XI.1/2.1978.71-88.
Language, Patriarchal - Gender-Specific Forms - ~ e i e r i c Masculine; Images of Women - Other; Religion, Women and - Christianity.
J - The authors advance a theory of the development of the English pronomial system which takes into accounr social and historical developments in the status of women
Stanley. Julia P. and Susan W. Robbins. "Sex-marked Predicates in English," Papers in Linguistics, x1.31'4, 1978.487-5J6.
Language. Patriarchal - and Sexual Stereotyping - Gender-Specific Forms; Sexuality. Male; Sexuality, ern ale - and the Double Standard; Passivity. Female; Motherhood; PregnancyKhildbirth; Abortion; Menstruation.
" . . . the Englfsh lexicon appears to contain a superfluous number of predicates to denote male sexual operations apd activities, and relatively few such terms to refer to female sexual activities, an imbalance explicable only with reference to the structure of the culture. "
ii % Steinem, Gloria. "The ?olitics of Talking in Groups," MS. , IX.l l , 1981.4345.84;-88.
Conversational Interaction, Male/Female; Power, Female. - Lack of.
I
1423. Stephenson, Marylee. "Butterflies Aren't Free: Sexism in Naarrai Science Books for the - Layperson." Atlantis, IV.2.1'979.96-103. -
Language, Patriarchal - and Female Invisibility - Generic Masculine - and Sexual Stereotyping.
' 6 - - Overview discmion of popular &ks on natural history anti human biology
.I
*
T i m Lenora A. "Not Mere Tongue-meek: The Case for a Common Gender Pronoun in English," International kurnal of Women's Studies. L6.1978.555-65.
_ . Language, Patriarchal - Generic Masculine - Gender-Specific Forms. - -
g Includes seven p r m s for non-genderspecific (called "common gender") pronouns
Weiher, Carol. "Sexism in Language and Sex Differences in Language Usage: Which Is More Important?." Cdlege C m p . t i o n and Cmmttirication , r- 3' 1976* 240-43.
Language. Pauimhd - Generic Masculine - ~ e n d x - eci& Forms; Speech Patterns. Female vs. Male; Feminist Process - in Resea~ch &
Wolfe, Susan J. "Consuucting and Rmnstructing Patriarchy: Sexism and Diachronic Semantics," Papers in Linguistics, XIU2.1980.321-44. ,
Language, Patriarchal - and Sexual Stereotyping - Gender-Specific Forms - Terms of Sexual Abuse - Obscenity; Family. W h e n and; Objectivity, Myth of. -- .
"Research on sexism in English correlates semantic change with the feature [+ female] . . . terms for women undergo pejoration [debasement], unlike corresponding terms for men . . . . Predicates indicating male donliiiation proliferate . . . . 'Feminine' pronoun forms may have developed because English shifted to 'naW gender.' Linguistic data provide evidence that patriarchy has not been an unbroken tradition among speakers of Indo-European languag~" Incomplete - check again for other speech categories
Wdfe, Susan J. "Amazon Etymology: Rooting for the Matriarchy," S i U e r Wisdom. 12,1980, 15-20. P
Language, Patriarchal - and Female Invisibility - as Dominant Discourse; ~ e & i s t Process-inResezfch.
Wolfe, Susan J. and Julia Penelope Stanley. "Mguistic Problems with Patrkrdd Remamuctions of hdo-~uropean Culture: A Little More than Kin, a Little Less than Kind," Wmen's Studies International Quarterly , III.2/3,1980,227-37,.
- - -- - - - -- - - Language, Patriarchal - and Female Inyisibility; Re-vision - of Critical Tradition
B
B
7 - -- - -- /-
"C%raslla~nndCender"
1429, Worby, Diana Zacharia "In Sea& ola Common Language: Women and &iucational Texts." A
Cdlege English , XLI.1.1979.101-05.
Language, Patriarchal - Generic Masculine - and Female ln&ibility - and Sexual Stereotyping.
c. Examination of sexist language in Slnmk, William Jr. and E B. White. The Elements of StvJe . -
P
XXXIV. PEDAGOGY AND BESEARCH d. -
1430. Abbot, Andrea and Pamela Gray. "Learning to Speak: A Women's Poetry Workshop," Rudicd Teacher, 13,.1979,33-38. +
Teaching - Writing to! Women; , Feminist Process - in the Classroom - in , ReadingNriting Groups; Collectivity in Women's Writing.
'\
1'431. Agonito, ~osemary and Joseph Agonito. "Resurfecting History's Fo~odten Women: A Cat& Study From the Cheyenne Indians," Frontiers, VI.3.1981.8-16. ,
?
__Biography, Women's; North American Indian Woinen, Writing by and about; ' Images of Women - Native Exotic - Squaw; Revision - of Stereotypes; Feminist Process - in Research.
4 I
1432. Allen, Margaret "The Representation of Women's and Feminist Work in Traditional Academic Journals: Austrah,,1975-1980," Reswcesjb. Feminist Research , IX.4, H80/81,13.
1 )
Feminist Process - in Research; Publishing, Women and
Description of work in progress - 1433. Anthony. Geraldine and Tina Usmiani. "A Bibliography of English Canactian Drama Written by
Women," Warld Literature Written in English , XW.l . 1978.120-43.
FeministsProcess - in the Theatre; Bibliographies ab6ut Women.
Lists work of more than two hundred Canadian women
L 1434. Archer, Jane, Sally Ann Drucker, Marilyn E Matis, Dot& Meek, men peters& and Marcella
Sherman. "Initiating a'Context: A CoUective Approach to Feminist Critical Theory." Radical Teacher. 18.lq80.33-39.
Teaching - Feminist Literary Criticism; Ferninist Pedagogy; Feminist Process - in the Qassroom; Critical Schools. Other. Relation .to Feminist Criticism - Marxist Criticism - Reader-Respohse Criticib - S w c h u a t i s m / P o s t - S m s m ; -st-Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of; Prescriptive Criticism; Writers,
'Women - and Silence. . ~ ~ ~ d u d e s w& rea- list /' -
h s m g Doris: The Gdden Naebook .
Arlow, Phyllis and Merie Fro@L School U. S. History and En&& 11-22.
"Women in the H@I Schoot Cunicrllllmr A Rertiei OfHigh --
Literature Texts." Women's Studies N ewdetter . L11.3/4, 1975,
Images of Women - Sex Object - Submissive Wife - Victim - Intellectual Inferior; %
Humour, Women b Objects of; Black Women - Absence from Literary Tradition L /D Language, Pattfarchal - and Sexual*Stereotyping - Generic Masculine; Literary Tradition Women's Absence from; Work. Women and; Sex Roles; Adolescence.
Studies twelve popularly used history texts and fiterature anthologies in cumnt use for representation ipd portrayals of viomen. Includes bibliography o~articlcs about sexism in school curricula.
Ascher, Carol. "Women Working with Women in the University," Heresies : 7.1979, 58-63. -
Academia, Women in; Rivalry. Female.
\c Austin, Kitty. "Our Peaders Wnte: Sexism and the ish Teacher: Where Do We Go from
, Here?." English h d , LXX.2.1981.48-51. ? ~eminist Pedagogy. 4
Several letters offering suggestions for dealing with sexism in the secondary school literature classroom Other writers are Marianne Jane Strong. Ellen D. ~ b l b a and William V. Ruch.
-i
Beebe, Saudra "Warnen in American ~iierature." English /acrnal. LXIV.6. 1975.32-35. "/ F d n i s t Pedagogy; Teaching - Feminist Literary Criticism - Women's W r; ting; Feminist Process - in thq Classroom.
Describes a onesemester high school class, "Women in American Literature"; includes lesSon plan O
. I
Berrian, Brenda F. "Bibliographies of Nine Female African Writers," Resecuch in Ajrrcan Literatures. XII.2.1981,214-36.
African Literature. Women and; Bibliographies about Women. . Includes primary and secondary material
Aidoo. A m Ata; Casely-Hayford. Adelaide; Casely-Hayford, Gladys ( m u d Aquah Laluah); Emecheta, Buchi; Nwakuche, Flora Nwapa; Ogot Grace; Segun, Mabel Imoukhuede Jolaosa; Sutherland, Efua; Zirimu, Elvania Namukwaya.
Tachiag - wan Wri"ag: Inbla(r) - Invisibility of - in hudcmia-- ~ w u n g ~ i i ! - tDve m u y - Literary Traditim - Publishity - Refaiionsbips; Academia. Worrren h; Lme Pottr).. Wmntn's; Li~erary Tradition - Wornen's; Teaching - Wmm's Writing; hM&ing. Women and.
Makes passing refmewe to &in c o r r t ~ ~ t p o q fcstrian poets
1 W . k t k h Ells. "A Whale New Iaoecr). 2kgming Hex': Ttpching Lesbian P e , " CeHege - - A
Ehgitrh. X t & 1W9.874-08. , *
' .
Tesching - Le&m Writing; Lesbian(s) - in Academia - Invisibitity of = Coming Ow - Love Wrry - RelatioDships - Litem Tradition; Academia. Women in; Literary
- Tradition - Women's; h e Poetry. Women's; Working-class Women. Writing b! d
+% a and about; Black Women - Lesbians; Teaching - Women's Writing. ,
v
0 +
hhk& passing r e f e r k s u, other contemporary lesbian poets '
&milow , E-, Ilouisc, s ed: The Wald Split Opem Fau ~ e n r w i & of W a e n Poets rn iinglond ond AmeAca, 152- 1950. ; Broumas, Olga: "Sleeping ~eauty " ; Bdkin, Eily and Joan Larkin. eds: A m a z m P a e r t ~ An Anthdog),; Grahn. Judy: "The Common Woman"; " A Woman 1s Talking to Death"; h r d e . Audre: "Lovc Poem"; "Scar"; "Power"; Rich, .' Adrienne: 'To Judith, Taking h v e ' ; Twenty- One h e Pcerns ; "Transcendental
, Exudem: Rukeyscr, Muriel: The S d of Darkness ; Sanon. May: Mrs. Stevens Hem the Mennor'ds Singing ; Sheman, ?? m: "Duration": "Lilith of the Wildwood. of the Fair Placesm; S w m o n . May: 'To Confirm a Thing".
9
1445: ~uikin: Elly. 'Heurcrsexism and Women's Studies," Rudical Teacher, 17,1980: 25-31. i
t Hctcrosexism - in Women's Studies; Racism - in Women's Studies; Lesbian(s) - in Academia - 1nvisibilir)l of; Teaching - Lesbh Writing; Academia. Women in.
-1
Indudes guidelines for anti-beterosexism consciousness-raising groups and for anti-hererosexist mch&g
1446. 'Bulkin, Elly. "Racism &d W ritinp: Some ~ h ~ l i c a t i o n s for White Lesbian Critics." S m s m W d m , :3,1980,3-22.
Racism - in Women's Studies; Heterosexisri3 - in Women's Stuhes.
Indudes guidelines for anti-mast C-R groups 3
- 1447. Call. Karen. "A Bibliography of Nineteenth-Century Women Writers in Rhode Island,"
American Truascendenral Quarterly. 47/48.1980,199-244.
Writers, Women - Rediscovered; Regionallsrn in Women's Writing: Bibliographies a h u t Women.
1448. Cantarow. Ellen. ' "Academic Gore." Radical Teacher 11.1979.15-16.20. *
Acaderk. .Women in
Describes the relation of women to the Old Boys' network at the Modern h g u a g e Association's annual c o n v e n t i o a ' k r n b e r 1978
/ --
1449. Carpenter, Carol. "Exercises ro Combat Sexist Reading and Writing " Cdlege En&h . XLJU.3, , - - 2981.293-300. - /
Feminist R& - in the Classroom; *uage, Patriarchal - &-&wal Stereotyping. .. .
lnciudes desc-riptim of course exercises and research topics for ccnnbatting and examin@ 1 . sexism in freshman ampmition muses :& - *
4
1450. Cary, Meredith. 'Literature and Liberation," Cdlege English , XXXVIII.1.1976.62-67.
Teaching - Women's Writing; Sex Roles; Style, Female vs Male; Passivity, Female.
Qopin, Kate: The Awaketiing ; Drabble. Marpuet: The M U l n m ; Fitzgerald, F. con: 7 &
' Tender Is the Night ; Fitzgerald, Zelda: Save Me the W d t z ; Howard, Elizabeth Jane: -Girl Oul ; Johnsan, Diane: Burning ; Kotker, Zane: Baiies in M d i m ; Lessing,
Doris: The Gdden N a e M ; O m , Joyce Carol: Them ; Piercy, Marge: Smclll Changes ; PIath. Sylvia: The Bell kv ; Ponicsan, Darryl: Cinderelia Liberty ; Spark, Muriel: The Rime ofMiss kan B d i e ; Wharton, Edith: The Age ofInmcence. a
5 - 4
1451. Cornissiong, B a r b and Marjorie Thorpe. "A Select Bibliography of Women Writers in the Eastern Caribbean," Wwld Literature Written in English ; XVIL1.1978.279-304.
Caribbean Literature, Women and; Bibliographies about Women . a
- Includes primary work by writers From Antigua Barbados, Dominica, Grenada, Montserrat, St Kim. St Vincent, Trinidad and Tobago
I P , .
1452. Cunningham, Stuan "Bibliography: Sylvia Plath," Hecute. W.2.1975.95-112.
- - - ---- Bibliographies about Women.
Includes: Location of individual poems, prose and dramatic pieces as well as critical articles and monographs.
i
Plath. Sylvia &
1453. Damon, Gene. "When It Changed: Oi. Gro Up Gay in America with the Help of Literature," Margins. 23,1975. 16-18.
'$# Feminist Process - in ~esearch; Lsbian(s) - Literary Tradirion - Identity - Invisibility of; ' Bi&ph y. Womenls; - Bibliagtaphies about Women; Literary Tradition - Women's; Identity. Female.
/- Bibliographic essay on lesbian literature andiesbians in 'literature.
- - P . *
P W - - - - - - - ---- -- -- - 1454, ' Dandridge, Rita. "On Novels by Black American Women: A Bibkopmphic-~y~)ILaen's- - - - - -
Studies Newsletter, VL3,1978,28-30.
Black Women - Absence from ~ikrary Tradition - Literary Tradition; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from - Women's; Bibliographies about Women. - - -
1455. .Davicison, Cathy N. "A Liferamre of Swivors: On Teaching Canada's Worne~ Writers," Women's Studies Newsletter, VI.4.1978.12-15. Y -
* - Role-Models. Female; Independence, F e w e ; Feminist Pedagogy.
Brief survey of canad& women writers whose novels feature'smng female protagonists. positive role models for students of women's literature
#
Atwood, Margar&; Beresford-HO&. Constance; Brooke. Frances; Gilboord. Margaret -Gibson; Laurence, Margaret; McClung. Nellie; Moodie. Susanna; Munro. Alice; Roy: , Gabrielle; Rule, Jane; Thomas, Audrey; Tmill, Catharine Parr; Wiseman, Adele.
- 1456. Dichter. Nancy. "Mufterings from a Women's Studies Institute." English J w d . LXX.4. 198 1,
34-35. n
Feminist Pedagogy; Feminist Process- in the Classroom; Racism.
A teacher's experiences in a feminist study group
1457. Doughty, Frances. "Lesbian Biography. Biography of Lesbians." Frontiers. IV.3.1979.76-79.
Lesbianism - Definitions of - Encoded; Hetermexism; Feminist Process - m Research; Public and Private, Separation
of.
Collected under the title "Three Perspectives on Method" with two other articles on lesbian biography: Miller. Patricia McClelland. "The Individual Life."' Frontiers. IV.3. 1979.70-74 and Faderman. Lillian. "Who Hid Lesbian History?," Frontiers, JV.3.1979. 74-76.
Anderson. Margaret; Flamer. Janet (pseud. Genet). d
t Erickson, Carolly and Kathleen Casey. "Women in the Middle Ages: A Working Bibliography." Mediaeval Studies, XXXW, 1975. W 5 9 .
Images of Women, Theory of; Bibliographies about Women: %
This listing "attempts to adknowledge the new orientations that have emerged in the last decade [in medieval women's studies] while preserving the most valuable older works". Mainly histqrical, includes section "The lmage of Women"
Faderman. Lillian. " h o Hid Lesbian History?," Frontiers, IV.3,197!&,74--76.
Biography, Women's; Lesbianism - Previously ~nrecoghized; Heterosexism; , Feminist Process - in Research. ,
- - Collected under the title "Three Perspectives on Methodw with two other articles on lesbian biography: Miller, Pa'trida McClelland "The Individual Life." F m i e r s ,#IV.3, '. 1979.70-74 and Doughty, Frances "Lesbian Biography, Biography oFLesbians," Fmiers . TV.3.1979.76-79. + .
!
DicLinsoo Emily; Lowell. Amy; Millay. Edna St. Vincent; Montagu, Lady Mary ~ & t l e ~ ; Seward, Anna.
Fairbairn. Zoe. Claire Chapman, Margot Lunnon, Georgina Tarm, Michele Russell, Amanda C u t h b e ~ and Pauline Matthews. "Diary of a Women Writers' Group," Spare Rib ,106,1981, 20-22.
Feminist Process - in ReadinglWriting Groups; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Wri ring.
Extracts from a diary kept as a record of feminist Writing workshop, led by Zoe Fairbairns Other authors listed are workshop participants, who took it in turns to write the diary.
*
Fairweather. Eileen. "Liverpool: Worker Writers - War of Words," Spare Rib. 88.1979.18-20.
Working-class Women, Writing by and about; Feminist Process - in ~ e a d i n g ~ r i t i n ~ Groups.
Ferguson. A&. "Feminist Teaching: A Practice Developed in Undergraduate Courses," Radicuf Teacher. 20.1981.26-29.1
Feminist Process - in the Classroom; FembWPedagogy; Political Activism, Women and
Femer. Carole and Michael Coleman. "Janet Frame: A Preliminary Bibiiography," Hecare, IIL2.1977.89-106. -
Bibliographies about Women; Australian Literature, Women and.
A list of Frame's published works. reviews of published works and critical studies.
Frame. Janet
Ferres, Kay. "Since Senral Pditics : A Selected Bibliography of Feminist Literary Theory," Litemwe in N w t h Queensid ,8,1980,101-09.
1
Bibhgaphies about Women /
Lists b k s and articles
1465. Fisher, Berenice. "What is Femihst Pedagogy?," Radical Teacher, 18,1980..20-24. - -
Feminist Pedagogy; Political Activism, Women and.
' 1466. Foster, Frances Smith. "Voices Unheard: Stories Untold: Teaching Women's Literature from a Regional Perspective in Wiomia," Radical Teacher, 14,1979.19-22.
Regionalism in Women's Writing; Teaching - Women's Writing; Oral Tradjtion. Women an&
Didion, Joax Play It & It Lup ; Jackson, Helen Hunt: Ramom .
1467. Fulton, E Margatet "Women in Education - Changing Roles and New Challenges." English Qwuterly . VIII.4,1975/76,21-32. --- -
Education of Women; Teaching - Feminist Literary Criticism; Technology, Women d
and; Militarism, Women and; . Work, Women and; Role-Models. Female; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Images of Women - Submissive Wife.
Grove. Frederick Philip: Master of the Mill ; Huxley, Aldous: Brave New W d d ; Laurence, Margaret: The Diviners ; McLennan, Hugh: The Watch That Ends the Night ; Ostenso, Martha: Wild Geese ; Ross, Sinclair: A s fov Me and M y House ; Stead. Robert J. C.: Grain .
1468. Gardner. Susan "The Methodology of Feminist Biography." Hecate , VII.2.1981,40-59.
Biography, Women's; Feminism, Twentieth Cen- - Influence on Women's Writing; Feminist Process in Research; Writers, Women - Conditions of - as Subjects of Women's Writing; African Literature. Women and
H
~ntebiew with Ann ! b t f co-au:hor of Olive Schreiner
First: Ruth and Ann Scott: Olive schreiner.
P
1469. Gerber, John C. "Women in English Departments before 1930 and After: A Note," W a e n ' s Studies Newsletter. IV.2.1976.9.
Academia, Women in.
Statistics on number of womqn teaching in English departments in American univepities
- Pedagogy and Research
and number enrolled in PhD programs over last 50 years % -- - ---
. . Gottlieb, Lois C. and Wendy Keimer. "Reflections on Canadian Women's Writing of the 1970's: Preliminary Resdts of 'An Annotated Bibliography of Canadian Women Writers {in English): A Feasibility Study, 1970-1975'," Canadian Newsletter ufResearch on Wtnqen , VII.2, 1978.20-25.
Feminist Process - in Research; Bibliographies about Women c
Green, Rayna. "Review ~ssay: '~ative American Women," Signs, VI.2,1980,248-68. J -
North American Indian Women, Writing by and a t ~ u t ; Bibliographies about Women.
Bibliographic essay on current scholarship on Native American women; includes some reference to native women's writing
P Greenburg..Joyce. *By Woman Taught," Purnas.sus: Patry in ~ e v k v . W.2,1979.91-103.
Teaching - Writing to Women; Feminist Process - in the Classroom.
Personal journal account of a poetry writing class taught by Adrienne Rich 3
Rich. ~drienne. a
Gubar. Susan and Anne Hedin. "A Jury of Our Peers: Teaching and Learning in the Indiana Women's Prison," Cdlege English . XLUI.8. 1981.779-89.
Teaching - Writing to Women in Prison - Women's Writing; Anger, Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Enclosure - Doubles; hbian(s) - Coming Out
Bronte. Charlotte: krne Eyre ; Glaspell. Susan: "A Jury of Her Peers"; Rich, Adrienne: "Re-Forming the Crystaln; "Diving into the Wreck".
-- Hageman, Elizabeth H. "Images of Women in Renaissance Literature: A Selected Bibliography of Scholarship," Women's Studies Newsletter , V.1/2,1977,15-17.
e,. * .
Bibliographies about Women.
"Offers a representative selection of scholarship on the image of woman in English - literature of the 1 6 d and 17th centuries." Includes 17 studies From the 1940s and 195Qs
Heilbrun, Carolyn G. "Feminist Criticism: Bringing the Spirit Back to English Studies," ADE Bulletin, 62,1979,3538.
I s $ " ..
- - - - -
Pedagogyc and Research -
Literaq Tradition - Women's A k n c e from; Academia, Women in; Teaching - - - - - - +-
Feminist Literary Criticism; Phallic Criticism. d
1476. Hoch, Judith and horna as he Kushner. "Alma Pater," International Jacrnal of Women's Studies, IV.3.1981.259-67. O
&adernia, Women in; Power. Male.
1477, Hoffman. ~ a n 4 . "White Women, Black Women: Inventing an Adequa'te Pedag6gy." Wmen's - Studies kewsletter . Y.1/2.1977.21-24.
Teaching - Black Women's Writing; Black Women - Absence from Literary Tradition -Identity -,Relation to White Women - Relation to White Feminism; Teaching - Women's Writing; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Identity. Female.
,
2 Momson, Toni: The Bluest EJV ; Walker, Alice: Revdutionary Petunias ; Meridian .
L
b
1478. Howe, Florence. "Ferninismad the Study of Literature." Radicul Teacher, 3.1976.3-11.
Reader, Woman as; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Fer~lt* i
Pedagogy; Teaching - Feminist Literhy Criticism; Images of Women. Theory of; Worlring-Cla homen, Writing by and about; Black Women - Literary Tradition; Literary Tradition - Women's; Female/Ferninist Aesthetic.
Albee, Edward: The American Dream ; Lawrence. D. H.: Sons and Lovers ; Olsen, TiIlie: "I Stand Here Ironing"; "Tell Me a Riddle"; Smedley. Agnes: Daughter o f h h ; Walker, Alice: "Everyday Use".
1479. Howe, Florence.> "Women's Education: Its History and Its Future," Radical Teacher. JS, 1979. 27-30.
Feminist Pedagogy; Black women - and Education; Education of Women; Work. Women and.
Includes a list of questions about women from which multidisciplinary scholarship might m proceed; the list is both "prescriptive'and visionary"
! u,
1480. Jelinek, Estelle C. "Teaching Women's ~u tob io~ra~h i&," Cdlege English . XXXVIII.1. 1976. 32-45. - P
a
Autobiography, women's; Teaching - Women's Writing - Writing to Women; Feminist Process - in the Classroom; Childhood ;
6 ,, 9 i: ,'!-; '! d Includes course material and bibliography of wom$in*~a.utobiographies
4 I - , , '
- . - - - - - --- - - Pedagogy and Research
Angelau, Maya: I K m Why the Caged Bird Sings ; Canighax, Sally: Hme t a l k -
Wilderness ; Hellman, Lillian: Pentimento ; McCuthy, Mary: Memuries of a Cafhdic Girlhaxi ; Mead Margaret: Blackbemy Winter.
1481. Jordon, Deborah. "Towards a Biography of Nettie Palmer." H e m e , VI.2,1980,64-72. -
Writers. Women - Conditions of - as Subjects of Women's Biography. .Women's; Feminist Process - in Research; Australian Literature, Women and
9 Palmer, Janet Gertrude (Nettie).
1482. Kaiser. Ernest and Robert Nerniroff. "A Lorraine Hansbeny Bibliography," ~reedwnways , XIX.4.1979.285-304. -
---
Bibliographies about Women. ' *-
Hansberry. L o m e .
- - 1483. Koehler, Lyle. "Native Women of the Amen&: A Bibliography," F m i e r s , VI.3.1981,
73-101.
North American, Indian Women, Writing by and about; Images of Women - Native Exotic - Squaw; Revision - of Stereotypes; Bibliographies about Women; Feminist Process - in Research.
t
- > Includes sections on biography and autobiography. artists and craftswomen
1484. Krasno. Francine. "On Teaching a ~ e m i ~ s t writing Workshop," W m n ' s ~ tudies ~ e w d e t t e r . V.4.1977.14-17. .
Teaching - Writing to Women; Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Feminist Pedagogy; Collectivity in Women's Wtiting. .
-
/
1485. Lauter. Paul. " Working-Class Women's Literature - An Introduction to Study," Radicd -
Teacher. 15.1979.16-26. -
Working-Class Women, Writing by and about; Teaching - Women's Writing; Forms. Non-Canonical - Letters - Diaries/Journals; Popular Culture - Songs; Oral Tradition, Women and - Song; Collectivity in Women's Writing; Subculture, Female; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Class Position, Women's; Feminist Process - in Research; Bibii&phies about Women.
Includes an introductory essay which considers definitions of working-class art, the usell reference works. .A bibliogaphy follows listing (A)
to the study of working-class women's literature; (B) books + . \ , .
r : -7 f 7-
containing poetry and prose by working-class womsn;-(C~lMons mntainSngme - - songs or poems by working-class women writers; (D) secondary books and articles mainly on working-class women's songs and poetry; (E) secondary boots and articles helpfd to -
- the study of working-class women's literature
Brecht Bemlt: "A Worker Reads History" ; Oisen. Tillie: "Tell Me a Riddle". 0
/-
Loader, Jayne. "Women in the Left, 1906 - 1941: A Bibliography of Primary Sources.", University ofMichigan Papers in Women's Studies, 11.1.1975. F82.
rh
Bibliographies about Women; Political Activism, Women and; Socialism, omeh ' and *.,
i
"This bibliography includes an annotated selection of sources by and about women in the anarchist movement, the radical culture movement centered in Greenwich Village in the 1910's and 1920's and the Communist Party and its affiliates before World
+ War 11. Forms of material cited include articles, poems, plays, short stories. novels and autobiographies.: Includes a section on the literary left
Loeb, ~atherine. "La Chicana: A Bibliographic Survey." Frontiers, V.2.1980, 59-74.
Chicanas, Writing by and about; Feminist Process - in Research; Bibliographies about Women.
An introduction to Enash-language materials on Chicanas. Includes section on literature by and about Chi- as well as a list of periodicals important for the study of Chicanas..
I
Lowenstein, Andre. "Writing from Inside." Radical Teadher .16.198Q.21-23.
Teaching - Writing to Women in Prison; Oral Tradition, Women and
McDaniel, Judith. "No Fear, No Flight: Confronting Judgements in Academe." Chrysalis. 5. 1977.~93-97.
Academia, Women in; - Power, Female - of; Feminist Pedagogy; Poliriml Activism, Women and "
-
L! d
McDaniel, Judith. "Is There Room for Me in the Closet *&My Life as the On lyyb ian Professor," Heresies -7.1979, 36-39. , 5 F.
Lesbian(s) - in Academia - Commg Out; Teaching - Lesbian Writing; rosexism; Academia, Womwin; Teaching - Women's Writing. Y 4
McIntyre, Sheila "A Bibliography of Scholarship on Literature by and about Canadian
-- - I
- - - - i - - - - --. Pedagogy and. Research I -
kcmen," Capdian ~ewsietler o Research on W w r n . W.1," 1977, W-114 - 4 Bibliographies about yomen; Femioist Process - in Research.
Catalogues all publiph&i scholarship and complete but unpublished theses written from 1972-1971-about litedtllre written2 by Canadian women or about the image of wdmen in Canadian literatuz,
t
Mack, Molly A. "What's Wrong with Female English Teachers?." Cdlege English, XXXIX.5,' 1978.603&.
Academia, Women in;, Images of Women - Schoolmarm.
Maglin. Nan Bauer. "'Full of'Memories': Teaching Mtrilineage." Cdlege English , XL8,1979, d9-98. I
'7 . .
Mother/Daughter Relationships; Oral Tradition, Women and; Litemy Tradition - Women's; Teadung - Women's Writing - Writing to Women; Forms. Non-Canonical - I)larjes/Journals; Pbblic and Private. Separation of; Writers. Women - and Silence;, A~tobiography~Women's; Biography. Women's.
Contains excerpts of's dents' autobiographical writings and oral histories of their mothers i and grandmothers
Clausen, Jan: "Stories41; Clifton, Lucille: "The Magic Mama"; "Earth Lodge Woman"; "Granma Crowdog"; F a x m i , Nikki: "Mothers"; Ozick, Cynthia: "Passage to the New World"; Shangt. Ntoiqke; Stomi, Alfonsina: "It May Be"; Walker, Alice; Walker, Margaret: hbilee ; "heage".
I Maranda, Jeanne and Mair V@my. "Quebec Feminist Writing, " Emergency Librurian , V.1. '1977.2-11. I .
I
Quebaoises. Writing dy and about; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; qolitical Activism, Women and; Colonialism, Women and; National Liberation. Women and; Language, Women's Use of- Creating a New Discourse; Feminist, Process - in Publishing - in Research; Bibliogiaphies about Women. I Includes annotated seltjcted bibliography of Quebec women's periodicals, manifestoes, studies and surveys. y women's issues of ~ e r i o d i d , and c~eative writing, awering 1971-1977 (French ve 'on included with abridged annotations)
I
Martyna, Wendy. '~kch ing About Languageand the Sexes." Wmen's Studies Internatid Qtrorterly , IIL2/3,1980,295+303.
oFeminist Process - in h e C h m o m ; Speech Pattern, Female vs. Male.
P &
- - - - - -- -- f ~ g ~ . a d h ~
lncludes outline for course titied "Langliage and the Sera" - uu
-f
. ,
1496. Miller, P a ~ c C l e l l a n d . "The Individual Life." Fruwiers . lV.3. 1979.70-74. -, --- - lfiography. Women's; Lesbianism - Previously Urnempized - Defd- ol: Heterosexism; Feminist ProcesS - in Research; lmages of Women/ Lesbian as Freak - Lesbian as$seudo-Male. -
&\
Collected under the title "Three Perspectives on Method" with two other articles on lesbian biography: Faderman, Ulian. "Who Hid Lesbian History?." F m i e r s , IV.3.
. - 1979.74-76 &ughty. Frances. "Lesbian Biography. Biography of Lesbians." Frontiers. IV.3.1979.76-79.
Barney, Natalie; Bowen, Elizabeth; Tudor. Elizabeth; Hall, Radclyffe; Sackville-West Vita; Sand, George; Wollstonecraft, Mary.
1497. Miner, Valerie. "Writing Feminist Fiction: Solitary Genesis or Collective Critiasm." Frmrers . -- VI.I.1981,26-30.
a Political Activism, Women and; F e w s t Process r in Reading/Writing Groups - in Publishing; Feminist Pedagogy.
1498. Morgan, Ellen "The One-Eyed Doe." Radical Teacher, 10.1978.2-6. J ... Teaching - Women's Writing; h-ger. Female; Alienation, Female;- Political
- - Activism, Women and; Speculative Fiction.
Russ. Joanna: The Female Man.
1499. Morgan, William W. "Images of Men and Maleness: A Thematic Approach to Teaching Women Writers," Cdlege English . XL8,1979,899-905.
Teadung - Women's Writing; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Power. Male; Malefiemale Relationships. + '
Bronte. Charlotte: h e E y e ; Chopin. Kate: The Awakening ; McCullers, Carson: "Wunderkind"; Welty, Eudora: "A Worn Path".
s .
1=50. Muske. Carol. "The Art of Not Bowing: Writing by Women in Prison," Heresies, L1. 1977, 3e34.
9 Teaching - Writing to Women in Prison; Feminist Pedagogy; Lesbian(s) - Subculture; Heterosexism; Publishing, Women and; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Crime. Women and; Subculture. Female; Prison Writing,. Women's.
Moss, Mildred; Powell. Ebbeth; Reedy, Juanitav-Shakur. Assata - LJL _- _ - -
i
Neff. ~ e b e e e b Kinnamon. "The Hymen of an intellectual ~ean&: Teaching Literamc to the Contemporary Iranian Woman," Internatid Jauircrl ofwarnen's Studies .11.5,1979,419-29.
Feminist Pedagogy; Teaching - Women's Writing - ~ & t ~itexky @ti- Iranim Women, Writing by and abput; @- Religion, Women and - Islam; Mriniage - and Woman's Fulfillment
Describes the author's experiences teaching literature to women in a college in Iran, over a four-yPar period in the seventies. Includes students' reactions, in class discussion and in. ~
& work, to-a number of novels in English, cited below
Austen, Jane: Pride ond PreNice ; Bronte, Em$: Wuthering Heights ; Chopin, Kate: . The Awakening ; Defoe, Daniel: Mdl Handem ; Eliot, George: The MU1 on the Am ; Freeman, Mary Wilkins: "A New England Nun"; Ford, Ford Ma(tox: The G d Sddier ; Glaspell. Susan: Ambraw Hdt and Family ; James, Henry: Washington S q w e ; Lawrence, D. H.: "The Horse Dealer's Daughter"; Woolf. Virginia: To the Lighthats ,
" -
Nemiroff, Greta Hoffman. "Rationale for an Interdisciplinary Approach to Women's Studies," Canadim Wmert's Studies. 1.1,1978,60-68.
Feminist Pedagogy; Feminist Process - in the Classroom; Academia. Woplen in.
Peece, Ellen. "Racism - A White Issue," Aegis. 1978. [Citation Inc.]
Racism - in Women's Studies; Black Women - Relation to White Women. . . Perkins. Carol. "Tricks of the Trade," Radical Teucher. 14.1979.23-26.
0
Feminist Process - in the Theatre; Collectivity in Women's Writing; Humour. Women's Use of; Teaching - Women's Writing.
Description of author's experience as a member of a feminist theatre collective, and her use of these skills inOteaching women's writing.
Piercy. Marge: Woman on the Edge of Time. &- 2
4
Radner, Susan. "Changing Approaches to Teaching Women in Literature," Frontiers. VI.1. 1981.396. .. ** , .+ 4
Teadung - Women's Work, Women and;
--
Writing; Political
Register, Cheri. "Brief. A-mazing Movementsf Dealing with Ijapak in Ux Wom6n7s Studis - --
Classroom," Women's StudiesNewdetter . W,4.1979,7-10. Feminist Pedagogy; Feminist Process - in the Classroom. -
. I
: Describes anger and frustration of z women's ~ d i & class in r-nse to the enormity sf , women's oppression; praposes a conceptual model of'development in feminist thought
Rich, Adrienne. -"Taking Women Students Seriously,: ~udicbt Teaeher : 11,1979.40-43. . t
Academia, women in; ' ~rminis t pedag&; Teaching - Writing to Women: Laqua@, Patn'archal - and F e d e Invisibility.
Talk addressed to teachers of women for the New Jersey College and University f h i t t i r s n on Women's Education, May 9,1978: Reprinted in On Lies, Secrets, and Silence . W. W. Norton, 1979
Richard, Michel. "One Man's Revdlt," ~ d k n Wmen's Stvdies .1.1, 1978. 13- 14,
Teaching - Women's Writing; Masculinity; Sex Roles.
'5 /
Describes the student author's p r a e s of consciousness after mding The Bell hr
Plath, Sylvia: The Bell Jcu . , -
Roberts, J. R "BUck Lesbian Literature/Black Lesbian Lives: Materials for Women's Studies,* RadicgTeacher ,17.1980,11-17.
Teaching - Black Women's Writing - Lesbian Writing; Black Women - Ltsbiam; Teaching - Women's Writing; Bibliographies about Women.
& annotated bibliography of materials on Black lesbians, w(th an emphasis on liferatwe
Rupp, Leila; "'Imagine My Surprise': Women's Relationships in Mistorid Pcrspemve,' Frontiers, V.3, 1980. 61-70.
Biography. Women's; Lesbianism - Definitions of - Previously Unrecognized; ' Heterosexism; Friendships, Female; Qxnmunities of Women; Lesbianfs) -
Subculnrre; Subculture. FeWe; Feminist Process - in.Research. 6
Dobkin, Maqorie: The Making of a Feminist: &iy h n a l s and Letters of M . Carey T h m m ; Faber. Doris: The Life ofLaena Hickok: h e a w Rmvel t 's Fritnh ; Wells, Anna Mary: Miss Marks and Miss W d l t ? y .
- - Russell, Michele. "Black-Eyed Blues Connections: Teaching Black Women (Part One),"
r .
e
C
4 - - -. --blqpgp&lrvl$- e
'bi
Wmm'r Ststdm N d ~ f e . IV.4.1W8.6-7. - L
T&tp - BlrcB: Wanen; f;tminia hoccs - in the €%smom; F u a i W m; W ~~ - lctenniq - and E#ncit C4atmtglity; -Identity. Fcmatc
Pan Two p~blishcd in Wmtcn's Saddrs Newdnm . V.1/2.19$7,24-28. See Hmaicr, 8, 1979.09-105 for cntirc arride I
1%. Rurrcll. ~ & c l c ' ~ ~ . Lcr Dom Ycqr W r : M Opcn b l t c r w 'White W& in'lhe ~ c l h ~ , ' C d e p &#.& ' XXXfXf. 1977.45-52
< .
1
~ ~ ~ - ~ ~ o ~ - R E i s ~ t o ) I V b i & F ~ t l 3 i ~ i 6 m - ~ l i 6 n ~ w h f ~ ~ ~ -OalTtoditirzn-&W&-MdBird:-; Rs isn - inWarm's a '
smdm; Awcmi&. Wamcn in; WaxJr. W~attrr and; Qwf 7 mdidan. W m r n and; c3?knw* W w u t b ; FcmiW ?=-.
d r
1513. R d . Mithefc. 'Ekk-Eyed ~ u c s k o m : T-ing M Women LI.' HImn'r Sfveltm Nmrfmer , V. 1 /2, 1-9Ti,,24-28.
T ~ - B i & W c m m ; -Worsen-aad&ackldiom-andBLackCuamunity- W fnd;iti-on; Fcrainist -; Ontl Tracktian. Warnin ad - SurPyutling.
Rn 0& pubdrsbcd in W e n d s Sndur ~nvdc&r. lV.4.1976.6-7. For entirr m i d e see Hcrc~cs . 8. 1979. PP- 10s
1514 R&f, M W . ''Bkck-Eyed Nu# Conntstim: From the Inside Out' Heresies. 8.1979. ' 99- 105.
d
Ttsching - BLBtdl Wumm; Fanin& Ppccs - in the 42bsman; Fen;inisr Pedagogy; . &d W m m - fcknGtyL urd Bkk - €hal ~nditiOm - and Btack Miom; lcbtitt-., FEAIIIIC; W T rPditka~ W ~ m d l a y l - Stomlinp.
0 Also pubfkkl in twg pans in Wuntcnf Studies Nmt$crrcr. Pan Onc. W.4. 1976.6-7; Pan Two. S.1/7.1977.24-28.
- Pedagogy Pnd Research
BMf derription of organiLation of an inUodunory women's studies mum 6 -- A -
8 .
1517. Schniedewind Nancy. "*Feminist Vdues: Guidelines for Teaching Methodology in Women's Studies." Radical Teacher. 18,1980, 25-28.
Cr
Fcminia Pedagogy; Feminist Process - in the Classroom.
P 1518. ~Schnonenbag, Barbara Brandon. "Edumtim for Women in Eighteenth Century England: An Annotated Bibliography;" W a e n and Lirercuqre ,' IV.1.1976,49-.55.
-
Education of Women; Advice Iiteratuk; Bibliographies about Women. ".
An annotated list of 18th century writing on women and education in the form of essays, '
conduct manuals, lemrs, fiction. Includes a brief introduction
1529. Schott helope Smnbty. "On Plots and Plights in the ~eaching of Creative writing: A Repon on One Exercise." CEA Critic , XXXW.4,197S,J7-19. . .
Feminist Pedagogy; faneuage. Patriarchal - and Sexual Stereotyping; Sex Roles; + Male Characters in W h e n ' s Writing. .
Schult. Joan. "Will the Perfect Reader Please Srand Up?." Hecute. 111.2.1977. 17-25.
k b i a n ( s ) - in Amdemia - Gnning Out - Literary Tradition; Teaching - Lesbian Writing; Feminist Pedagogy; Iiterary Tradition - Women's; Academia. Women in: Teabing - Women's Writing
Sharisranian. Janet "A Nore on Using Feminist Literary Criticism in the ~lassru6m." Frontws , IV.l. 1979.31-34.
~each ine - Feminist Literary Criticism: Feminist Process - in the Cla$room.
Includes suggestions for course material
Shteir, h n B. "0x1 Teaching 'Women and Literature' to Grade 13 Students." Canadran - P
Women's Stuhes ,I.1. 1978.80-81.
Teaching - women's Writing. /
Includes cdurse description 8-
Smith Barbara "Doing Research on Black American Women," Women's Studm Newsletter . N2. 1976.4-5.7.
387
I .
Feminist Process - in Research; Black Women - in Academia - Absence Erc#n ~ i t e r k y Tradition - Physical Appearance - and Work -and Black Feminism - Lesbians - Literary ,
Tradition - and the Family; Academia, Women in; Literary Tradition - Women's 1
Absedce from; Physical Appearance; Work, Women and; Literary Tradition - - - Women's; Family, Women and.
Thematically organized reading list and guide to research on American Black women. Includes following headings: Independent Black Women, The Myth of Matriarchy, -
Growing Up Black and Female, The Specter of White Beauty, Black Women and Black Men, Black Women Working, Black Mbian Writers, Black Women and the Feminist Movement What Is Black Women's Culture, Black Women Poets
1524. -
Smith, Barbara. "Racism and Women's Studies," Women's Studies Newsletter , W.3, 1979, . Racism - in Women's Studies; Black Women - i n Academia - Relation to White Women; Academia, Women in,
1
1525. Stansbury, Sherry A "A BibFography of Feminist Criticism," C a d i a n Newsletter of Research on Women. VI.2,1977,84-114. c.
Feminist Process - in Research; Bibliographies about Women.
"A list of criti?cai works examining women in literature and culture from a feminist peyective". Organized in the following categories: Literary Criticism: Books; Literary Cnticisrn; Article$; Ltngurstics; Fine Arts; Media; Autobiography; Biography; Memoirs; S p e d Issues; Anthologies; Bibliographies; and Resource Materials -
* L --
1526. Suauss. Jennifer. "An Annotated Bibliography of Contemporary Women Poets of Australia," W d d Literature Written in English . XVII.1.1978.63-82. -
Australian Literature, Women and; Bibliographies about Women.
1527. Strobel. Margaret "Fighting Two Colonialisms: Thoughts of a White Feminist Teaching about Third World~Women," Radical Teacher. 6.1977,2&23.
Feminist Pedagogy; Black Women - Relation to White Feminism; ~m~erialikn, Women and; Heterosexism; Afiican Literature, Women and.
-.I Author relates her experience teaching two courses about Third ~ b r l d women
a Sembene, Ousmane: Gafs Bits of Woad (Zes Barts de Bds de ~ i e u ) . - -
1528. Taylor. Sheila Omi 'Women in a DoubleBind: Hazards of the ~rgmkntative Edge," Cdlege Composition and Canmtcnication , XXIX.4 1478.38589.
' Writers. Women - AnxlEty of Authorship; 3 'st ~e&i&; Style, Female YS, - -
Male; Language, Patriarchal - Rheto dition - as Inadequate for Expressing, Women's Experience; Feminist Process - in the Classroom.
Vicinus. Martha and Cynthia Kinnard. "'I Have Lived with All the Women I Ever Want to Here*: Teaching Women's'Studies in a Women's Prison," Radical Teacher. 16.1980, 18-20.
Teaching - Writing t Womep in Prison - Women's Writing. - .- m ." L
Viemeisel, Karen "An Annotated Checklist of Lesbian Feminist Resources." Margrns . 23. 1973, 11-15.
O Bibliographies about Women; Feminist Process - in Rqearch - in Publishing; Lesbian(s) - Publishing.
List. bibliographies, indices, joumals;presses, and archives
Washington, Mary Helen. "T ching Black- Eyed Suwm : An Approach tc tit... Study of Black Women Writers," Black AmJ- Literitwe Fawn . XI.1.1977.20-24.
Teaching - Black Women's Writing; Black Women - Identity - Physlul Appearance - Suppressed Artist; Self. Divided; Viorence against Women; Political Activism, Women and; Re-vision.- of Stereotypes; Teaching - Women's Writing; Identity, Female; Physical Appearance; Artist Woman as.
Washington, Mary ~ e l e < ed.: Black Eyed Surorrr: Cl-c Smms by and a b m Black W a m e , ~ . _
~ h k o c k . Gillian. "Doris Lessing: A Selective Bibliography." Hecore . VI.1.1980.102-10.
Bibliographies about Women.
A selected list of writing about Doris W i n g &
Lessing. Doris. -
Zirnmennan, Bonnie. "Lesbianism 101." Radical Teacher. 17,1980.20-24.
Teaching - Lesbian Writing; Lesbian(s) - in Academia - Coming Out; Heterosexlsm - in-Women's Studies; Racism - in Women's Studies; Academia, Women in. Teachmg - Women's Writing; ~ibhgraphies about Women.
Includes bibliography of resources for teaching about lesbianism
G -
1534. Adler, Louise and Sneja Gunew. "Method and Madness in Female Writing," Hecate . VII.2, 1981.20-33.
Language. Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse - Encoding; Deconsmction, Feminist; Critical Schools, Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism -
a SmrcoualismlPost-StrucRualism - Freudian/RychoanaIytic Criticism; ~ifTerer&e. ThW of; Subject, Theory of the.
1535. An Jerman, Verena. "Helene Cixous and the Uncovery of Feminine Language," Women and Ljtemtwe , Mi.l.1979.38-48.
Language, Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse - l ' b tu re Feminine; Language. Patriarchal - as Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience; French Literature, Women and. --
Makes passing reference to many of Cixous's works. Bibliography of her publieaPians -
included --
I
Cixous. Helene.
1536. Andersen, Margret "Feminism and the Literary Critic," Atlantis, 1.1.1975.3-13.
Literary Tradition - Women's; Revision - of Critical Tradition; Feminism. Twentia Cenmy - Influence on Women's Writipg; Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Phallic Criticism.
Anger, Jane: Pmecritm 1Qr W a e n ; Atwood. Margaret: Swvivd ; almann. Mary: Thinking abht W a e n ; Finch. Anne. Countess of Winchilsea; Lawrence, Margaret: The Schod of Femininity ; Millett Kate: S e d Pditics ; Pisan, Christine de: Le Ditie w 2eanne $Arc ; Trilling, Diana; Woolf, Virginia: A Room of One's Own . - -
> 9
1537. Andresen-Thom. Martha "Thinking about Women and Their Prosperous A& A Reply to Juliet Dusinberre's Shakespeare and the Notwe of Wtnnen ." Shakespeare Studies . XI. 1978.259-76.
-# - Revision - of Stereotypes; Images of Women - Garrulous Woman; Power. Female . - Male Fear of; Power. Male - and the Social Order; Educatiog of Women; Love, Romantic; Lmages of Women - ~ediator.
Boccaccio. Giovanni: Concerning Fbmarr ken ; Capella, Martianus: De kvptiis Phildoghe et Meravii ; Castiglione. Baldassare: The Book of the Courtier ; Chaucer, Geofkey: Ths Canterby Tdes ; The Legend of Goad W m ; Plutarch: Lives ; M d i a ; Shakespeare, William: Much Ado about Nothing ; Othello ; A Midsummer NighfsDrem; AsYauLikek. -
1538. Applebroog, Ida. "The '"I am Heathcliffe." says Catherine' Syndrome," Heresies. 1.2. 1937, - 118-24-
Humour, Women's Use of; Identity, Female; Oral Tradition, Women and.
P
1539. Arnold. June and Bertha Hanis. "Lesbian Fiction: A Dialogue." Sinister W i s d m . 1.2, 1976. 42-51.
~esb&n(s) - Positive Images of - Writers. Conditions of - Writers, Silences of; Writers, Women - and Silence - Conditions of; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; Collectivity in Women's Writing; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence on
2 - Women's Writing.
Harris, Bertha: Lover ; Sarton, May: Mrs. Stevens Hears the Mermaids Singing .
1540. Arnold, June, Sandy Boucher, et al. "Lesbians and Literature." Sinister Wisdom . 1.2, 1976, 20-33.
Lesbian Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of; Teaching - Lesbian Writing; Lesbian(s) - Positive Images of - Writers. Conditions of - Writers. Silences of - Subculture; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing: Collectivity in Women's Writing; Feminism,,Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Writers. Women - and Silence - Conditions of; Subculture. Female; Teaching - Women's Writing.
. Panel discussion
Arnold, June: The Cook and the Carpenter ; Boucher. Sandy: ~ s d t s ' a n d Rituds ; Millett, Kate: Hying ; Piercy, Marge: Small Changes ; Russ. Joanna: The Female Man ; - Witrig. Monique: Les Guerilleres ; Woolf, Virginia: Mrs. Ddoway .
1541. Atwood. Margaret "The Curse of Eve-or, What I Learned in School," Canadian Women's Studies. 1.3.1979. 30-33.
Writers, Women - Conditions of; Images of Women, Theory of; Prescriptive Criticism; Academia. Women in.
1542. Auerbach. Nina. "Artists and Mothers: A False Alliance," Women and Literature . VI.l, 1978. 3-15.
Artist Woman as; Motherhood; Revision - of Stereotypes; Writers, Women - . Conditions of.
Austen, Jane; Eliot George.
1543. ~u&rbach. Nioa "Feminist Criticism Reviewed." W m e n ond Litwmcae, I (Hew Sdes), 1986, 258-68.
-
- Academia, Women in; Separatism and Feminist Literary Criticism; Literary Tradition - Women's; Feminist Pedagogy; Teaching - Women's Writing; New Woman, The; Biography, Women's.
i
- ---.
1544. Austen, Zelda. "Why Feminist Critics Are Angry with George Eliot." Cdlege English , XXXW.6,1976,549-61.
Prescriptive Criticism; Images of Women, Theory of; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Heroine's Maniage as Closure - Heroine's Death as Closwe; Power, Femile - Lack of; Style, Female vs. Male.
See response: Donovan, Josephine. "Comment for Zelda Austen," Cdlege English , XXXWI.3.1976.301-03.
Eliot. George: The Mill on the Ross ; Middlemarch .
1545. hym, Nina. "Melodramas of Beset Manhood: How Theories of American Fiction Exclude Women Authors." American Quarterly, XXXIII.2,1981,12339.
Revision - of Critical Tradition; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Objectivity. Myth of; Critiml Schools, Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - New Criticism; Phallic Criticism; Power, Female - Male Fear of; Nature, Women and;
'~asculinity; Images of Women - Temptress - Earth Mother.
Discussion of major male American literary critics, including Harold Bloom, Richard Chase. Leslie Fiedler, F. Q. Matthiesen, Richard Poirier, Edward Said and Lionel Trilling
\
1546. Belkin. Roslyn. "Changing Conventions in Fiction Written by Women," Canadian Newsletter of Research on Women. W.2.1978.18-19.
Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Heroine's Death as Closure - Heroine's - Marriage ai Closure - Punishing Heroine; Forms. Innovative, in Women's Writing; French Literature, Women and
Mentions many other 18th and 1% works by women in passing
Colette, Sidonie-Gabrielle: The Vagabond ; Jong, Erica: Fear o/Flying ; Laurence, Margaret: The Diviners.
- 1547. Berg, Karin. "Looking at Women in Literature." Scandinavian Review, LXIII.2,1975/76, 48-55.-
- -
\+a,ndinavian Literature. ~ o & n and; Feminism. ReTwentieth Century -1nfluince 'o Men's Writing - Influence on Women's Writing; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Infl ence on Women's Writing; Feminist Process - in Reading/Writing Groups - in
Acade, Women in. Re
-
t % 1548. Bond, Jean Car y and C a d e E. Gregory. "Two Views of Black Macho and the M p h of the
Supgrwmn ." Freedom ways . XIX.1. -1979.13-26. I
Images df women, ~heory ' OR Images of Women - Amazon - Superwoman; ~ascuhbity; Black Women - Relation to White Feminism - Relationships with Men - and Blaik Feminism; Racism - Relation to Sexism; Male/Fernale Relatiorships.
>
Wallace, Michele: Black Macho and the M p h of the ~upernoman . I B
1549. Bovenschen, Silvia. "Is There a F'eminine Aesthetic?," New German Critique. 10.1977.111-37. A - -
Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Writers. Women - Anxiety of Authmbip - Conditions of; Litemry Tradition - Women's Absence from; Artist. Woman as; Physical Appearance; Images of Women, Theory of; Language, Patriarchal - Dualism - as Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Subculture. Female.
1550. Bovenschen, Silvia. "Is There a Feminine Aesthetic?," Heresies, 1.4, 1977/78, 10-12.
Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Subculture. Female.
A longer version of this article is published in New German Critique, 10,1977,111-37.
1551. Bowles, Gloria. "Criticism of Women's Poetry: An Addendum to Elaine Showalter's 'Review Essay: Literary Criticism' (Vol.1, no.2) and Annette Kolodny's 'Review Essay: Literary Criticism' (Vo1.2, no.2)," Signs, III.3,1978,712-18. I
-a Literary Tradition - Women's; Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Revision - of Critical Tradition. A-
Overview of m e n t feminist criticism of women's poetry. Includes some brief discussions of work on individual women poets, cited below
Bogan, Louise; Dickinson, Emily; Doolittle, Hil* (H. D.); Loy. Mina; Millay, Edna St Vincent; Ridge, Lola; Rukeyser. Muriel.
d
1552. Brady, Charles J., S. M. "Mary and Feminism," University of D a p m Review, XI.3.1975, 21-26.
Images of Women, Theory of; Images of Women - Madonna; Religion, Women-imd - Christianity; Chastity, Female; Role-Models, Female; Sex Roles; Mythological Figures in Wome$s Writing - Virgin Mary.
C
Crosby, Jean: "Thc Continued Story of Me"; Daly, Mary: The Chwch and the Second Sex ; Douglas, Carol Anne: Mar), Anti- Mwy ; Rivers, Caryi: Aphradite ut Mid- Century.
- - 1553. Bmidotti, Rosi and Jane Weinstock. "Herstory as Recourse." Heme , VI.2. f980.25-28.
Language, Women's Use of - 1'Ecriture Feminine - Creating a New Discourse; u
, Father/Daughter Relationships; French Literature, Women and +
-
@"% - Response to New French Feminisms . >
, Marks, Elaine and Isabelle de Courtiwn, eds.: New French Feminism: An Anthdogy . d.
1554. Brigantine, Meg. "The Perverse Perils of Pauline the Writer." Maenad, 1.2,1981, 12-24. V'
Publishing, Women and; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Academia, Women in; Power, Male- and the Social Order; Power. Femqle. -
-
1555. Brodine, Karen "Politics of Women Writing," The Second Wave , V.3,1979. '6-13.
Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Political Activism, Women and; Fernalefieminist Aesthetic; Marxist-Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of; Subculture, Female; Separatism and Feminist Literary Criticism; Working-class Women, Writing by and about; Racism; Heterosexism. -
For several responses to this article see "Forum." The S e c d Wave, V.4,1980,2-5.
Daly, Mary; Grahn, Judy; Piercy, Marge; Rich, A d r i e ~ e ; Wakoski, Diane; Won& Nellie; Yamada, Mitsuye.
1556. Brassard, Nicole. "Traversing Fiction," trans. Barbara Godard, Fireweed , 1, 1978,20-21.
Femalefieminist Aesthetic; Language, Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse; Collectivity in Women's Writing.
1557. Burke, Carolyn. "Introduction to Luce Irigaray's 'When Our Lips Speak Together'." Signs. VI.1, 1980.66-68.
Language. Women's Use of - lYEcriture Feminine - Syntactical Experimentation; Deconstruction, Feminist; French bkature, Women and.
Irigaray, Luce: "When Our Gps Speak T~gether" ("Quand nos imeskparlm"). . - - - A
\ -
Burke, Carolyn. -"Irigaray through the Looking Glass." Feminist Studies, VII.2.1981.288-306. -
Language, Women's Use of - 1'Ecriture Feminine- Creating a New Discourse - Naming - Reclaiming; Language. Patriarchal - W s m - Linearity - as Dominant Discourse - and Female Invisibility - as Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience; Phallogocentrism; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; Sexuality, Female; MotherlDaughter Relationships; Lesbian(s) - Relationships; Freudian Theory. Relation to Women's Writing; French Literature, Women and
Irigaray, Luce: Speculum of the Other W m n (Speculum de Pautre fimrne) ; The Sex That Is Nd One (Ce Sex. qui n'en est pas un]; "And the One Doesn't Stir without the Other (Et l'une ne huge pas sans I'autre)".
Burke, Carolyn Greenstein. "Report from Paris: Women's Writing and the Women's Movemenf" Signs. III.4,1978,843-55.
Language. Women's Use of - 1'Ecriture Feminine; Language. Patriarchal - as Doamant Discourse; Deconstruction, Feminist; Phallokocenmsm; Feminist Process - in Publishing; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's
flwriting; French Literature, Women and , - L Cixous, Helene; Irigaray, Luce; Kristeva. Julia
P
P8 7<' Carruthers, Mary. "lgggdung Women: Notes toward a Feminist Poetic," Massachusetts Review, XX.2. i979.281-307.
FemalelFerninist Aesthetic; ' MotherlDaughter ~elationshi~s; Physical Appearance; Aging, Women and; Love, Romantic - Destructive Power of; Alienation. Female; Rivalry, Female; Role-Models. Female; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Fairy Tale Imagery in Women's Writing - Snow White - Rapunzel; Lesbian(s) - Love Poeny; Language, Women's Use of - Parody - Creating a New Discourse; Love Poetry. Women's.
A h ; Brwks, Gwendolyn: "Jessie Mitchell's Mother"; Deagon, Ann; Dickinson. Emily; Giovwi, Nikki: "Seduction"; Grahn, Judy: "The Common Woman"; Edwurd the Dyke and Other Poems ; Griffin, Susan; Kaufman, Shirley: "~others. Daughters"; Kim, Wayce; Levertov, Denise: "In Mind"; Lindsay. Karen; Morgan, Robin: "Lesbian Poem:; Parker, Pat: "For Willyce"; Plath. Sylvia: "The Disquieting Muses"; "Lesbos"; "Daddy"; Arid ; Rechter, Judith: "Fay Wray to the King"; Rich. Adrienne: Snapshtxs of a Daughter- in- Law ; Sexton, Anne: "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs"; "Rapunzel"; "Consorting with Angels " .
Casterton, J d k "In the Kitchen: Problems of Women's Studies Courses," Red Letters, 9. 1979, 45-48.
1
,e - I
.Ip - - * L - - I - - --
Theoretical i I
Feminist Pedagogy; , Academia, Women in; Marxist-Feminist Literary Qitid_sm, r
- Thmry ol: Deconsydion, Feminist
, 1562. Cixous. Helene. "The 1 a u 4 of the Medusa," trans. Keith &en and Paula Cohen. Signs, 1.4. 1976,875-93. ,
I I
Language, Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse - 1'Ecriture Feminine; Q Sexuality. Female; $riters, Women - and Silence; Phaliogaentrism; Language.
Patriarchal - as Domihant Discourse; -French Literature, Women and. I
Cixous. Helene: The Lmcgh of the M e h . I
'. 1563. Cixous, Helene. "La k n e pee : An Excerpt" Diacritics. VIL2.1977.64-69,
Language, PatTiarchaE - Dualism - as Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience - and Sexual Stereotyping; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Sexuality, Female; Passivity. Female; Images of Women, Theory of; Phallogdtrism; French Literature, Women an&
I
IP dixous. Helene and Catherine Clement: Lo kune Nee . I . , a
< I \
1564. Cixous. Helene. "Casmtion or Decapitation?," trans. Annette Kuhn, Signs. VII.i 1981.41-55.
. . ' Language, Women's Use of - l'Zriture Feminine; Decomt~ction, Feminist; ' Phallogocentrisrn; Language, Patriarchal - as Dominant Discom:; Images of Women - Other - Hysteric; Sexuality, Female; Sexuality, Male; French Literature. Women and
1 Cixous. Helene: "Castration or Decapitation?". + I -
1565. qawen, Jan. "The Politics of Publishirig and the Lesbian Community," Sinister Wisdom ,I.2, 1976.95-115.
' Feminist Process - in Publishing; Lesbian(sj - Subculwe - Literary Tradition - - Publishing; Literary Tradition - Women's; Subculture, Female.
Includes collection of responses from lesbian writers to questionnaire on lesbian writers anti publishing
+
1566. Cliff, Michelle. "The Resonance of Inteq-uption," Chrysalis ,8,3979,29-37.
Writers, Women - Conditions of - and Silence - Anxiety of Authorship; Suicide. Women and; Madness, Women and; Subculture, Female; Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Literary Tradition - Women's; Artist, Woman as.
- - Theoretical -
- . Many other women v&ers are also mentioned in passing . LL
Jameson, Anna Brownelk Phelps, Elizabeth Stuart Ward: The Stwy of Avis ; Olsen, Tillie: Silences ; Shakur, Assata; Scbreiner, Olive: W m n ond Labacr ; Weil, Simone; Woolf,~ Virginia.
1567. Cook, ~lanche Wiesea "'Women Alone Stir My hagination': Lesbianism and the Cultural Tradition," Signs . IV.4.1979,718-39.
Lesbian(s) - Literary Tradition - Subculture - Relationships - Sexuality - Invisibility of: Lesbianism - and Punishment as Narrative Strategy; Popular Culture - Lesbian Pulps; , . Biography, Women's; Literary Tradition - Women's; Subculture. Female; Sexuality, Female.
Bamon, AM; Barnes. Djuna: Ladies Aknanack ; Barney. Natalie; -Busy, Dorothy Strachey: Olivia ; Hall, Radclyffe: The Well of Loneliness ; Malle t Frhwise: The ZZWonist ; Morgan, Claire: The Price ofSaft ; Sackville-West Vita; Stein. Gertrude; Vivien, Renee; Weirauch, Axma Elisabeth: The Scwpion ; The Ourcast ; Winsloe. .- Christa: The Child Manuela ; Wmlf, Virginia.
2
1568. Coward, Rosalind. "'This Novel Changes Lives': Are Women's Novels Feminist Novels? A Response to Rebecca O'Rourkds Article 'Summer Reading'." Feminisz Review ,5. 1980.53-64.
FemaleIFeminist Aesthetic; Literary Tradition - Women's; Ferni~ism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Political Activism, Women and; Realism. Theory of; Sexuality, Female; Confessional Mode in Women's Writing; Popular Culture - Modem Romances.
Response to: O'Rourke. Rebecca. "Summer Reading," Feminist ~ e i i e w , 2 , 1979.1-17.
1569. Cruikshank, Cathy. "Lesbian Literature: Random Thoughts," Margins ,23, 1975, &41.
Lesbianism - Definitions of; Lesbian(s) - Literary Tradition; Literary Tradition - Women's.
1570. Dandridge. Rita B. "Male Critics/Black Women's Novels." CLA Juunal . XXXIII.l, 1979.1-1 1.
Revision - of Critical Tradition; Black Women - Absence from Literary Tradition; Phallic Criticism; Racism; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from
Harper, Frances W.: Ida LeRoy, Or Shadows Upwed ; Hurston, Zora Neale: Their ENS Were Watching Gcd ; Shockley, AM Allen: Loving Her. -
1571. Delmar, Rosalind, e d "Writers and Readers," Red Letters, 9.1979.17-34.
.. - 'Fbeomcal------'
Colldvity m ~ & m ' s Writing: R&st Process - in Reading/Wlia'ng G r o w ; - .
Reader, Woman as; FemaleIFeminist Aesthetic; Subculture, Female; French ' Li mature, Women and
@ - 0 - 0
Excerpts from collectively written reviews of Shulamith Firestone, Julia Kristeva, Luce Irigaray and Kate Millett by the Catalogue =torial Collectivesf the Women's Bookshop, Milan. Includes introductory discussion of their collective writing process as well as an introduction by editor/translator. D e w
Firestone. Shulamith: The Dialectic of Sex ; Irigaray, Luce: Speculum of the Other Woman (Speculum de Pautre fimme) ; Kristeva, Julia: Abart Chinese W m e n @es Chi'ndses) ; MiIlett, Kate: Sexual Pditics .
-
6
Diamond, Arlyn. "Practicing Feminist Literary Criticism," Wmen's Studies Interriutional Quarterfy ,1.2. 1978. 149-52.
Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Objectivity, Myth of; Literary Tradition - Women's; Images of Women, Deory of.
Donovan, Josephine. "Comment for Zelda Austen," Cdlege English, XXXWJ,1976,301-03.
Objectivity. Myth of; Prescriptive Criticism; Literary Tradition - Women's.
Rt."spdll~e to: Austen. Zelda. "Whv Feminist Critics Are Angry with George Eliot," Cdlege English , XXXW.6.1976.549-61.
Donovan, Josephine. "Feminism and Aesthetics," Criticd Inquiry, III.3,1977,605-08.
' Prescriptive Criticism; Images of Women, Theory of; Femalefieminist Aesthetic.
Edwards, Lee R "The Labors of Psyche: Toward a Theory of Female Heroism," Criticd Inquiry. Vi.l.1979.33-49.
Critical Schools, Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - Juogiao Criticism; Self-realization; Rites of Passage; Malefiemale Relationships.
Apuleius: Amw and Psyche
17
1 Farwell, Marilyn R "Adrienne Rich and an Organic Feminist Criticism," Cdlege English . XXXIX.2,1977.191-203.
90ughf Modes of, Female vs. Male; Pluralism in Feminist Critical Theory; Motherhood; Artisf Woman as; Personae in Women's Poetry; language, Women's Use of - Reclaimmg; Critical Schools, Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - New Criticism; Revision - of Critical Tradition
- I - c
L ii
- - - - r--- - - - ' l'heoFeti#l
. -
Rich, Adrienne. - -
1577. Famell. Marilyn R. "Feminist criticis; and the Conapt of the ~oet ic Persona.* Buchcit Review, XXIV.1.1978.139-56.
Objectivity. Myth of; Critical Schools. Other, Relation to Feminist ~ r i t i c i 4 - New Criticism; Personae in Women's Poetry; Thought Modes'of. Female vs Malt: . Androgyny; Sex Roles; Literary Tradition -.Womert's Absence from; B Confessional Mode in Women's Writing; Identity. Female.
Dickinson, Emily; PI;&. Sylvia: "Lesbos"; Rich. Adrienne; Woolf. V i m a
1578. Fassler, Barbara "Theories of Homosexuality as Sources of Bloomsbury's ~ndrogyny." Slgm . V.2, 1979,237-31. .-
Androgyny; Transvestism; Homosexllality, Male; Lesbianism - Definiljons of:
Hall, Raddyffe: The Well of Loneliness ; Sackville-West, Vita; Stracbey, Lynon; WadT. Virginik
1579. ' Feral. Josette. "Antigone or The Irony of the Tribe ." trans. Alice kcline and Tom Gom. Diacritics. VIII.3, 1978.2-14.
- Critical Schools. Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - Freudian/Psychoanal)tfic -
Criticism - Structuralim/Post-Suucturalism; Images of Women - Other; Power. #
Female; Identity, Female; Language, Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse: Mother/Daughter Relationships.
Sophocles: Antigone .
1580. ~;rguson, Mary Anne. "Images of Women in Literature: An Evolution.". R d , d Teacher. I?. * 1980,34-36.
Images of Women. Theory of; Revision - of Stereotypes; Teaching - Fermnisr Literary Criticism; Passivity, Female; laentity, Female; Sex Roles - Ke$miorl. of.
Discussion of changes in the second and third editions (1977.1981) of Imuges of W m e n in Literature (Boston: Houton MifflinJ973) edited by Mary Anne Fergusan
1581. Fisher,Berenice. "WhoNeedsWomanHeroes?."~esies:9.III.1,1980.10-~3.
Role-Models. Female; Images of Wo en. Theory of; Mother/I)aughtcr P Relationships; Biography. Women's* ')9_utobiography. Women's; fUiticai Activism. Women and - I
399
\ - 2
5 . ~~~. l a c . 'WlisfFfnis: Samc Diff T ,' W a e n and Urerolwe. LI (New Series). 1981. 233-5.
* CTitiat %& Orbcr, Rciorion m F#rrini# Criticism - SmtcuualismfPosl-Strum '
- Fteudirn-w Czi-:" Pbbmmsm
1%. Gardiner. Judith Kegan ' ~ ~ y t i c CTitidsm a d d h Ftma!e Reader." Lzierazure Psjcirdogy . ~ ~ 3 . 1 Q 1 5 . 1 0 0 - 0 7 . I
I
CriW k k m k Orher. Rtladoa tu Ftrninist Criticism - F r c ~ y c h o a p a l y t i c I
C
- - T h e a r e t i c a l
- -
Criticisn; Language Patriarchal - and Female Invisibiliw; Identity, F W ; Se-h Roles; Reader. Woman as
0
Gardiner. Judith Kegan. W n Female Identity and Writing by Women." Critical Inquiry, VIII.2. 1981.347-61.
Identity, Female; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Forms. Innovative, in Women's Wrihng; Reader, Woman as; Androgyny; C.ritical Schools. Other. Relation to Feminist criticism - Freudian/Psychoanal ytic Critic'sm
Lessing, Doris: The Gdden Notebad ; Rhys. Jean.
.& 8 Gaudin. Colege. Mary Jean Green. Lynn hth&nY Higgins. Marianne ~ k h . Vivian Kogan. Claudia Reeder. and Nancy Vickers. "Innuduction. Feminist Readings: French TexWAmerican Contexts," Yale French Studies. 62,1981.2~18.
Collectivity in Women's Writing; Academia, Women in; * Critical Schools. Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism - Freudian/Psychoanalytic Criticism - Strucmratism/fost-Structumlism.
0 Includes conversation among scholars Susan Gubar. Carolyn Allen, Sandra Gilbert. Elizabeth Brenda Silver about their responses 1.0 French feminist thought
Geldennan. Carol W. "The Male Nature of Tragedy," Prairie Schooner. XLIX.3.1975,220-27.
Masculinity; Power. Female - Lack of; Public and Private. Separation of.
Aeschylus: The Oresteia .
Gibbs. Anna. "Helene Cixous and Gertrude Stein: New Directions in Feminist Criticism," Meanin, XXXVIII.3.1979.281-93.
Realism, Theory of; Images of Women. Theory of; Prescriptive Criticism; Literary Tradition - W o m m Difference, Theory of; Language. Women's Use of - 1'Ecriture Femi o m , Innovative, in Women's Writing; French Literature. Women and
Cixous, Helene: S d e s ; Stein. Gertrude: Ida. A Novel . /
Gibbs. Anna, "Round and Round the Looking Glass," Hecute. VI.2.1980.23-24.
Language. Women's Use of - 1'Ecnnue Feminine; French Literature. Women and.
Response to New French Ferninisms
Marks. Elaine and Isabelle de Courtivron, eds.: New French Feminisms: An Anthdogy .
Gibbs. Aana "h Alternative Viewpointw Hecate, VI.2,1980,29-43.
Writers, Women - Conditions of;- ~o&cal Activism, Women and; Difference, Theory of; French Literature, <Women and.
Response to New French Feminism 9 Q
Marks. Elaine and Isabelle de Courtivron, eds.: New French Feminisms: An Anthdogy .
Gilbert, Sandra. "What Do Feminist Critics Want? or. A Postcard from the Volcano,=-AX Bulletin. 66,1980.16-24.
Academia, Women in; ' Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Revision - of Critical Tradition; Literary Tradition - Women's; Phallic Criticism. .
-
Gilbert, Sandrii and Susan Gubar. "A Revisionary Company," 4Nmel . X.2.1977.158-66.
Literary Tradition Women's; Writers. Women - Rediscovered; Femalefleminist Aesthetic
Extended review of positive and negative aspex% of Patricia Meyers Spacks' The Female Imagination and EUen &hers' Literary W m e n
Y --
Gilbert, Sandra M. "Patriarchal Poetry and Women Readers: Reflections on Milton's Bogey." PMLA . XCIII.3.1978.368-82.
Writers. Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Power. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Power, Male; Images of Women - Submissive Wife - Terrible Mother - Temptress; ~ n g & Female; Political Activism, Women and; Incest; Reader, Woman as
f
Blake. William; Bronte, Charlotte: Shirley ; Byron, George Gordon, Lard; Milton, John: Puradise Lost ; Wollstonecraft, Mary; Woolf, Virginia
Gilben, Sandra M.-"Life Studies.-or, Speech after Long Silence: Feminist Critics Today," glish , XL8.1979.849-63. a -
f tvision - of Critical Tradition; Confessional Mode in Women's Writing; '
M / Objectivity, Myth of; Writers, Women - and Silence; Literary Tradition - Women's
- Women's Absence from; Marxist-Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of; Academia, Women in; MadnEss, Women and; Communities of Women; Nanative Strategies in Women's Writing - Two Suitors Convention; Collectivity in Women's Writing; Separatism and Feminist Literary Criticism. -in
a *
Review article of current feminist literary criticiim
Gilbert, Sandra M. "Sandra Gilbert Responds," Cdlege English , XLl.4.1979.464-68.
Marxist-Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of; Academia. Women in.
Response to: Robinson, Lillian S. "A Comment on Sandra Gilbert's 'Life Studies or, Speech afkr Long Silence'," Cdlege English , XLI.4.1979.462-64. Original article: Gilbert. Sandm "Life Studies, or. Speech after b n g Silence: Feminist Critics Today." Co , XL8,1979,84%3. n
Glaslonbury. Marion. "The Best Kept Secret - How Working-class Women Live and what They Know," Women's Stlrdies lnter~tioncrl Quarterly, 11.2.1979.173-81.
Class Position, Women's; Language, Patriarchal - and Female invisibility; Working-Class Women, Writing by and about; Literary Tradition -- Women's Absence from; Mother/Daughter Relationships;' Work. Women and.
Goldsmith, Andrea E "Notes on the Tyranny of Language Usage." Wmen's Studies Interriational Quarterly, III.2/3.1980.179-91. 0
I
Language. Patriarchal - as Dominant Discourse - and Female Invisibility - and Sexual Stereotyping; Language. Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse; Subculture. Female; Anger. Female; Forms. Innovative, in Women's Writing; Narrative Smtegies in Women's Writing - Stream-of-Consciousness; French Literature, Women and
. . !Mm+Monique: L'Opoponax ; Les Guerilleres ; The Lesbian Body ; Woolf, Virginia: Mrs. Dalloway ; To the Lightham- .
Gomick, Vivian. "Feminist Writers: Hanging Ourselves' on a Party Line?." Ms. . IV.1. 1975, 104-07.
Prescriptive Criticism; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing. E
Greene, Gayle. "Feminist and Marxist Criticism: An Argument for Alliances." Women's Studies, IX.1.1981.29-45.
Critical Schools. Othq. Relation to Feminist Criticism - Marxist Criticism; Literary Criticism. Theory of; Feminism. Twentieth Century -
. . --
I
~hakkspeare, William
1602. Gregory, Carole. "Black Writers' Views of _America," Freedwnwup. XK3,1979,1&6L -
Political Activism, Women and.
1603. Griffin. Susaa "On Pornography." Chryscrlis ,4,1977,15-17. -
Pornography; Violence against Women; Political Actiiism, Women and; Writers, women - and Silence.
1604. Gubar, Susan. "'The Blank Page' and the Issues of Female Creativity." Criticd Inquiry, Vm.2, 1981.243-63. a
Writers, Women - Anxiety of Authorship - and Silence; Images of Worfien - Object; Artist, Woman as; Physical Appearance; Literary Tradition - Women's; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Blood - Mutilation - Weaving; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Great Goddess.
w
Dinesen, Isak: "The Blank Page"; Doolittle, Hilda (H. D.): Helen in Egypt ; Eliot, George: Daniel Dercmda ; Levertov, Denise: "Growtb of a Poet"; Plath, Sylvia: Ariei ; Rich, Adrienne; Rossetti. Christina; Wharton, Edith: The Harse of Mirth .
1605. Hall, Barbara. "Woman as Creator." Rejiactwy Girl , Autumn (March). 1975,69-70. [Citation Inc] ...
Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Artist Woman as; Images of Women - Muse. r 0
----- - -
1606. Harris. Janice H. "Our Mute. Inglorious ~ o t h e k . " Midwesf ~ u a r t e r l ~ ; XVI.3.1975.244-54.
Motherhood; Writers. Women - Conditions of; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from. ...
1607. Haworth, H. E "Romantic Female Writers and the Critics," Texas ~tudies in Li6eratw and - - tonguage . XVn.4,1976,725-36.
Phallic Criticism; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Images of Women - Intellectual Inferior - Moral Custodian.
Overview of early 19th Century British women writers and of contemporary critical response.
b
1608. Harris, Bertha. "What We Mean to Say: No& towards Defining the Nature of Lesbian Literature." Heresies .1.3, 1977, 5-8.
Images of women - Lesbian as Freak; Lesbian(s) - Positive Images of; Revision - -
3
- -- Theoretical -
d&
of Stereotypes; Lesbian Feminist Literary Criticism.The ry-of, P 1MW. Hodgs, Beth. "Lesbian Feminist Writing and Publishing: Editorid:" 4 , ~ g i n . s .23.1975.3 --
Lesbian(s) - Publishing - Invisibility of; S e x d t y , Female - Male Fear of; Ferninis1 Process - in Publishing.
1610. Hogan, Linda "Native American Women: Our Voice, the Air." Frontiers. VI.3, 1981. 1-4.
North American Indian Women, Writing by-and about; Political A'ctivism. Women and; Writers, Women - Conditions of.
-
Ifitroduction to special issuefon North American Indian women
1611. Howe, Florence. "Those We Still Don't Read," Cdlege English , XLIII.l, 1981.12-16.
Academia, Women in; Work, Women and; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Writers. Women - Rediscovered
Larsen, Nella: Quicksand ; Passing ; Phelps. Elizabeth Stuart Ward: The Silent Partner ; Pinzer. Mairnie: The Maimie Papers .
1612. Hull. Gloria T. "Rewriting Afro-American Literature: A Case for Black Women Writers." Radical Teacher, 6,1977,lO-14.
Black Women - Absence from Literary Tradition - Literary Tradition ,- Writers, Conditions of - and Harlem Renaissance; Teaching - Black Women's Writing;
3 Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from - Women's; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Teaching - Women's Writing.
Makes passing reference to other black American women writers
Bennett, Gwendolyn; Brooks. Gwendolyn; Dunbar-Nelson, Alice; Fauset. Jessie Redmond; Grimke. Angelina Weld; Harper. Frances W.; Hurston, Zora Neale; Johnan, Georgia Douglas; Larsen, Nella; Marshall, Paule; Momson, Toni; Spencer, Anne; Walker, Alice; Walker. Margaret; Wheatley, Phillis. - - - -- -
1613. Huston, Nancy. "Yet Another Contradictory Note," Hecate , VI.2.1980.44-45.
Difference, Theory of; French Literawe, Women a.nd a e
Response to New French Ferninisms
Marks, Elaine and Isabelle de Cowtinon. eds.: New French Feminisms: An Anthdogy . P
/
Irigaray. Luce. "When Our Lips Speak Together," tEans. Carolyn Burke, Signs, W.1, N8Q. -
69-79. - --
Language. Women's Use of - I'Ecriture Feminine - creating a New Discourse; Lesbian(s) - Sexuality; Sexuality, Female; French Literature, Women and
Irigaray, Luce: "When Our Lips Speak Together" ("Quand nos levres se parlent").
Irigaray, Luce. "And the One Doesn't Stir without the Other." trans. Helene Vivieme W'enzel, Signs, VII.l.1981.60-67.
Motherllhughter Relationships; Identity, Female; French Literature, Women and.
Irigaray..Luce: "And the One Doesn't Stir without the Other (Et l'une ne huge pas sans I'autre)".
Jacobus, Mary. "The Question of Language: Men of Maxims and The Mill on the Floss ," Critical Inquiry, WI.2.1981.207-22.
Fernale/Feminist Aesthetic; Deconstmction, Feminist; Difference, Theory of; Language. Patriarchal - as Dominant Discourse; Language, Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse; Education of Women; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing -
" Heroine's Death as Closure; Sexuality. Female; French Literature, Women and.
Eliot, George: The Mill on the Floss ; Irigaray. Luce: "When Our Lips Sp& Together" ("Quand nos levres se parlent").
Jardine, Alice. :Introduction .m Julia Kristeva's 'Women's Time'," Signs ; VII.1, 1981, 5-12.
Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on en's Writing; Identity, F e d e ; Deconstruction, Feminist; French Literature, Women and.
Kristeva, Julia. h
-
Jardine. Alice. "Re-Texts for the Transatlantic Feminist;" Yale French Studies, 62,1981, * 220-36.
Reader. Woman as; Language, Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse - Syntactical Experimentation; Images of Women, Theory of; Subject Theory of the; . Gynocritics; MotherIDaughter Relationships; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Circularity - Miiltiple Heroines - Subtext; Writers. Women - and Silence; Style. Female vs. Male; French Literature, Women and.
Wittig. Monique: Les Guerilleres ; Woolf, Virginia> The Waves . . '
0
- - - pp- -- -
Theoretical
Jehlen, Myra. "Archimedes dnd the Paradox of Feminist Criticism," Signs, g.4. 1!8lI 575-601.- L-
Revision - of Critical Tradition; Gynocritics; Literary Tradition - Women's; Objectivity, Myth of; ' Subculture. Female; Writers. Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Sentimental Fiction; Identity. Female; Power, Female; Passivity. Female; Class Position, Women's; Public and Private, Separation of.
Richardson, Samuel: Pamela ; Clarissu ; Rowson, Susanna Haswell: Charlme Temple .
Jensen, Maggie. "Between Dinner, Dishes, and Diapers: A Woman Writer's Plight," R a m of One's Own, Il.2/3,1976.66-79.
-
Writers, Women - Conditions of - Anxiety of Authorship.
J Chopin. Kate; Eliot George; Gould, Lois; Laurence, Margaret; Lessing. Doris; Nin, Anais; Plath. Sylvia; Stein, Gertrude; Wwlf. Virginia @
Jochmans, Betty. Bruce Erlich. Lorraine Keilstrup and Joanna Lathrop. "Symposium: Women and Tragedy." Prairie Schooner, XLIX.3.1975.227-36.
Writers, Women - Conditions oE terary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Artist Woman as; . Masculinity. 2
~ines . Ann Rosalind. "WFiting the Body: Toward an Understanding of L'hiture Feminine," Feminist Studies, VII.2. 1981.247-63.
Language. Women's Use of - 1'Ecriture Feminine - Creating a ew Discourse; Language, Patriarchal - as Dominant Dikourse - as Inadequate % for xpressing Women's Experience; Phallogocentrism; Fede/Feminist Aesthetic; Freudian Theory, Relation to Women's Writing; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing: Sexuality, Female; French Literature. Women and.
Cixous, Helene: The Laugh of the M e d w ; Cixous, Helene and Catherine Clement: La Jeune Nee ; Irigaray, Luce: Speculum of the Other W m n (Specdurn de I'autre femme) ; The Sex That Is N d One (Q=e Sexe qui n'en est pas un) ; Kristeva, Julia; Wittig, Monique: L'Opoponax ; Les Guerilleres ; The Lesiion Bady ; Lesbian Peoples: Material fw a Dictionury. 9
-
Juhasz, Suzame. "The Feminine Mode in Literature and Criticism," Frontiers. 11.3.1977. 96-103.
Political Activism, Women q d ; ~ & n vs. Passion; . Anger. Female.
Critique of Spach, Patrick The Female Imagination
{uhasz, Summe. "The Critic as Feminist Reflections on Women's Poetry, Ferninismiand the - Art of Criticism," Women's Studies, V.2.1977.113-27. cF
-- Revision - of Critical Tradition; Confessional Mode in Women's Writing; Personae in Women's Poetry; Identity. Female; Objectivity, Myth of; Critical Schools, Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - New Criticism. -
f
Sexton, Anne: 45 Mercy Street .
Juhasz. Suzanne, "'Some Deep Old Desk or Capacious Hold-All': Form and Women's Autobiography," Cdlege English , XXXIX.6.1978.663-68.
Autobiography. Womeii's: Forms. Non-Canonical- Diaries/Joumals; Narrative , Strategies in Women's Writing - Circularity; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing.
*' Includes anonymous excerpts from short autobiographies written by the author's students
Juhasz, Suzanne. "Transformations in Feminist Poetry." Frontiers. IV.1,1979, $930. -
Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Language, women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Light - Water - Circles - Rainbow - hfining - Jewels; Revision - of Myth; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Circe - Odysseus.
Traces the development of feminist poetry over the last ten years
Alta: I Am N d a Practicing Angel ; No Visible Means of Support ; Atwood, Margaret: Yac Are Happy ; The Jbwnah of Susanna M d i e ; Clifton, Lucille: An Ordinary Woman ; Fraser. Kathleen: What I Want ; New Shoes ; Griffin, Susan: Like the Iris of an Eye ; Lorde. Audre: "Poems Are Not Luxuries"; Rich, A d r i e ~ e : Diving into the' Wreck ; Pwm Selected and New, 1950- 1974 ; The Dream of a Cmrnon language.
Juhasz, Suzanne. "Towards a Theory of Form in Feminist Autobiography: Kate Millett's Fear of Flying [sic] and Sita ; Maxine Hong Kingston's The Woiman Warritx ," International Journal of Women's Studies, II.1,1979,62-75.
Autobiography, Women's; Forms. Innovative, in Women's Writing; Style, Female vs. Male; Forms. Non-Canonical - Diaries/Journals; Public and Private, Separation of; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Chinese-American Women, Writing by and abqut; Identity, Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Woman Warrior.
Kingston, Maxine Hong: The Wornan Warricr: Memoirs of a G i r l h d among Ghms ; Millett, Kate: R$ng ; Sita . -
Kaplan, Cora. "Radical Feminism and Literature: RethUhg MiUett's Sexual Pditics ." Red
- - _ /
Letters, 9.1979,4-16. - - A - - -
Images of Women, Theory of; Critical Schools, Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism - Freudian/Psychoanalytic Criticism - Marxist Criticism -
% Stmcturalism/Post-Structuralism; Marxist-Feminist Literary Criticism. Theory of.
~ i l l e k Kate: Sexual Pditics .
1629. Kaplan, Sydney Janet "Literary Criticism," Signs , IV.3.1979.514-27.
Literary Tradition - Women's; Writers. Women - Rediscovered - Anxiety of ' Authorship; Nmt ive Strategies in Women's Writing - Two Suitors Convention;
Revision - of Myth; Lesbianism - Encoded; Confessional Mode in Women's Writing; Images of Women, Theory of; Black Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of.
Review-essay on current feminist literary criticism. Authors cited here are subjects of current criticism cited in article
Carlyle, Jane; Doolittle, Hilda (H. D.); Eliot., George; Fuller. Margaret; Hmton, Zora Neale; Nin, Anais; Oates, Joyce Carol; Richardson, Dorothy; Sand. George; Stein, Gertrude; Woolf. Virginia.
1630. Kaye, Melanie. "Culture Making: Lesbian Classics in the Year 2000?." Sinister.Wisdom , 13. 1980.23-34. -
Lesbian(s) - Literary T~adition - Writers. Conditions of - Subculture; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence From - Women's; Lesbian Feminist Literary Criticism. Theory of; Writers, Women - Conditions of.
1631. Kennard, Jean E "Convention Coverage or How to Read Your Own Life." New Llterary History, XIII.1,1981,69-88.
Reader, Woman as; Revision - of Critical Tradition; Literary Tradition - Women's; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Two Suitors Convention; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Enclosure - Doubles - Quest - Rooms; Madness. Women and; Self, Divided; Identity. Female; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Critical Schools. Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism - Reader-Response Criticism; Feminist Process - in Reading/Writing Groups. -
Extensive discussion of Charlotte Perkins Gilman. more general reference & m a n y conternpo~aryMorth American women writers, most of whom are cited here
1-
Atwood, Margaret: Swfhcing ; Engel. Marian: Bear ; French, Marilyn: The Women's Room ; Gilman, Charlotte Perkins: The Yellow Wallpper ; Godwin. Gail: The Odd Woman ; Jong, Erica: Fear of FIHng ; Kaufman, Sue: Diary of a Mad H a m w i f e .
K e w d , Jean E "Personally Spealung: Feminist Critic$ and the Community of Readers," Cdlege English , X~2,1981.140-45.
Confessional Mode in Women's Writing; Objectivity. Myth of; Critical Schools, ' Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - New Criticism; Academia, Women in; Separatism and Feminist Literary Criticism; Reader, Woman as; Feminist Process - in Reading/Writing Groups.
Kolodny. Annette. "Some Notes on Defining &Feminist Literary Criticism'," Criticol Inquiry, II.1, 1975,7592.
Femalefieminist Aesthetic; ~fyie, Female vs. Male; Revision - of Stereotypes; Self. Divided; Alienation, Female; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Clothing; Rkvision - of Critical Tradition; Lirerary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Separa-tisni and Feminist Literary Criticism; Reader, Woman as.
e Edible Wtjvnan ; S w h i n g ; Barnes, Quna: Nightwad ; Chopin, ; Didion, Joan: Ploy It as It Lap ; Plath, Sylvia: The Bell 3ar ;
Wakoski. Diane: The Mawcycle Betrayal Poems. 1
Critical Inquiry, II.4.1976.821-32.
% a Kolodny. k e r n . "The Feminist as Literary Critic: Confronting the Spat of &garatism,"
Sepimtisrn and Feminist Literary Criticism; Academia, Women in; Teaching - Feminist Literary Criticism; Fernale/Ferninist Aesthetic; Prescriptive Criticism.
Response to: Morgan, William W. "Feminism and Literary Study: A Reply to Annette Kolodny." Criticul Inquiry, 11.4.1996.807-16. Original article: Kolodny. Annette. "Some Notes on Deftning a 'Feminist Literary Cfiticism'," Critical Inquiry. II.1.1975, 75-92.
Kolodny. Annette. "Literary Criticism," Signs, II.2,1976,404-21.
Biographyi Women's; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Language, Women's Use of - Parody; ~omography; Heterosexisrn; Sexuality, Female; Lesbianism - Definitions of; Images of Women, Theory of.
~ n n h review of uends in feminist literary criticism
Lowell, Amy; McCullers. Carson; Millay, Edna S t Vincent; Sand, George; Wharton, Edith: "Beatrice Palmato Fragment ".
Kolodny. Annette. 'Dancing though the Minefield: Some Observations on the Theory, Practice, and Politics of a Feminist Literary Criticism," Feminist Studies, VI.1.1980,l-25.
Revision - of Critical Tradition; fiterary Tradition - Women's Absence from -
- - - - - - - - - - Threticrl
- ,
Women's; Reader, Woman as; Female/Feminist Aesthetic; Prescriptive Criticismi Phallic Criticism; Writers, Women - Rediscovered - C=ond@ons OR Objectivity. -
-
Myth of; Language, eaul'archal - as Dominant Discourse.
Koldny, Annette. "A Map for Rereading: Or. Gender and the Interpretation of Literary Texts." New Literary Histmy. XI.3,1980,451-67.
Reader, Woman as; Re-vision - of Critical Tradition; Literary Tradition - Women's; Language, Patriarchal - as Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience; Writers. Women - Addressing Male Readers- Anxiety of Authorship.
Chopin, Kate: The Awakening ; ~ & n , Sara Willis (pseud. Fanny Fern): ,Rare Clark ; Gilman, Charlotte Perkins: The Yellow Wallpaper ; Glaspell. Susan: "A Jury of Her Peers"; Harland, Marion.
Kristeva, Julia "Women's Time," uans. Alice Jardine and Harry Blake. Signs . VII.1, 1981, 13-35.
Identity, Female; Deconstruction, Feminist; Phallogocentrism; Femi@sm,, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Language, Patriarchal - as Dominant Discourse - and Female Invisibility; Power. Female; Subculture. Female; French Literature. Women and
Kristeva, Julia: " women's Time".
1639. Kuhn, Annette. "Introduction to Helene Cixous's 'Castration or Decapitation?'," Signs. VII.1. 1981.3640.
Critical Schools, Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - StructuralismlPost-Structuralism; Phallogocmtrism; Language. Women's Use of - 1'Ecriture Feminine; French Literature. Women and
Cixous. Helene. 1
Ladden, Arlene. "The Martyr Arts." Heresies. 1.4. 1977/78.16-18.
Selfsacrifice; Mamchkm, Female; Religion, Women and - Christianity; Mysticism, Women and; Artist. Woman as; h g e s of Women - Victim - Martyr.
Discussion of woman's role as martyr, from early Christianity onwards. in a variety of genres
Larkin, Joan, Jan Clausen, et al. "Collage of Critiam" Sinister W i s d a . L2.1976.64-66. \
Revision - of Critical Tradition; Collectivity in Women's Writing; Feminism, -
Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing.
Panel discussion of feminist criticism and the women's movement
1642. Lippard, Lucy R "Some Propiqpnda for Propaganda," Heresies: 9 , III.l,1980,35-39.
Female/Ferninist Aesthetic; Political Activism, Women and; Didactic Literature; Oral Tradition, Women and - Conversation - Gossip; Class Position, Women's; Language. Women's Use of - Parody. -
- 1 Discusses problems involved in producing political art
1643. Lipton, Eunice. "The Violence of Id&logical Distortion: The Imagery of Laundresses in 19th Century French Culture," Heresies ,6.1979.77,79,81.
Images of Women, Theory of; Images of Women - Immoral Working-class Woman; Workq-Class Women, Writing by and about; Class Position, Women's; Work. Women and; French Literature, Women and
w Montorgeuil. George: Le Ca* concerl ; Uzanne, Octave: La Femme a Paris ; &la, mile L'Asrommair .
1644. Lorde. Audre. "Poems Are Not Luxuries." Chrysalis, 3.1977.7-9.
Language. Women's Use of - Creating-a New Discourse; Political Activism. Women and; Female/Feminist Aesthetic.
Lorde. Audre: "Poems Are Not Luxuries".
1645. hrde, Audre, Adrienne Rich and Alice Walker. "In the Name of All Women: The National < Book Award Speech." Margins, 23.1975.23,
Writers, Women - Conditions of - and Silence. .
1646. McDowell, Deborah E "New Di~ections for Black Feminist Criticism," Black American Lterature Ftnum, XIV.4.1980.153-59.
mck Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of; Black Women - Absence from Literary Tradition - LesVhns - Literary Tradition - Writers. Condtions of; Racism 7 in Women's Studies; Revision - of Critical Tradition; Phallic Criticism; Lesbian(s) - Literary Tradition; Sryle, Female vs. Male; Female/Feminist Aeithetic; Political Activism, Women and; ' Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Clothing - Journey; Literary Tradition - Women's - Women's Absence from; Writers, Women - Conditions of. o
1647. Marcil-haste, Louise. "The Grammar of Feminine Sexmiit).." €A kxrnrPt uf&ir$arsrf *
Pditical Thewy . IV.2,1980.6c9-74.
Language. Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse - 1'Ecriture Feminine; ,
Language. Patriarchal - and Female Invisibility - Dualism; Critical Schools. Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism - Freudian/Psychoanal ytic Cfi ticism - Structuralisrn/Post-Structuralism; French Literature, Women and.
Review essay - Irigaray. Luce: Speculum ofthe Other Wcnnan (Speculum de f m r e jkrnrne) ; Thr Sex That b Nor One (Ce Sexe qui n'en est pas un) .
1648. Maitland, Sara. "Novels Are Toys Not Bibles, But the Child Is Mother to the Woman." Women's Studies International Quarterly. II.2.1979.203-07.
9
Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Prescriptive Critick~; Images of Women, Theory of.
Fairbaims. Zoe. Sara Maitland, Valerie Miner. Michele Robens and Michcline Wandor: Tales I Tell M y Mother ; Maitland, Sara: Daughter of&rumiem ; Roberts. Michelc: A Piece of the Night,
-
1649. Manderson, Lenore. "Self. Couple, and Community: Recent Writings on Lesbian Women, ' Hecate. VI.1.1980.67-79.
/ 6
Lesbim(s) - Identity - Subculture - Literary Tradition Publishing - Comng Our - Positive Images of; Images of Women - Tragic Lesbian - Lesbian as Freak; Communities of Women; Motherhood; Australian Literature. Women and; Identity, Female; Subculture. Fernale; Literary Tradition - Women's; Publishing. Women and.
4
1650. Marcus. Jane. "Nostalgia Is Not Enough: Why Elizabeth Hardwick Misreads Ibsen, Pla'Lh and Woolf." Bucknell Review. XXIV.1. 1978. 157-77.
Phallic Critiasm; Self-sacrifice; Artist Woman as; Family. W m n and; Class Position, Women's; !Socialism. Women- and; Feminism. Pre-Twentieth Ccnttwy - Influence on Men's Writing; Suiade, Women and; Anger. Fcrnalc: Power, Female; Independence. Female; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence an Wonren's Writing; Scandinavian Literature-en and
An analysis of Elizabeth Hardwick's critical work: Seduction and Betrap/
- Ibsen. Henrik: Hedda Gabler ; A D d f s H a w ; The Muuer Builder ; R ~ ~ n t r s h d m ; Plath, Sylvia; Woolf, Virginia: A R a m of One's Own ; Three Guineas ; Mrs. W o w a y .
*
L- "d
1655- Marks. RnuIc 'Wcmen md Liruatun in F~ance.' Srgns . IIL4.L97&,832-42. - F m ptwopmtcism; Laaguage. Womm's Use of - 1'Eaiatre Fauhim; €35- SdmA, Other. R c h m to Femtinist Criticism -; - Freudian Thtory, Relation to Women% Writing; -=innumc oo wrmm*s writing; Frroch Literature.
Waczrenlad =
Guwr, Helene: trigaray. Lua; Kristtva, Julia; Wimg. Monique.
$
5 . Marsh. Ngaio. Anne Ek, Cherry Hankin et d. "Women rn Women,' L&&/i. XXX.IIL2, 1979.10149. . .
- <
, F~c/f:-aniairtrA&ctiC; Writers. Womcn - ~ d i t i a n s of; New Zealaad Liuraauc. W ~ a r J d .
d
~ r r s p o r i f c s b w r i h to editor's questions abut warnen and writing in New i h h z d - chsbt. S . ; ELx. Ann6 Naakin. Cherry; Kidman. Fiona; Marsh. N W ; %it#'. Hskn.
-. /f < . 1613. Maw I(/!hfinc & '*Play w Rcrh and Blood': ~ e r u i Iddogyeand the Resumtion
AarcPa' W. XLVL4.1979.595-617. e
Scxuoiiry. F M c ; Tranmshm; Prostitution; ' Work. Women and; Reason vs. Pasam; images of Women - Daxivcr; Public and Privau. Separation of; Thclm. W- in rhc.
Theoretical
Frontiers, II.2.1977.50-53. -
Literdry Tradition - Women's Absence from; 'Black Women - Absence from Literary ~raditionl Ethnidty in Women's Writing; ~ e g i o d s m in Women's Writing; Re-vision - of Critical Tradition; Oral Tradition. Women and; Female/Feminisr Aesthetic; Racism.
n
Roberts, Elizabeth Madox: "The Haunted Paface". -
1656. Melrnan, Deborah. "Feminist Explorations: Life udder Patriarchy." Canudian J a c r d of P d i t i d and S o d Theory, IV.2.3.380.64-68.
Language, Women's Use 0''- 1'Ecria;re Feminine - Creating a New Discourse; Sexuality, Female; French Literature. Wpmen and.
Review discussion of New French Feminisms
' Irigaray. Luce; Kristeva, Julia; Marks. Elaine aqd Isabelle de Courtivron. eds.: New French Feminisms .
1657. Metzger, Deem "In Her Image." Heresies, 1.2.1977.2-11.
Subculture, Female: Femalefieminist Aesthetic; Oral Tradition. Women 'and - - Conversation; Speech P2mrns. Female vs. Male; Intuition. Female; Feminist Process - in Reading/Writing Groups; Language, Women's - Use of - Creating a New Discom; Communities of Women; Collectivity in Women's Writing.
1658. Meager, Deena and Barbarawerhoff. "Dear Diary (or. Listening to the Silent Laughter of Mozart while the Beds Are Unmade and the ~ e d n s of Breakfast Congeal on the Table)." Chrysalis. 7.1978.39-49.
Forms, Non-Canonical - Diaries/Journals; h g u a g e . Pamarchal' - as Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience; Language, Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse; Collectivity in Women's Writing; Self-realization; Isolation of Women -
1659. Miller, Naaq K. "Emphasis Added: Plots and Plausibilities in Women's Fiction." PMLA . XCVI.1. 1981.36-48.
Difference. Theory of; Femalefieminist Aesthetic; Literary Tradition - Women%; Language. Paniarchal - as Dominant Discourse; R e Theory of; Power. Female; Sexuality. Female; Renunciation; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Dreams; Narrative Suategm in Women's Writing - Heroine's Mamage as Cfr>sure - Subtext; French literature, Women and
I
&of C-eorge: The Mill oul the Flcss ; Lafayem. Marie. Mme de: La Frincesse de Cleves . - -
1660. Mor,rgan, William W. "Feminism and Literary Study: A Reply to Annette Kolodrty," inquiry, 11.4,1976,807-16. -
Teaching - Feminist Literary Criticism; Separatism and Feminist Literary Criticism; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Objectivity, Myth of.
C
Response to: Kolodny, Annette. "Some Notes on Defining a 'Feminist Literary Criticism'," Critical Inquiry. II.1,-1975.75-92. Kolodny's response to Morgan. "The Feminist as Literary Critic: Codfonting the Spectre of Separatism," follok, pp. 821-32.
i661. Morris, Meaghan. "Aspects of Current French Feminist Literary Criticism," Hecate. V.2.1979,
1 63-72.
4' Images of Women, Theory of; Deconstruction, Feminist; Language, Patriarchal - Dualism; Images of Women - Other; Language, Women's Use of .- 1'Ecziture c
Feminine - Creating a New Discourse; Literary Tradition - Women's; Phallic Criticism; Critical Schools. Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism -
* FreudiadPsychoanal ytic Crificism; Freudian Theory, Relation to Women's Writing; French Literature, Women and.
1662. Mulford, Wendy. "Notes on Writing: A MarxistfFeminist Viewpoin5" Red Letters, 9,1979, 35-44.
Marxist-Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of; Subject Theory of the; "Language. Pauiarchal - as Dominant Discourse; Female/Feminist Aesthetic.
Mulford, Wendy.
1663. Neely. Carol Thomas. "Feminist Modes of Shakespearean Criticism: Compensatory. Justificatory, Transformational" Women's Studies, IX.1.1981.3-15.
lmages of Women, Theory of; Revision - of Critical Tradition; Pluralism in Feminist Critical Theory.
Shakespeare. William. a
1664. Oates, ~oyce'Caro1. "1s There a Female Voice: Joyce Carol Oates Replies," Women and fireratwe. I (New Series), 1980.10-11.
Artist Woman as; Style, Female vs, Male; Androgyny.
1665. . Olsen, Tillie. "Silences," Ms. , W.3,f978,6465.9!&~
Writers, Women - and SBenm - Conditions of; Work, Women and; Motherhood, 1
-
Includes passing biographical references to male and female 19th and 20th century -fiten
O'Rourke. Rebecca. "Summer Reading." Feminia Review .2.1979.1-17.
fi&rary Tradition - Women's; Fern in ia Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Feminist Process - in Publishing.
See Response: Coward, Rosalind. "'This Novel Changes Lives': Are Women's Novels Feminist Novels? A Response to Rebecca O'Rourke's Article 'Summer Reading'." Feminist Review, 5.1980.53-64.
- - p/
French, Marilyn: The Wunen's R m ; Gibbons. Stella: Cdd C m j h Form ; Holtby. Winifred: S w h Riding ; Roberts, Michele: A Piece of the Night ; Webb. Mary: Preciau Bane ; Fairbaims, Zoe. Sara Maitland. Valerie Miner. Michele Roberts and Michelinc Wandor: Tales I Tell My Maher .
,
Parker, Rozsika and Amanda %bestyen. "A Literature of Our O m " Spare Rib, 78.1979. 27-30.
- -
Literary Tradition - Women's; Lmagery and Motifs in wornex& Writing - Rmms; Madness, Women and; Male Characters in Women's Writing; Publishing. Women and; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Separatism and Feminist Literary Criticism; Female/Feminist Aesthetic.
L + +: Interview with Elaine Showalter
Parks, Adrienne. "The Lesbian Feminist as Writer as Lesbian Feminist" Margznr . 23.1975, 67-69. %.
Fernale/Feminist Aesthetic; Lesbian(s) - Literary Tqdition - in Academia; Academia, Women in; Feminist Pedagogy; Literary Tradition - Women's.
Pearson, Carol and Katherine Pope. "Toward a Typology of Female Portraits in Liiiiture." CEA Critic, XXXVII.4. 1975.9-13.
Images of Women. Theory of; Images of women - Virgin - Whore - Submissive Wife - Great Goddess - Temptress - Earth Mother; Artisf Woman as.
Includes an outline of a proposed anthology on images of women in literature. with selections from a wide range of periods in English literature; chosen to illustrate the range of female h n e r portraits
Pratt, AMis 'Aunt Jennifer's Tigers: Notes toward a Reliterary History of Women's Archetypes," Feminist Studies , IV.1.1978.163-94.
Artist Woman as; Oral Tradition, Women and; Imagery and 'Motifs @ Women's Writing - Weaving - Needlework - Cenitrus - Quest - Unicorns; Mythologid Figures in Women's Writing - Medusa - Eurydice; Power, Female - Male Fear of; Sexuality.Female; Subculture.Female.
t
Bogarl Louise: "Medusa"; DuPlessis. Rachel Blau: "Eurydice"; Levemv, Denise: "Song for Ishtar"; "Hypocrite Women"; Lindbergh, Anne Morrow: "The Unicorn in Captivity";
. Morgan, Robin: "Voices Fnnn Six Tapestries"; "Monster"; RW. Adrienne: "Diving into the Wreck"; Rossetti, Christina: "A Birthday"; Sarton, May: "The Muse as Medusa"; "The Lady and the Unicornn; "My Sisters, 0 My Sisters".
Radway, Janice. 'The Utopian hpulse'in Popular Literature: Gothic Romances and 'Feminist' Protest," Arneticun Q w z e r f y . XXXIII.2.1981.140-62.
a
Gothic, Female; Popular Culture - Modem Romances; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Heroine's Maniage as Closure; Independence. FeiWe; Self-realization; Sexuality. Female; Sex Roies; Anger, Female; Passivity, Female; Publishing, Women and; Reader. ,Wornan as; Identity, Female.
Holt Vimria: The Mimess of MeUyn ; The ~ i d k of the Peacock ; The Shadow of the Lynx ; Stewart, Mary; Whimey, Phyllis A.
j:
1672. Register. Cheri. "Literary Criticim" Signs , VL2,1980,268-82.
~ t v i s i c m l o f critical Tradition - of Myth; FemalebFeminist Aesthetic; Writers. Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Identity, Female; Artist, Woman as; Communities of Women; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Enclosure.
+ Review of current feminist literary criticism
1473. Reinhardt, Nancy S. "New Directions for Feminist Criticism in Theatre and the Related Arts," Soundings. LXIV.4.1981.361-87.
Public and Private, Separation of; Masculinity; . .. Rationality, Male; Power, Male; Feminist Process - in the Theatre; Lmages of Women. Theory of; Language. Paniarchal - Rhetorical Tradition. -
Aeschylus: The Oresfeia ; Aristotle: Poetics ; Shakespeare. William; Sophocles: Oedipus Rex ; Antigone.
r , - 1674. Richman, Michele. "Sex and Signs: The Language of French Feminist Criticism;" Language and
StHe. Xm.4.1980.62-80.
Critical Schools, Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - S w t - S t r u c t u m l i s n ' , Language, Women's Use of - I'Ecriture Feminine;
Language, Pahkchal - as Domirum Discou~se; Sex&ty, Female; Phallogocentrism; French Literature, Women and.
IMthes, Roland: Mflhdogies ; Bataille, Georges; Cixous, Helene and Catherine Clemenh La Jane Nee ; Foucault, Michel: Histaire de la S e d i t e ; Heilbrun, Carolyn: Toward a Recognition of Ahdrogyny ; Kristeva Julia; Leclerc, Annie: Parde de Femme ; Levi-Straw. Claude: The Elementary Structures of Kinship .
Richmond, Velrna Wurgeois. "Women as Critics: A Look to the Future," CEA Critic , X M W . 4 , 1975,20-22.
Female fieminist Aesthetic; Academia. Women in. 4%
Roberts, Michele. "Writing and (Feminist) Politics," Women's Studies International Quarterly . II.2.1979.215-18.
~emini&, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Female/Feminist Aesthetic
Robinson, Lillian S. "A Comment on Sandra Gilbert's 'Life Studies, or, Speech After Long Silence'." Cdlege English . XW.4,1979,462-64.
Marxist-Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of; Academia. Women in.
Response to: Gilbert, Sandra M. "Life Studies. or, Speech After Long Silence: Feqinist 'Critics Today." Cdlege English , XL8,1979,849-63 Gilbert's response to Robinson follows, pp. 464-68. -
Rogers, Katharine M. "New (and Still Sexist) Scholarship," Wmen's Studies Newsletter. 111.2. 1975.12-13,
Phallic Criticism; Academia, d Women in.
Discussion of sexism which 'remains emb > dded in scholarly works and unchallenged by the academic establishment" Examples given from two Shakespeare studies. Passing reference to work on 18th century writers
Shakespeare, William: - The Winter's Tuff ; The Taming ojthe Shrew .
Rooke. Const~ce. "Feminist Literary Criticism: A Brief Polernic." R w m of One's Own , 11.4. 1977.40-43,
F
Images of Women, Tlieory of; Prescriptive Criticism.
Reyak, DemeW B. "More on Black Macho ctnd thg M j f h ofthe Superworncur ." Freedmwa$, XIX2,1979,98-101.
C
Black Women - and Black Feminism - Relation to White Feminism - Relationships with Men; Malefiemale Relationships.
Wallace, Michele: Black Macho and the M p h of the Superwoman.
Rule, Jane. "Sexuality in Literature," Fireweed, 5/6.1979/80.22-27.
Languisge. Patriarchal - as Inadequate f6r &pressing Women's Experience; Language, Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse - Naming; Erotic Writing, Women's; Sexuality. Female; Sexuality, Male; French Literature. Women and
Millen, Kate: Sita ; Rich, Adrienne: The D r m of a Common Language ; W a 3 , Phyllis: Naked Poems ; Wittig, Monique: Tke Lesbian Body.
Sargent, Pamela, Marge Piercy et al. "'Dw Frontiers': Letters From Women Fantasy and Science Fiction Writers." Frontiers ,II.3,1977,62-78. -
Speculative Fiction; Femalefleminist Aesthetic.
Chamas. Suzy McKee; Lynn, Elizabeth A; McIntyre. Vonda N.; Piercy. Marge; Sargent, Pamela; Sheldon, Alice (pseud James Tiptree Jr.); Wilhelm, Kate; Yarbo, Chelsea Quinn.
Shange. Ntozake. "Black Women Writing/Where Truth Becomes Hope/Cuz It's Real," Margins. 17,1975.50-54, 59-60:
Black Women - Writers. Conditions of - Relation to White Feminism -( Mother/Daughter Relationships - and Black Feminism; Images of Women - Tragic Mulatto; Writers. Women - Conditions of (20th Century American); Mothermughter Relationships.
Baraka, Imamu Amiri (LeRoi Jones); Hmtcm, Zora Neale: Their Eyes Were Watching God ; lyaoun, Ifa; Larsen, Nella: Quicksand ; P-ng ; Marshall, Paule: Brown Girl, Brownstones ; Nkabinde. Thulani; Shange, Ntozake. 0
Shor, Naomi. "Female Paranoia: The Case for Psychoanalytic Feminist Criticism," Yale French Studies. 62,1981,204-19.
Critical Schools, Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - Freudian/Psychoadytic Criticism - Structuralism/Post-Structuralism; Freudian Theory, Relation tofl@'ornen's Nriting; Sexuality. Female; hnguage. Women's Use of - 1'Ecriture F e a e . - Brunswih Ruth Mack: "The Analysis of a Case of Paranoia"; Freud, Sigmund; Poe. Edgar A l h f The Mystery of Marie Roget :
1685. Showalter, Elaine. "Literary Criticism," Signs, L2.1975.435-0.
Re-vision - of Critical Tradition; Literary Tradition - ~ o m e d s ; Writers. Women - Rediscovered; Language, Women's Use of - Naming; Style, Female vs. Male; Images of Women, Theory of; Critical Schools. Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism - Freudian/~sychoanalytic Criticism.
Review of current feminist literary criticism
Bronte, Charlone; Eliot, George; Kelley, Edith Summers; Lkhing, Doris; Plath. Sylvia; Woolf, Virginia
1686. Showalter, Elaine. "Feminist Criticism in the WiMemess." Critical Inquiry. MI1.2, 1981. 179-205.
Revision - of Critical Tradition; ~~nocritics;' Fernale/Feminist Aesthetic; Language, Women's Use of - 1'Ecriture Feminine - Creatinr a New Discourse; Identity. Female; Critical Schools. Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism - Freudian/Psychoanalytic Criticism; Freudian Theory, Relation to Women's Writing; -r
Language, Patriarchal as rninant Discourse; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Subculture. Female; W r i h omen - and Silence; Literary Tradition - Women's,
1687. Sloman, Judith. "The Fragmentary Genres: '&omen Writers and Non-Canonical Forms." Canadian Newsletter of Research on Wamen , VII.2.1978.26-29.
-- - FO&, Non-Canonical - Diaries/Joumals - Leners; Literary Tradition - Women's; Subculture, Female; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing. '
Banett Browning, Elizabeth; Edgeworth. Maria; Montagu. Lady Mary Wortley; Nin, Anais; Osborne. Dorothy; Pinzer. Maimie: The Maimie Papers ; Wordsworth, Dorothy: The Grasrnere J w d ; Woolf, Virginia
1:
1688. Smith, Barbara. "Toward a Black Feminist Criticism" Conditions, 1.2.1977.25-44. \
Black Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of; Lesbian Feminist Literary Criticism. Theory of; Black Women - Absence from Literary Tradition - Lesbians - Literary adi it ion - Writers. Conditions of - and Black Feminism - Relation to White Feminism - - Sexuality; Friendships, Female; Independence. Female; Sexuality, Female; Racism - in Women's Studies; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Lesbian($ - Literary Tradition; Literary Tradition - Women's.
-
also published in somewhat different form Women's Studies Interrrtlrional Quarterly .II.2, . 1979.183-94
1 -
Morrison, Toni: Sula ; Pew, Ann: The Street ; Walker, Alice: In Love ond Trarble: Ston'es of Black Women.
1689. Smith, Barbara. "Toward a Black Feminist Criticism," Women's Studies IrgerMtionql Qwrterly .II.2, 1979,183-94.
Black Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of; Lesbian Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of; Black Women - Absence From Literary Tradition - Lesbians - Literary
-- Tradition - Writers, Conditions of - and Black Feminism ;-Relation to White Feminism; Re-vision - of Critical Tradition; Racism - in Women's. hd ies ; Writers. Women - Conditions of; Literary Tradition - Wcknen's AbsenceBom; Lesbian@) - Literary Tradition; Literary Tradition - Women's.
also published in somewhat different form in Conditions. 1.2,1977,25-44
Morrison, Toni: Sula . -
1690. Smith. Dorothy E "A Peculiar Eclipsing: Women's Exclusion from Man's Culture," Women's Studies Internatid ~ u u r t & l ~ , 1.4,1978,281-94.
Language, Patriarchal 7 as Dominant Discourse - and Female Invisibility; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence From; Class Position, Women's; Education of Women; Power, Male.
1691. Spacks; Patricia Meyer. "The Difference It Makes," Sou ings , IXIV.4.1981.343-60. /" Re-vision - of Critical Tradition; Pluralism in Feminist Critical Theory; Academia, Women in.
Austen, Jane: Sense andSensibility .
1692. Spector. Judith A. "Gender Studies: New Directions for Feminist Criticism," Cdlege English , XLIII.4, 1981, 374-78.
Images of Women, Theory of; Literary Tradition - Women's - Women's Absence from; Academia, Women in; Teachicg - Feminist Literary Criticism; Separatism and Feminist Literary Criticism.
. . $2
1693. Spivak, Gayatri. "Feminism and Critical Theory," Women's Studies Intei national Quarterly , 1.3. 1978,241-46.
Deco11struction, Feminist; Critical Schools. Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - Freudian/Psychoanalytic Criticism - Marxist Criticism - Structuralism/Post-Strucnrralism. I
1694. Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty. "French Feminism in an International Frame." Y d c French Studies ,62,1981,154-84. a
-
422
Academia, Women in; Freudian Theory. Rehien t~ Hromm's W r k b g Gritid - --
Schools, Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism - Structuralism/Pat-Structuralism; Language, Women's Use of - 1'Ecriture Feminine - Creating a New Discome: Imperialism, Womenand; Phallocentrism; Deconstruction,Feminist; French ' - Literature, Women and.
Cixous, Helene: The b g h of the Medusa ; Clement, catherhe; Demda, Jacques; - -
' Irigaray. Luce: Spenrlwn of the Other W m n (Spedwn de Pawe fimme) : Joyce. James; Kofman. W; Kristeva, Julia: A b m Chinese Women @es Chindses) ; Lacan. Jacques; Wittig, M-e.
-
1695. Steeves, Edna L "The Girl That I Marry: Feminine Stereotypes in Literature." CEA Critic, XXXVII.4,1975,22-24.
Images of Women, Theory of; Revision - of Stereotypes; Feminist Pedagogy.
1696. Stanley, Julia P. "Fear of Rying ?," Sinister Wisdom ,1.2,1976,52-62.
Autobiography, Women's; Confessional Mode in Women's Writing; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Objectivity. Myth of.
Millett, Kate: R 9 n g . - .
1697. Stanley, Julia Penelope and Susan J. Wolfe (Robbins). "Toward a Feminist Aesthetic," Chrysalis, 6,1978,57-71.
~emale/Femhist Aesthetic; Writers. Women - Anxiety of Authorship; Style. Female vs. Male; Confessional Mode in Women's Writing; Language, Patriarchal - as Inadequate for Expressing Women's Experience - as Dominant Discourse - Dualism - Linearity; Language, Women's Use of - Creating a New Discourse - Nming - Syntactical Experimentation; korms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; Collectivity in Women's Writing.
1698. Stewart, Grace. "Mother, Daughter and the Birth of the Female Artist," Women's Studies, m.2. 1979.127-45.
Artist, Woman as; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Identity. Female; Writers. Women - as Subjects of Women's Writing; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Birth; Mythological Figures in Women's Writing - Demeter - Kore; Rites of Passage.
0
\ . Atwood, Margaret: Lady Oracle ; Broner, E M.: Her Mdhers ; Cather. Willa: The son^ of the Lark ; Fitzgerald, Zelda: Save Me the Waltz ; Jon& Erica: Fear of H$ng ; W i n g , Doris: The Gdden N c i e W ; Petesch, Natalie: The Odyssey of Katinar Kuldrovich ; Phelps, Elizabeth Stuart Ward: The Stwy of Avis ; Richardm Dorothy: Pilgrimuge ; Sarton, May: Mrs. Stevens Hears the Mermaids Singing ; Sinclair, May: Mary Ollvier: A
T b e o r e t i e
L.@ ; Wooff, Virginia: To the Lighthaue . -
-
Theriot, Nancy M. "Mary Wollstonecraft and Margaret Fuller A Theoretical Comparison," International J w n a l of Wmen's Studies, IL6,1979.560-74. 3 d
Sexuality, Female; Education of Women; Family, Women and; Male/Female Relationships; Motherhood; Reason vs. Passion; Androgyny; Sex Roles; Power. Male - and the Social Order.
Places Wollstonecr&'s and Fuller's views on human sexuality in the context of their grounding in Enlightment and Romantic philosophy, respectively
d
Thompson, Hilary. "Vagmal Accessibility: Towards a Typology of Female Characters in Literature." Atlantis, 1.2, l976,98-104.
Imagesof Women, Theory of; Images of Women - Idealized Love Object - Virgin - -
Immoral Working-class Woman - Whore - Sexually Devouring Woman - Shrew - Witch - Castrating Bitch; Sexuality, Fexbale; . Courtly Love.
Trofunenkoff, Susan M~M. "Natioqlism, Feminism and Canadian Intellectual History." Canadian Literature. 83.1979.7-20.
Regionalism in Women's Writing; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; +
Images of Women - Terrible Mother; Public and Private, Separation of; N a t i o m Women and
Trujillo, Marcella. "The Dilemma of the Modem Chicana Artist and Critic," Heresies, II.4, 1979,510.
Chicanas, Writing by and about; Images of Women, Theory of; Racism; Imperialism. Women and; Mythological Figurmin Women's Writing - La Malincp - Virgin of Guadalupe - Tonantzin (Our Mother). f
/
Gonzales, Sylvia; Moreno, Dorinda; Ridell, k S.; Schmidt, Lorenza C.. /
1703. Tuchman, Gaye. "Some Thoughts on Public and Private Spheres," Ce-nt . IIL3/4.1980, 111-13.
Public and Private, Separation of; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Cult of True Womanhood; Domestic Fiction.
1704. Walker. Alice. "One Child of One's Own - An Essay on Creativity," Ms. , VIII.2.1979.47-50, 72-75.
- - - -- -- Artist, Woman as; Motherhoad; Writers, Women - Conditions of; Black &%me~ - +
- Writers, Conditions of - Motherhood - Relation to White Women - and Black Feminism - Relation to White,Feminism; Racism - in Women's Studies.
1705. ,Walker, Alice. "Breaking Chains and Encouraging Life - Conditions Five. The Black Women's Issue", Ms. , VIII.10.1980.35-41.
!
- - Black Women - Lesbians; Lesbian(s) - Coming Out - Invisibility of - Writers, Silences of; Writers. Women - and Silence.
Grimke, Angelind Weld; Shockley. Ann Men; Smith, Beverly. u
Wandor, Michelene. "Sexual Politics and the Strategy of Socialist Theatre." Theatre Quurrerly . IX.36,1980,28-30.
Feminist Process - in the Theatre; Socialism, Women and; Politid Activism. Women and; Literary Tradition - Women's Absence from; Feminism. Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing - Influence on Men's Writing.
Washington, Mary ele en. "nese Self-Invented Women: A Theoretical F r a m e r k for a Literary History of Black Women," Rrrdicd Teacher. 17,1980.3-6.
Black Women - Absence from Literary Tradition - Literary 'Fradition - Identity- and Black Consciousness - Writers, Conditions of - Mother/Daughter Relationships; -
- Role-Models, Female; Political Activism, 'women and; Slavery; Literary Tradition - Women's - Women's Absence from; Identity. Female; Writers. Women - Conditions of; Mother/Daughter Relationships; Slave ~ a r r a t i d .
w ,+ Makes passing references to other Black American women writers, m: gated here
Cooper. Anna: A V d c e @om the South ; Douglass, Frederick: Narrative ofthe Life of Frederick D o u g l ~ , An American Slave ; Marshall. Paule: Brown Girl, Bnnvnstbnes ; Momson, Toni: S d a ; Stewart, Maria; Walker, Alice; West Dorothy; Wright, Richard.
Watson, Barbara Bellow. "On Power and the Literary Text," Signs .L1,1975,111-18.
power, Female; Images of Women, Theory of: Power. Male; Images of Women - Sex Object - Victim.
Chopin, Kate: The Awakening ; Lawrence. D. H.; Lessing, Doris: The Gdden Naebtwk ; Shaw, ~ e & e Bernard; Woolf, Virginia: T o the Lightharse .
- 1709. Wenzel. Helene Vivienne. "Introduction to k c e Irigaray's 'And the One Doesn't Stir Without the Other'," Signs. W.1.1981.56-59.
~other/Daughter Relationships; Freudian Theory, Relation to Women's Writing; Identity, Female; Deconstruction, Feminist; French Literature, Women land.
Irigaray, hce.
1710. Williams, Juanita H. "Woman: Myth and Stereotype," International Jaunal of Women's Studies, L3,1978,221-47.
h g e s of Women, Theory of; Images of Women - Earth Mother - Temptress - <Sexually Devouring Woman - Witch - Whore - Angel in the House - Moral Custodian - Virgin - Sex Object - Idealized Love Object - Southern Belle - Old Maid - Unclean Woman - Other; Nature, ~omefi-and; Cult of True Womanhood; Religion, Women and - Christianity - Judaism - Puritanism; Revision - of Myth.
" Apuleius: The Gdden iisr ; Beecher. Henry Ward; Donne. John; Juvenal; Kramer, Henry and James Sprenger: Mdieus Mdejcanun ; Rossetti, Dante Gabriel; Schopenhauer, Arthur; Spenser, Edmund; St Augustine; S t John Chrysostom; Swinburne, Algemon Charles; Wylie, Philip: Geneation oflipers.
.,, E-c
0 .
- I 1711. Zimmeman, Bonnie. "The New.- Wisdom, L2,1976,34-41. -b,--l ---
Lesbian Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of; Lesbian(s) - Literary ~radition - Identity; Heterosexisrn - in Women's Studies; Literary Tradition - Women's; Identity, Female.
&cussion of Ellen Moers' fiternry W m e n and Jane Rule's LeEbiun Images
1712. Zimrnerman, Bonnie. "What Has Never Been: An Overview of Lesbian Feminist Literary Criticism," Feminist Studies, W.3.1981.451-76.
Lesbian Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of; Lesbian(s) : .literary Traditi~n - Writers. Silences of'- Identity - Invisibility of - Sexuality - Subculture; Lesbianism - Encoded - Previously UnreSognized; Images of Women - Lesbian a9Frea.k; Racism - in Women's Studies; Heterosexism - in Women's Studies; Communities' of Women; Role-Models, Female; Female/Ferninist Aesthetic; Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing; Separatism and Feminist Literary Criticism; "Identity, Female; Sexuality. Female; Literary Tradition - Women's; Subculture. Female.
Includes review of contemporary feminist and lesbian feminist literary criticism and survey of lesbian writers
Dickinson, Emily; Faderman, I+ilhn: Sur-ng the Love of Men. Ramantic Friendship and Love between WtqnenfiDm the Renaisgce to the Present ; Foster, Jeanette: Sex V w i m t Wunen in Uferetwe ; Hall. Radclyffe: The Well of h i i n e q ; Rule, Jane: Lesbian Images ; Stein, Gertrude. t
-
The Subject Index organizes the articles listed in the bibliography according to seveml hundrtd of
the topics, themes and concepts discussed by feminist critics. Its purpose is to group discussions of clml! -
related ideas and to suggest to &IS the broad range of topics considered by feminist critics.
Headings: The subject headings are descriptive rather than evaluative. The headings "Prescriptive
Criticism" and "Didactic Literaturen, for instance. direct &IS to discussions rather than examples of Ul-
concepts. A heading may not always indicate an author's precise word choice. However, it does reflect
herhis treatment of the general idea. Analyses of conduct manuals, advice columns, and courtesy books.
for example, hafe all beep gathered ynder the heading "Advice Literature", and discussions of women
writers' attempts to deal 64th prdhibitions against women writing are under "Writers. Women - Anxiety of
Authorship." In most cat&, alternative terms have been cross-referenced. For topics which have been 0
e e l y covered, such as Marriage and Sexuality, the more specific sub-categoria may help a r m users to - *
work most l.scfi;! to them, e.g. "Marriage -pas Economic Necessity" or "Sexuality, Female - Male Fear
of." Thqe follow the general headings. ForA1arge categories which have not been broken down. users my
find the t5ibliopphyYs division'by time period and genre helpful in m o w i n g the areas of investigation.
~eferenf~ Numbers: The numbers following each subject heading refer to artids which specifically
address that theme or topic. They &e entry numbers. not page numbers. Numbers following main
headings refer to general disc&iw of the topic. e.g. "Oral Tradition. Wbmen and". while numbers 2
following sub-categories refer to more specific discussions, e.g. "Oral Tradition. Women and - Gossip."
work on Minorities: Since the journals we have searched are predominantly English. American and
Ca"dadian, most of the authors covered are in the Anglo-Armrican tradition. In order to make other work %
easily accessible to the user. we have included subject index references to writing by and'about women of
other nationalities, e.g. "French Literature, Women and". "African Literame, Women a d " , and to
writing by m d about women of cultural or ethnic minorities, e.g. "Chicanas. Writing by and about".
. .
'fmvrsh Women. Writiag by red abour* ln asdcr w mrlre tbc work of 3kk iwaam~ and l ~ m o r c -7- --
wxsibe. re b*c g a ~ mgopnha feminia criridna &cir spcciri EODmm in a series of - w b c a ~ t x e d t f & t s t g c a c r a l k d i e g s , ~ 'Bltdr: W m - a n d w o r k - ~ t b e ~ y ' o r
. AcaknaIrUimm in', etr
. Abimkm 518.564.640.790.812.837,1214,1315,1421
See also: "Motherhood; Regnancy/Qildbirtb . - \
b .
Academia, Womw in: 1121 ,1143.1144,1153 ,1388 ,1389,1408 ,1436'. 1443 . 1444,1445 .Q1448 . 1469 .1475,1476.14$9.1490.1492.1502.1507 ,'1512.1520.1523.1524,1533,1541 . 1543. 1547,1554,15561 , ~588,1593,15%.1597.1611,1632,1634,1608,1675.1677.1678.1691 ,1692 ,1694 See also: Fcainist Pedagogy; Feminist Pmces; Teaching
Addcscumx 525.526.653.662.672.6P6 .721,738.744.786.790.798.804.817 ,830.895.896, ' 912.928.1034.1133.1262.1272.~. 1360.1435 a
Sat also: Childhood; Rites of Passage
Adultery: 4 .11 .29 .'62.73.85 . lj9'".140.146.152 : 177 ,181 ,230,235 ,265 ,272 ,279,281 ,288 . ' 303,324,341 ,359,416,463,633,645 ,751'. 846.933 . l3 lO. l3 l l See also: Mamagc; Seduction
Advice Utcnturc: 30 :32 .'65 .76.117. i i8 .120. U3.152.171 . 177.183.201 ,202,219,253,256. 275,276.293.404,410.485,798,1096.1109.1110,1112,1~17 .1125,1128.1129.1283. 1294,1301 .I302 ,1312.1328 ,1518 ,1582
African Utcrature. Women and: 241 ,245.322.614 ."641 . 718 .739 ,766 .800 .810 .813 .842 .869 ,914 , 940.1160.120, lm, 1342,1348.1351 ,1439,1468,1527
L e also: lack warnen
a Women and: 159.200.236.539.668 ,720,721 ,738.760.840.877 ,915 ,939,969,1188 . 1560
Alcohol, Women and: 140 ,258 ,416 ,906 I
Alienation, Female: 38,205 ,285 ,311 ,362 ,374.375 ,549,564,622 . U 7 ,654 .665 ,669 ,674.686. 708 ,712 ,716 ,722 . ?24.733 ,742 ,766 ,821 ,.824 ,826 ,851 ,904 ,906 ,940 ,946 ,955 ,959 . 1013.lb43.1072.1269.1275.1276.1285.1287.1324.1417.1498.1560. 1633 See also: Isdation of Women '
Androgyny: 59.68 .'90.111 . 113,114.136,. 153.198.232.277 . 292 .323 .376 .454 .480 ,522 .523 , 530.552,576.593.604,640,657.658.685,711 ,738,758,764,782 ,819,830,880,902 . 903.972.1035,1168.1277.1418.1577.1578,~158?. 1664.1699 Ste aka: Sex Rdts; Transvestism
Anper. F&C: 1 5 0 . 1 5 9 3 . 2 4 7 ,273.283.284.291 ,294,323,344, fM1.384.393.394.563 ,589. 634.668.669,683 ,701 ,709,722,723 .748,765,778.841,848,862,881,!307.911,956. 958,959.975.991 ,1001.1002,1099.1123,1182 .1183.1208,1260.1353.1355.1473, 1498.1595,1599.1623.165G. 1671 See also: Videnix, Ftmale
'l
mi Woman a~86.128 ,164,238.246,348,351 .352 ,362,366,373 .397,400,407,444,46C'.461 ,477 ,484,522,523,550,553,635 , 6 4 2 . 6 5 ~ ,660,677 ,685 ,689,755 ,759,765 ,771 ,802 . 820.828 ,832,835 ,836.838 ,887 ,903 ,925 ,928 ,934,943 ,953 .956.959.970.1016.1029
1080,1083 ,1123,1165 ,1183 ,1189,1191 .1209,1217,1245 ,1249,1268 ; 1273 ,1276, i285 . 132[1.13UJ3fi%lSI.. 1542 ~ 1 ~ 1 5 6 W 5 K ~ W r 1 Q O S ~ U T ~ 5 ~ l - ,1669,1670,1672 ,1698 ,1704 *. See also: Writers. Women & -
--
Australian Literature, Women and: 332 ,333 ,337 ,515 ,608 ,609,610,662 ,674,722 ,723 ,730,731 , 732 ,-745 ,748 ,890,891 ,998 ,1016,1075 ,1111 ,1116 ,1146,1178,1185 ,1215 ,1237 ,1258, 1263 ,1280 ,1483 ,1481 ,1526 ,1649
Autobiography, Women's: 42,389,425,540,583,591 ,705,728,759,773,825,840.877,884,887, 889 ,909 ,932 ,1041 ,1060 ,1111 ,1194 ,1296 ,1320 ,1349 ,1480 ,1493 ,1581 ,1625 ,1627 , 16% See also: Confessional Mode in Women's Writing
Beauty: See Physical Appearance P
hies about Women: 1433 ,1439 ,1447 ,1451 ,1452,1453 , 1454,1458,1463 ,1464 ,1470,1471 .1474,1482.1483.1485.1486.1487,1491,1494.1509,1515.1518,1525.1526,1530,
, 1532 ,1533 . ,
Bildungsroman, Female: 235 ,284 ,324 ,346 ,426 ,538 ,549 ,652 ,672 ,703 ,728 ,823 ,868 ,890 ,1177 , --m f h
~ i & r a ~ h ~ . Women's: 125.229.389,497.1068,1431.1453,1457.1459.1468,1481,1493.14%. 1510,1543.1567 ,1581 ,1635 -
Black Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of: 11!30.1208 ,1629,1646,1688 ,1689
Black Women -Absence from &xary Tradition: 1033 ,1063 ,1160.1435 ,1454.1477 ,1523 ,1570,1612.
1646,1655 ,1688,1689,1707 -in Academia: 1512,1523 ,1524
I -and Black Community: 618,702,735 ,743,800,883 ,919,924,925 ,1031,1042,1067 , i
1161.1211,1255.1265.1342,1511,1513,1514 -and Black Cmsciousness: 467 ,618 ,743,989,1020,1042 ,1062,1161 ,1164,1198 ,1210,
1219,1225 ,1243,1249,1255 ,1512,1707 a n d Black,Feminism: 579,1027 ,1033 ,1068 ,1085 ,1183 ,1225 ,1235 ,1440,1523,1548 .
1680.1683 .1688.1689,1704 -and Black Idiom: 467 ,682.719.1244 ,1306 ,1513 ,1514 -and Education: 467 ,682.703 ,716 ,869 ,1479 -and the Family: 466,467 ,525 ,539,575 ,584,618,694.702.703.716.735 $739,743,869
.925.989,1062.1072,1243,1249.1523 -and Harlem Renaissance: 866 ,919 ,924,983 .1014.1015 ,1164,1165 ,1306 ,1612 -Identity: 525,584,618.682,847,922,989.994,1029,1034.1035,1062,1077,1078,
1164.1183.1208.1342,1477,1511,1514,1531,1707 -Lesbians: 879,983.984.1 2,1092,1179,1208,1210,1225,1444,1509,1523.1646.
1688,1689,1705 sh, -Literary Tradition: 1160,1183 :1306,1317 ,1344,159,1361 ,1454,1478 ,1523,1612,1646
,1688 ,1689.1707 -Mother/Daughter Relationships: 274,525,660,703 ,735 ,847 ,883 ,1034,1035 ,1198 ,1208
,1683,1707 -
-~otherdcud: 467 .618.702,739.988.1062,1164.1342.1704 i -Oml Tradition: 466,660,702.719.1249.1306,1342.1344,1359,1361 1362,1512,1513,
I C
*
1514. ' -- - -
-Passing: 891,924,1164 ., -Physical Appearance: 525,584,682,739,925 ,1523 ,1531 -R&tim to White F&sm: 494,513,579,914,1668 ; 1 ? 3 5 , W ,M77,1SL2-. H27 , fS48 -
,1680,1683 ,1688 ,1689,1704 -Relation to White Women: 274.849.879.883 ,1033 . f225 ,1265,1477 ,1503 ,1512 ,1524,
1704 b
-Relationships with Men: 525,539,554,565 ,570.579.637 ,678 ,682 ,702,716,719,735 , ,
866,869,883,922,925.989.1008.1015,1033.1042.1062.1072.11~. 1176,1548, 1680
-and Religion: 739,869 ,1062 ,1072 -Sexuality: 525,539,565,650,716,735,871 ,1029.1034.1077 ,1164,1176.1265.1361 .
1688 -Suppressed Artist: 5846,925 ,103 ,1183 .I531 -and Work: 682,698,739,1062,1265,1344,1361.1512.1523 -Writers, Conditions of: 206 ,210.800.919.925 ,983 ,984 ,1014 ,1027 , 1031 ,1039 ,1063 ,
1067,1068,1071,1085.1165.1179.1190.1198,1208.1210.1211.1212.1219.1225 1243,1244,1255,1317 ,1344,1612.. 1646.1683,1688.1689.1704.1707
-write&. Rediscovered: 206.466.919.924.983 ,984,1015 ,1306,1359 See also: African Literature. Women and; Miscegenation; Racism; Slavery; Teaching - Black Women; Teaching - Black Women's Writing
CalCalvinism, Women ee Religion, Women and - Calvinism
Captivity Narrativ ?
Caribbean Literature, women and: 570,716,847 ,989 ,1451 -
Chastity, Female: 4 , 4 4 , 4 5 , 5 2 , 5 6 . 7 9 . 8 1 , 8 3 , 8 5 .94.97,139,141.143 . 171 .176.180.181 ,183 . 188,189.193 ,194,218 ,219.244.403.471 ,473 ,1303 ,1552
P Chicanas, Writing by and about: 618,950,955 , 1 ~ , 1 0 0 8 , 1 0 0 9 , 1 1 7 5 ,1336,1487 , 702
Childhood: 3,185,228,306,584,721 ,804,821 ,884,895,896,912,989.1004,1090,1110,1262. 1404.1480 See also: Adolescence
Chinese Literature, Women and: 592 ,1331
Chinese-American Women, Writing by and about: 527 ,540,865 ,1627 See also: Immigrant Women, .Writing by and a b u t
Christianity. Women and: See Religion, Women and - Christiaqity e Class Position, Women's: 13 ,34,38.39.69.85,118 F12l. 149.163.170.176.184.185.194.198.
202,203 .208,215,220.225,236,242.249,253,267 ,268.275.278.311 ,312,318,335. 3 4 6 , 3 4 7 . 3 4 9 , 3 5 4 , 3 5 7 . 3 6 0 . 3 6 7 , , ~ 4 0 4 , 4 0 5 , 4 0 7 . 4 0 8 , 4 1 9 . 4 2 9 . 4 3 6 . 4 7 3 r 4 9 4 , 532,539,547 ,556,561 ,562,568,578.586.597.613.626.627 ,656,662,675,682,688, 713 ,714,716,753 ,754,789,800,807 ,825 ,835 ,842 ,874,880,8%.906,922.924,1023 , 1050.1062.1105,1107,1119,1125.1127,1129,1160,1202'~ 1232,1239,1263,1265.1274 ,1285,1287,1301 ,1329,1330.1378.1485.1582,1583.1598.1619,16~2.16~3,1650. 1690 See also: Money. Women and; Work. Women and; Working-Class Women. Writing by and
about I .
Classical Greek Religion, Women and; See Religion, Women and,- Classical dreek
Collectivity in Wometn's Writing: 568,638 ,874,1025 ,1030,1039 ,1052,1064,1070,1074,1075,1086 . ,1102,1166,1169,1193,1244,1335 ,l369,1430,1484,1485 ,1504,1539 .-I., 1556,
0
1571 ,1588 ,1596,1641 ,1657,1658 ,1697 Seeafso:FeministProcess
,.
Cglonialism, Women and: 124,159,496,739,772,800; 842,847 ,869,875,940.1169,1178,1181, 1228 ,1263,1287 ,1494,1512 See also: Imperialism, Women and
Comics: Sek Popular C u l m - Comics
Communities of Women: 48 ,119.228 ,229,380,394,436 ,519 ,659.721 ,754.760 ,779,886,927 . 940,1011 ,1072.1102.1234,1325,1327, l342,1510,15%, 1649,1657,1672,1712 See also: Friendships. Female; Lesbian@) - Subculture; Subcultare. Female
4
Cunduct%anuals: See Advice Literature
Confessional Mode in Women's Writing: 328.559,583,626,705.773,889,931,965 ,966,976,982. 987,1001,1126,11$2,1213.1299,1568,1577,1583.~5%, 1624,1629,1632,1696.1697
Consciousness--: See Fe-
Conversation: See Oral Tradition, Women and - Conversation
Conversational Interaction. Malefiemale: 1382 ,1384,1422
CQurtesy Books: See Advice Literature \
Courtly Love: 28 .33.46.47 , 50 .55 .58.66.67 ,71,72,73 ,74 ,127 ,155 ,1700 See also: Love, Romantic; Troubadours. Women
Crime. Women and: ~3.367,393.524,710,1099,1271.1282,1500 b See also: Mson Writing, Women's; Teaching - Writing to Women in Prison; Violence, Female
Critical Schools, Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism -Freu#an/Psychoanalytic Criticism: 9 ,271 ,508 ,509,834 ,971 ,979 ,1173 ,1357 ,1534,1579
1584.1585.1586,1587.1588.1628 ,1647,1661 .1684,1685.1686,1693 -Jungian Criticism: 1007 ,1575 -Marxist Criticism: 835 ,1057 ,1434,1601 ,1628 ,1693 -New Criticism: 1545 ,1576,1577 ,1624,1632 -Reade~Response Criticism: 1434 ,1631 -Strplcaualism/Post-Structuralism: 181 ,270,736.827 ,979,1308 ,1434,1534,1579,1584,
1585.1588.1628.1639.1647.1651.1674,1684,1693,1694 See also: Freudian Theory. Relation to Women's Writing; Revision - of Critical Tradition
Cult of True Womanhood: 89.176.177 ,184,201 ,224; 225.241 ,253,258,261 ,267,273 ,291 ,313. 315,331-, 341 ,343 ,345 ,346,356.367 ,385 ,392 ,410.414,419; 420,430,434,436,437, 440,447,463.465 ,476.484,485,490.495,503 .852.1014,1110.1138.1266,1276.1297
1312 ,1703 . l Z l O b e also: Images of Women; New Woman, The
-
Death, Women and: 110,115,123,181.192,194,285,373,383,453 ,481 .634.666.6?2.709.728. -
735,744,845,877,1195 .1302,1330.1346,1353
4" See Jso: Images of Women - Dead Woman; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Death; u * - Narrative Suategies in Women's WFiting - Heroine's Death as Closcre
Deconstruction, Feminist: 374,480,814,875 .899.1169.1308.1534.1557.1559.1561 , 1564.1616, -1617 ,1638 ,1651 ,1661 .1693,16~4.1709 See also: Critical Schools, Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - Structuralism/Post-Structuralism
Detective Fiction: See Popular Culture - Ditective Fiction
Diaries: See F o m , Non-Canonical - Diaries/Journals
Didactic Litera-: 35,162,164.174.197 .251,278.286.404.431 ,495,589,806,1298 . 1299,1329 ,1642
Difference. Theory of: 271 ,1134,1534.. 1590 ,1592.1613.16i6 , 1659
Dime Novels: See Popular Culture - Dime Novels
Divorce: 149.303,358,486.558,559,1046,1054,1310.1311 See also: Adultery, Marriage
Domestic Fiction: 248,249,279,280.315 ,317 ,358 ,414'. 419,420,436 ,588 ,723 ,755,762 ,820, 1127,1583 ,1703
Domptic Poetry: 126 ,136 ,207 ,956,965 ,1020 -. ~om&city. Cult of: See Cult of True Womanhood
0
Doubling: See Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Doubling
Dualism: See Language. Patriarchal - Dualism
Education of Women: 1 3 . 3 2 . 4 9 . 5 3 . 6 5 , l l l . 117.118.119.120.121.122.130.134.154.160.162 ,169,177 ,185,188.189.195,201.202.212,217 ,219,220,235,237 ,243,251 ,256,264.
. 276 ,286 ,288 ,289,299 ,301 ,303 ,306,326 .354,3M ,366,368 ,380 ,387 ,389,399 ,404 , 405 ,410,412,413 ,437 ,438 ,447 ,467 ,482 ,485,492 ,519,527 ,557 ,581 ,592 ,639,658 , 675 ,682 ,683 .703 ,716 ,737 ,770 ,798 .869 ,885 ,1207 .1214 ,1270 ,1294 .1298 .1299 . 1301,1302.1467,1479.1505,1518 ,*1537.1616.1690. 1699
Education of Women (Contemporary Practice): See Teaching
Encoding: See Language. Women's Use of - Encoding .
Erotic Writing, Women's: 551 ,1681
Ethnicity in Women's Writing: 520.526.540,570,618,865.906,910,950,955,1004,1008,1009, 1162.1655
Fairy Tale Imagery in Women's Writing -3eatttyand Ifte&ast+ 3% - - - - - - - -
-Bluebeard: 501 -Cinderella: 511
- -Rapunzel: f 560 -Sleeping Beauty: 511 ,917 -Snow White: 512 ,1560 -Snow White and Rose Red: 342 ,917
See also: Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing; Mythological-Figures in Women's Writing
Family, Women and: 1 , 3 ,6 .8.9.10.21.22,85,105 ,203 ,248,268 ,285,289,313,314,315 ,343, 367 ,394,403,413,419,426,438,466,467 ,485,525 ,529,539,540,555,556,575,584, 586,592 ,596,597 ,608,618,632 .656,694,702,703,716.722,723 ,725,728 ,735,739, 743.762,775,783.786.820.835.838,851,856.865,869,881,905,925.938,960,989, 1028.1037.1060.1062.1065,1072.1080.1096,1117,1137.1145,1171,1243,1249,1343 ,1366 ,3426,1523 ,1650,1699 -as Agent of Women's Oppression: 559 ,834 ,1049 ,1268 ,1313 -and Parental Authority: 167 ,170 ,176 ,187 ,194,275 ,493 ,844,1285 ,1322 -as Woman's Sphere: 2.65 ,195,225 ,228 ,242,249,273 ,303,404,410,435,493,798.
1128 ,1268 ,1301 + See also: Marriage; Motherhood
Father/Daughter Relationships: 94,101 ,104,126,181 ,194,207 ,227,387 ,435 ,493 ,503 ,561 ,630, 653.686.748.834,838,881,906.1060,1189,1205,1269,1286,1360.1553
Female/Feminist Aesthetic: 255 ,293 ,481 ,566,568 $04 ,642,689,701 ,729,736,762,763 ,780, 815 .858.934,936,939,959.977.996,1007,1035.1036,1070.1081,1098,1102.1177 , 1186,1190.1216.1224,1231 ,1233.1254,1325.1393,1395.1478.1484,1549.1550,15~5 .1556,1560.1566.1568,1571.1574,1594.1605,1616,1622,1626,1627,1633,16$4. 1636.1642.1644,1646.1652.1654.1655.1657.1659.1662.1667 ,1668,1672,167!i,1676 ,1682 ,1686,1697 ,1712 See also: Forms. Innovative in Women's Writing; lmagery and Motifs in Women's Writing; Language, ---- Women's Use of; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing
Feminism. Pre-Twentieth Century -Influence on Men's Writing: 54.99.106.122 ,188 ,215 ,233,234,244,248,256,260,290.
308 ,330,338 ,339,346,353 ,385 ,403 ,438 ,439.447 ,483 ,495 ,502.1049.1270. 1547 ,1650
-Influence on Women's Writing: 120,122,165 ,182,202 ,224,226,228 ,243,252,258 ,264, B
,276.286.287 , 2%.308 .317 ,322 ,360 ,368 ,374 ,375 ,386,389,394,401,405. 422 ,431 ,436,437,448 ,479,492,494,495 ,502 ,1158 ,1298 ,1326,1536,1547
Feminism, Twentieth Century -Influence on Men's Writing: 513 ,581 ,675 ,767 ,797 ,1046,1054,1090,1601 ,1706 -Influence on Women's Writing: 526,550,559,561 ,566,589,606,619,633 ,658 ,668,674
,675,684,. 695 ,709 ,726 ,733 ,765 ,772 .777 ,792 .7%, 797,818,820,835,840, 8 6 8 . 8 7 6 , 8 8 6 , 8 8 7 , 9 0 3 , 9 1 1 , 9 2 1 . 9 2 7 . 9 3 6 , 9 5 0 , 3 , 1017 ,1027 ,1028 ,1030 ,1031 ,1032 ,1045 ,1047 ,1052 ,1054 ,1058 ,1059 ,1068 ,1070 ,1074,1075.1076,1082.1087.1090,1106,1111.1112,1116.1126.1131,1145, 1166.1167.1168.1169,1170,1171,1172,1177,1178,1180,1181.1186,1192,1200 .1205,1207,1209,1218,1220,1222,1230,1238,1246,1248.1252.1253,1254, 1256,1259,1298,1460.1467,1468,1494,1536,1539,1540,1547,1549.1555,1559
Feminist Pedagogy: 162. i434.1437 ,1438,1455 ,1456 ,1462,1465 ,1478 .1479.1484.148P .la. 1500,1501 ,1502,1506.1507.1511.1512,1513,15~4,1517 ,1519,1520,1527 ,1528.1543 ,1561 ,1668 , 16950 See also: Feminist Process; -Teaching
Feminist Process -. - -in the Classroom: 1430,1434,1438 ,1440,1449,1456,1462 ,1472 ,1480,1495 ,1502 . 1506
,1511 ,1514.1517 ,1521 ,1528 -in Publimg: 1003,1088,1089,1090,1092,1093.1094,1095.1097,1098.1100,1101 .
1102,1103,1104,1106,1108, llll.-fl15,1120,1121.1122.1126,1131.1135,1136 ,1141,1143,1144,1146,1147,1148,1150,1152.1153.1154.1155.1193.1494. 1497 ,1530,1559,1565 ,1609,1666
-in Reading/Writing Groups: 1064.1248 ,1430,1460 ,1461 ,1497 ,1547 ,1571'. 1631 ,1632 , 1657
-in R.esearch: 1 ,57,77 ,1111 ,1121 ,1339,1364,1378 ,1381 ,1410 ,1425 ,1427 ,1431 ,1432 . 1442,1453.1457,1459,1468.1470,1481,1483f 1485 ,1487.1491 .1494.1496.1510 -
,1523,1525 ,1530.1547 -in the Theatre: 489,1025,1030,1032.1036.1039,1047.1W8.1050,1052,1053,1056.
1058 ,1059 ,1064 ,1066 ,1070 ,1074 ,1075 ,1079 ,1081 ,1082 ,1086 ,1206 ,1215 ,1217 .1218,1226,1233.1254,1309.1433,1504,1673.1706 See also: Feminist Pedagogy
Folklore: 67,719,82r3.1297,1328,1330,1338.1339.1341,1351,1353.1364,1365.1366.1369 See also: Oral Tradition, Women and
Forms, Innovative, in Women's Writing: 69,125 ,516,540,568,571 ,624,625,645,659,665 ,668 . 6 7 6 . 6 8 3 . 7 0 3 . 7 0 5 . 7 0 9 . 7 1 9 , 7 2 4 , 7 2 7 , 7 3 6 . 7 4 7 , 7 6 i , 7 6 2 . 7 6 3 . 7 6 4 , 7 9 2 . 8 1 6 . 8 2 0 . 8 5 0 . 855,901,909,927,936,953.1036,1052,1064,1077.1083,1180.1181 ,1195,1211 ,1219. 1226,128,1279,~~25.1361.1539,1540.1546.1558.1587.1590,1599,1622,1625.1627 ,1687 ,1697 ,1712 See also: Language, Women's Use of; Narrative Strategies in Women's Wribng @
Forms, Non-Canonical -Diaries/Journals: 159,221 ,362,380,399,429,497 ,676,802,1271 . 1296.1338.. 1442 .
1485 ,1493 ,1625.1627 ,1658 ,1687 -Letters: 160.221,257,320.380,410.683,699.770,1166,1291 ,1442,1485 , 1687
See also: ~ u t o b i o g r a ~ h ~ , Women's; Oral Tradition. Women aqd .
Fotonovelas: See Popular Culture - Fotonovelas
French Literature, Women and: 3 2 , 6 6 , 7 1 , 8 0 , 8 2 , 8 4 . 1 1 7 . 1 1 8 , 1 2 2 , 1 4 8 , 1 5 7 . 162,166,16 ,172, 173 .176 .179 ,180 ,181 ,185 .192 ,195 ,200 .201 ,215,235,270,271 ,272,303, ,328. 341 ,347 ,351,352,361 . 366 ,374 ,375 ,376 .396 ,404 ,406 ,410 .571 ,573,598,600,636, i"; 712 ,714 ,740 .760 .794 ,796 ,802 ,825 ,827 ,840,873,876,884,887 ,888,899.915 ,917 ,' 927 ,932,936.949,954,979.1134.1173.1194,1214.1216.1234,1241,1258.1271 ,1290, 1316 ,1323 ,1535 ,1546 ,1553 ,1557 ,1558 ,1559,1562 ,1563 ,1564 ,1571 ,1584 ,1590 ,1591 .1592,1599,1613,1614,1615 ,1616,1617.1618,1622 ,1638,1639,1643,1647 ,1651 , 1656,1659,1661 ,1674,1681 ,1694,1709
Freudian. Criticism: See Critical Schools. Other, Relation to Feminist Criticism - Freudiq/Psychoanaiytic
Freudian Theory, Relation to Women's Writing: 172 ,374,508 ,847 ,1558 ,1622 ,1651 ,1661 ,1684, 1686,1694,1709 .=
.Friendships, Female: 22 .95 ,188 ,241 ,257 ,264,269,305 ,330 ;368 ,428,455 ,475 ,477 ,497 ,507 , 508 ,509,525 ,536,584,635 ,652,679,684,693 ,695 ,709,728 ,754,849,853 ,905,925 , 1011 ,1234.1247 ,1250 ,1282 ,1300 ,1367 ,1457 ,1510,1688 See also: Communities of ~ o b e n ; Lesbia.n(s) -
I> t Gender-Specific F O ~ : See Language, Patriarchal - Gender-Specific Forms
Generic Masculine: See Language. Patriarchal - Generic Masculine . "
. - German Literature. Women and: 57 ,133 ,386,508 ,532 ,736,1057 ,1106,1270,1285 '
Gossip: See Od Tradition, Women and - Gossip
Gothic. Female: 168.170.184.186.187 ,198 ,311 . W : 501 .72f, 738 ,756 7787 ,824,839,856,857 ,1207 ,1257 ,1264,1277 ,136d ,1671 See also: Popular Culture - Modern Romances; Sensation Fiction . - -
,- -:s
Graffiti: See Popular Culture - Graffiti
Greek Literature", Women and: 895 ,896 , 1335
Gynocritics: 1518 ,1619,1686
Harlem Renaissance. The: See Black Women - and Harlem Remissanbe'
Harlequins: See Popular Culture - Modem Romances
Heterosexism: 95.547.602.793.844.850.927~1013.1179.1192.1457.1459.1490.1496.1500, 1510.1527 ,1555 ,1635 -in Women's Studies: 1445 ,1446,1533.1711 ,1712
i Hinduism. Women and: See Religion. Women and - Hinduism / Homophobia: See ~eterosexikn
Homosexuality, Male: 90.572 ,573,623 ,685,687 ,861 ,1578
Humour, Women as Objects of: 70 ,100,157 ,212 ,214 ,409 ,1069 ,1129 ,1307 ,1334,1337 ,1350 , 1352,1355,1435 See also: Images of Women; Misogynist Tracts
Humour, Women's Use of: 134,258,259,287,296,422,431,432,514,524,551 ,567,569,577,588 ,709.713,727,729.760.788,806.905.921,958,1061.1070,1130.1182.1246.1319, 1321 ,1324,1341 ,1349,1352,1354.1355.1369,1504,1538 See also: OraI Tradition, Women and - Bawdiness; Satire. Women's Use of
Identity, Female: 86.113,168.172,243.270.277,311.316,324,328,346.374,375.397 ,,430,449 ,491 ,508 .509,5i5 ,516,520.525u, 526,540,541 ,542,549,553 ,557 ,574,576,584,596.
8 0
602.618.626 627,631 rm r 6 3 5 6 5 L WSL66L6-L679&2 . 7 Y 720 7"' 7'1 779 ,811 ,817 ,821 ,826,827 ,847,850,855 ,858,878 ,882,885 , 8 9 8 . 4 3 : 912 : 9; : G2 940.941 ,946.953 ,956,959,960,972 .974.976,989.994,995,1001.1002.1008.1029, 1034,1035,1041 ; l062,l065,l077 ,1~15,1164.H73,1183,1;2022,~28& 1213, m m - - -
,1296,1318,1320,1342,1368.1407,1411,1453.1477,1511,1514,1531,1538.1577. 1579 ,1580 ,.I583 ,1586,1587 ,1615 ,1617 ,1619 ,1624 ,1627 ,1631 ,1638 ,1649,1671 , 1672 ,1686,1698 ,1707 ,1709,1711 ,1712 See also: Independence, Female; Self-realization
Illness, women and: 126,267,392.446.512.634,945.1012 See also: Images of Women - Invalid -
Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing -Animals: 873 ,966 -Attics: 340 - -Bees: 481 ,956 -Birds: 280 ,481 ,568 ,762 ,899 ,1035 , 1078 -Birth: 285 ,582,640,689,927,931 ,953 ,973 ,977 ,988.1~2.1251.1277 ,1318.1327.
1353 ,1698 -Blood: 642.751 ,823 ,1035 ,1177 ,1604 r.
-- -Bride: 481 -Bridegroom: 451 ,457 P
/ -calvary: 481 . -Child: 481 ,720 ,956
-Circles: 735,823,876,899,917 ,936.940.1177,1626 -Cities: 607 ,639 -Clothing: 136,657,708,1040.1168,1272,1633.1646 -Colour: 763 -Cows: 615 ,625 ,968 -Dance: 889 -Dead Child: 433 ,895 ,982,1315 ,1353 -Death: 400.451 ,468,477 ,481 ,853.881 ,945,1008 ,1305,1335 -Disguise: 136,284,481,573 ,657.. 1015,1282 d
-Doubles: 284,344,782.850.976,977,982,1020,1473.1631 -Dreams: 168 ,530 ,554.720.766.1177 ,1659 -Drowning: 280,1267 -Enclosure: 168,182,X!6,284,294,340,388;374.573 ,582,608 ,649.654.708 ,723 ,824'
-Escape: 182,186,284,340,383 ,411.664,853.977,1018 - -Father: 449 ,450 ,481 ,981 ,985 ,1304 . -Female Christ: 138 ,804 -Film-making: 736 , 1157
- m e : 3 4 ,481 .853 - - - - - - - ---
-Housekeeping: 481 ,608 ,755 ,762 ,956,965 ,967 ,1279 -Houses: 168,184,284,607 ,708,723 ,762,824,934,1257 ,1277 " e
-#tuigt~: 360,639 -Intoxication: 481 -Jewels: 1021 ,1626 -Journey: 284,360.426,457,720,750,823.901,985 ,1177,1346,1646 -Kettles: 762 -Labyrinth: 166 ,795 ,1251 ,1277
/
-Landscape: 126,153,168,481.615,751,766,824,8~,918,1008,1010 -Light: 573 ,901 ,974,1175 ,1626 -Male Deity: 449,450.451 ,452 ,457 ,477 ,481.727 ,881,985 ,1304 -Mining: 1626 -Minors: 337,717 ,740.850,878,882,898,899,982,985.1018,1277 -Moon:ZM, 292,384,478.725 ,762,763 ,803,959,%2,966,974,990,1007,1010,1175 -Muse: 442,449,450,451 ,452,456,477 ,478 ,481,593.971,973,993,996.1013,1077 ? -Music: 411 ,762 ,965 -Mutilation: 481 ,853 ,946 ,1020,1604 -Nature: 459,468 ,481 ,573 ,881 ,1010,1325 -Needlework: 945 ,968 ,1670 i.
-Pain: 449 ,481 ,1020 ,1305 ,1335 -Paper: 946 -Paradise: 64,468.481 ,,530,873.910.1304 -Parties: 934 , -Philosopher-Queen: 154 ,1002 ,1208 -Photography: 708 -Pursuit: 186 -Quest: 277.40O.5U). 548,564,607 ,639.640.672.75O. 766,812,834,9lO.912,917 .
940,959,971 .972.973,974,990,1005 ,1156,1631,1670 -Rainbow: 1626
+ -8leaving: 1275, LWSW. 1670 - - - - 1 -- -
~Wiidemess: 941 ,1156 ;
\
-Windows: 340.708 -\, /
- - - -Witches/Wit&cI;rft: 442 ,584 ,982 ,1077 -
\ -Woman Warrior: 59 ,136 ,154,876 ,917 ,1208 ,1627 ,'
\ -Womb: 689.981 ,982 ..I327 -Wooing Woman: 80 ,82 ,474 ,996
See also: Fairy Tale Imagery in Women's Writing; Mythological Figures in ~om&fs. Writing; Revision - of Stereotypes; Re-vision - of Myth
I
Lmages of Women -Abandoned Woman: 143 -Adventuress: 543 ,587 ,663 ,914,1046 ,1314 "Amazon: 6 ,14 ,18 ,52,59,116 ,1548
' , -Ambitious Black Woman: 923 -American Girl: M9.290.295.385.438.535.543.1276 -Angel in the House: 240.253,301,316,317,330,341,343,356.402.414,419,427 ,435 .
437,440.471,473,485,495,550.838.938,1107,1268.1276,1323.1328.1710 -Animal: 4,211,214,291 .77•‹6.894,1051.1160.1327 ,1330.1366 -Black Mammy 698 ,1062 ,1344 -Black Matriarch: 545 ,575 ,894.923 ,1024,1027 ,1062 ,1067 ,1164,1176 -Black Whore: 914,1160.1164 . -Black Woman as Bearer of Culture: 517 ,914,1014,1024 , 1062 -Blues Singer: 660 ,1165 ,1362 -BluestocLing/Learned Woman: 52.53.117.157. g. 202.212.213.217 ,296,372 ..422.
447 ,519,864,1321 -Career Woman: 217.232.290.298 : 301 ,386,395 ,424.543 ,611 ,629 ,675,1026,1046.
1091 ,1107 .1113,1117 ,1125 ,1133 ,1151 ,1350 \
a t r a t i n g Bitch: 127 ,209,506,560,623 ,628,652.681 ,749,799,813 ,864,1026,1037 . 1276 ,1329,1700
-Child-Woman: 33 ,34 ,58 ,240.. 245 ,276 ,334,356,427 ,486.491 ,543 ,565 ,636,692, 813 ,821,823 ,924 ,1057 ,1118 ,-I137 ,1177
-Coquette: 208 , '211.212,213,232,259,387,1312,1313.1397 Y' ' * '
-Crone: 73 ,78 .1560,1?68 . i , ,
-Dead Woman: 180 ,192 ,445 ,473 ,612 I , '
'Deceiver: 11,30.33,46,47 ,48,56,73,78.97,101 ,110,132 .'141 ,152,211.. 248,254. ,
414,1118 ,1307 ,1314,1351 ,1366,1653 -Dumb Blonde: 543 -Earth Mother: 14,96.132,224,325,330,397,409.485,487 ,515,532 ,580,588 ,598,
625 ,652 .654 .663 .711 .739 .745 ,774 .781 ,8~4 ,836 .891 ,914 .964 ,992 ,1051 , 1057,1061 .1080,1284.1292 ,1324,1340.1545 ,1669.1710 - --____
-Faithful Servant: 698 . 1062 -Fallen Woman: 4'1.63.70.85.127 ,130,132,134,139.143 ,171 . 181 , 194,211 ,230.288
,302.330,350,356.406,413.419,424,434,789,791.879.1046.1077 ,1105 ,1271 ,1276,1297 ,1309,1366
-Fashion Plate: 152 ,212,276 ,353 ,485 , 1129,1133 ,1307 , 1328 . 1582 -Foreign Exotic: 1340 -Forsaken Woman: 47 ,70 ,141 ,1276 -Frigid Woman: 35 ,309 ,424 ..435 ,506 ,675 -Frontier Woman: 648.769.1297 &nulobs Woman: 1537 -Girl-Next-Door: 656,1113 ,1136,1313 -Gold Digger: 543
L
7 '
-Gossip: 409,1328 ,1414,1582 d
- -GrearGix@ss: 739.169 - -
-Happy Housewife: 588 ,648,652,656,684,864,1091 .1107,1114,1116,1125 ,112fF.1129 ,1137,1138 ,1392
-Hysteric: 157 ,183 ,231 ,435 ,636.675 ,1271 ,1564 -Idealized Love Object: 31 , 46 ,55 ,60 ,66 ,74 ,80 .91 ,96 ,152 ,271 ,282 ,310 ,334 ,353 ,
361 ,375,414,445 ,506.512.567 ,612 ,712,823 ,836 ,916.926.963 ,993,1177. 1270,1297 ,1308 ,1365 ,1700,1710
-Immoral Working-class Woman: 302 ,1113.1643.1700 fi -Indian Princess/Queen: 1340 -1nteliecrual Inferior: 8.30.63.65 .76.127 .130.134.137,~4i ,149.154.161.188 ,195.
199,256.276.353 ,356.361 ,377 ,379,447,485.521 ,532,543 ,628 ,692,776,831 ,864,926,930.1129,1270,1292,1328.1388,1392.1435,1607
-Invalid: 183 ,248 ,276,334 -Irrational Woman: 18,34,137,157.296,361,377,760.1118,1392 -Jealous Woman: 1118,1351 ,1368
L -Lesbian as Freak: 519,602,707,776,879,1496,1608 ,1649,1712 -Lesbian as Pseudo-Male: 602 , ,886 ,1139 ,1496 -Lesbian as Woman in Need of a Man: 214,572 -Liberated Woman: 352,652,671 ,1116,1136,1145 0 . -Madonna: 30.41 ,46.49,112.232,240,325.341,361,495,565,791,854,894.1184,
1283.1552 -Madwoman: 233,254,270,636,712,760,801,1295,1368 -Martyr: 1313 ,1640 -Mediator: 41 ,1044,1537 -Moral Custodian: 6,41,76,175,1770,201 , 224 ,225 ,Z7 .253 .258 ,282 ,29S ,296 ,3O4,
379,387 ,402,419,424,437 ,438,440,485 ,495.502 ,545 ,565 ,587,663 ,711.739 ,769,799,851 ,926,935,938,1_044', 1184,1276,1278.1313,1328.1607,1710
-Moral Inferior: 8 .13.51 .63,130,132.~54,161,166.356,424,543,1046,1271,1366, 1582
-Muse: 91 ,132 ,580,636,760 ,836 ,1605 L
-Narcissist: 30,127,134, 152,208.212,213.1118,1226,1307 -Wive Exotic: 570.799 ,1062 ,1278 ,1316 ,1323 ,1431 ,1483 -Object: 97,211 ,245.628,827,1316.1330.1604 -Old Maid: 157,232,259,296.409,414,422.428,464,612,d29,675.693.1337,1350, .
1385,1710 -Other: 1 ,47,70.91.166.180,245 ,254,270,288 ,375 ,435 ,506,565 ,567,580,621,
745.827.887,1057,1173,1297,1339,13%, 1408,1420,1564,1579,1661,1710 -Parasite: 21 ,914,1118 -Schemer: 1132 -Schoolmarm: 769 ,1492
' -Self-Hating Black Woman: 923 -Sex Object: 4.188,208,259,310,356,521.532,543.560,565 ,611 ,612,628,656.671.
681 ,692.789,799,894,926,930,%3.964,1026,1037.1057.1129,1163,1350, 1392 ,1435 ,1708 ,1710
-Sexually Devouring Woman: 8,48 ,56 ,72 ,78 ,79 ,127 ,140 ,141 ,171 ,214 ,250 ,291 ,462 ,567,617 ,656,663 ,678,681 ,781 ; 787,854,1051 ,1303.1350.1366,1700,1710
-Shrew: 14 ,35 ,46 ,212 ,259 ,295 .29 i : . 533,1037,1328,1329,1337,1350,1351,1582, 1700
-Southem Belle: 274,387 ,849.935 ,1297 ,1710 : -Squaw: 1340,1431,1483 -Submissive Wife: 24,2~,33,46,51,58,60,76.90,113,146,149,154~, 188,218,225.
233 ,253 ,397,402,410,434,440,487 ,491 ,533,598 ,611 ,663 ,692,829,956,1026
. $ - ,1118,1129,1133,1138,1160 , l283.1284.1292,1329,1435,1467 ,1595 ,1669
[email protected];582.6% - - -
- - -- - - - - - -
-Superwoman: 351 ,652,894,1129,1145 ,1297 ,1548 -~emptress: 4 ,23 . 3 . 3 1 ,#, 49. S4.72.73 .78 ,90.101,127., 132.297 ,379 ,386,471 ,
506.515,533,611,l74.~046,1105,1270.1283,1316.1328.1545,1595 ,1669.1710 -Terrible Mother: 35,112 ,209,211 ,341,343,379,462 ,623 ,625 ,656 ,678 ,601 ,749,781
,834,854,872,881 ,1324,1328 ,1351 ,1357 ,1368,1595 ,1701 -Tragic Lesbian: 707 ,879 ,1649 -Tragic Mulatto: 417 .883.897,1062.1164,1683 %
*O -Unclean Woman: 30.55 .56,78.211.214,291,621 .1307,1328,1710 -Vengeful Black w o k ; 923 -Victim: 4,6 ,8 .34 ,70 ,73 .113 ,139 .181 ,194 ,209 .230 ,231 .232 ,254 ,274 ,310 .350 . "
377 ,434,526.617 ,647,684,794,843 ,911 ,926 ,930 ,956 ,965 .974 ,975 ,1043 . .
1069,1079,~112,1173.~357,1365,1368,1435,1640,1708 -- -~ir~in::"4,44,46,47,52,56,97,101 , l l 3 , l 4 3 . l 7 l , l 8 0 . 2 6 3 . B l . 2%.3~6 .424 ,434 . .
@ - - ,440.493,495,565.663.717.745,774,854,1~1,1184.1303.1312,1316.1330.
1357,1368~1669,1700,1710 -Virmous W O ~ : 6 ,8 .52 ,132 .161 .176 ,213 .218 .221 .256 .263 ,310.356.493.870,
914 ,935 ,1105 ,1132,1270 ,1283 ,1284 -Waiting WOman: 113.457 , $70.1069,1l32 ,1365 -Whore: 8.76.97.101 .109.152,211 ,214,545,598.681 ,717,749,963.1061 ,3073.
12%' ,1313, i314,1328,1669.1700,171-0 -Wisewaman/Seer: 14,1330 . -Witch: 35.76.78.101.127.512.712.801 ,813,854.864.1051 ,1077 ,1184,1314.1357 :
1360,1368 ,1377 ,1700.1710 See also: Cult af True WomanhW; Language. Patriarchal - and Sexual stereotyping;
D Misogynist Tracts
B Images of Women. Theory'of: 1 .92.99.157.208 ,218,504,656,698 ,914.1107 ,111O.lf51,1357. - 1377,1407,1458,1478,1505,15~5,1516,1541,1544,, 1548.1549.1552,1563.1572.1574 ,
.1580,1581.1590,1618,1628.1629,1635,1643.1648,1661.1663,1669.1673 ,1679. 1685 ,1692.1695 ,1700,1702,1708,1710
Immigrant Women, Writing by and about: 412 ,527 ,540 ,639 ,686 ,694 ,716 ,755 I
I
Imperialism, Women and: 6,739,861,944,1031 .1187.1232.1240.1263 ,1340,1527 ,1694,1702 See also: Colonidism, Women and
=! Incest: 888 ,1105 ,1595
a
Independence, Female: 6 . 8 $11 ,22 .44 ,54 ,58 ,59 ,68 .88 ,99 ,131 ,142 ,147 ,153 .1.59 . 164 ,165 . 167,172.178,188.190,202.226.228.229,232,233,234,239.242,248,2$6~258.262, 277 ,279,293,295,298 ,309,314,326,327 ,330,338 ,339,346,348 ; 351 ,355 ,357 ,363 .
I 365 ,370.371 ,378 ,380,382 ,402,406,411 ,434,436,438 ,458 ,464,482,486,493 ,502 . 504,510,520,526,535,542,544,558 ,581 .585,587,592.5%,601,618.621 ,622 ,627 , 6 3 4 , 6 3 7 , 6 3 9 , 6 4 3 , 6 5 1 , 6 5 2 . 6 6 1 . 6 6 2 . 6 6 6 , 6 6 7 , 6 7 5 . 7 0 0 . 7 1 1 . 7 1 2 . 7 1 7 , 7 2 1 . ~ 2 2 . 7 2 5 , +
- 7 3 3 , 7 3 8 , 7 4 0 , 7 5 0 , 7 5 4 , 7 5 6 , 7 6 7 , 7 8 4 , 7 8 5 , 7 8 5 , 7 % . 811 ,821 .836,846.849,856.859, 873 ,880.887,890,906,913 ,918 ,941 .966,%9,970.974,999,1006.1023 .1028.1045 , 1054.1055,1084,1109,1113,1123,1139.1175,1183.1214.1221.1232.1238.1246.1261 ,1262,1266,1266,1274,1282,1285,1287 ,1290,12%, 1300.1314,1359,1455 ,1582. 1650.1671 ,1688 See also: Money, Women an& Self-realization
441 a"
-Linearity: 814 ,1216,1558 ,1697 - - - -
. - -ty: 14UT. 1426 , , -phmrical Tradition: 125 ,271 .I387 ,1388 ,1389 .13% ,1528 ,1673
. -and Sexual Stenotyping: 245 ,1118 ,1371 ,1383 ,1385 ,1386 .1392 ,1394 .I397 . f398 . la_, '14W.1409,1411.1412.1413,1414 ; 1416.1421 ,1423.1426,1429.1435,14rt9.1519 .1=, 1599
-Terms of Skxual Abuse: 1426 see also: Phallogoc~trism
Language, Women's Use of -Cn#hng a New Disc~use:-172 : 270.571 ,624,525,653 ,658 ,659,713 ,736,808 ,896,899
,u917,927,936,957 ,97!2998699?%. 19,1157.1159.1~69,1173.1180,1216.1324 .
i 1325,1374.1380.1387.1494,1534,1535.1553.1556, X558.1560.1562,1579,1599 ,1614.1616,1618,1622.1626,1644,1647,1656,1657.1658,1661 ,1681 . 1686. 1694 ,1697
. - -Enccxiing: 615,713,803 ,843 ,951 ,968 ,997 ,1362 , 1534 -IntcrteWty: I009 -In~ti~e: 1381 ,1397 ,1402 @
- b y : 128.150.432,472,644.703,748,848,907 ,921 , 9 5 5 ,975,997 ,1009.1324 -1'Matre Feminine: 3%. 571 ,653 ,927 .979,1169.1216.1324,1535 , 1553,1557 ,1558,
1559,1562,1564,1530.1591,1614,1622.1639.1647,1651 . 1656.1661 . 1674. 1684 i686.1694
-Namiag: 185 ,652 ,739 ,818 ,917 ,927 ,957 ,958 ,1169 . 1193 .1208 ,1558 ,1681 . 1685 , - 1697
-Obscenity: 551 ,1407 I P .
-Parody: 848 . &. 1305 .1319.1560.1635 ,1642 ,
-Punning: 615 ,644,968 ,1319 -Reclaiming: 713,739.917 .958.972,980.1169,1209.1377 . 1558.1576 -Sutjactive Voice: 66.374 ,516,624,736.751 ,936,945 ,954,1264 -Syntactical Experimentatjon: 644,670 ,899,936 ,979,1159 '. 1169 . 1173 , 1180 . 1557 . 1618 .
1697 See also: Conversational Interaction, Male/Female; Fernaie/Feminist Aesthetic; Imagery ''
and Motifs in Women's Writing; Speech Patterns, Female vs. Male; Style, Female vs. i
Male
Latin-Amkrican Literature. Women and: 546.726.948 , 1105 , 1184 , 1187
Lesbian Feminist Literary Criticism. Theory of: 936,1540,1608,1633, I688 , 1689.1711 . 1712 0
k s b n Pulp Fiction: ?hx Popular Culture - Lesbian Pulps
k y s ) -ip Academia: 1443 . 1444 ,1445 .14W . j520 . 1533.. 1668 -Comirig Out: 958,1074,1192.1235 , 1245,1358,1443 . 1444 . 1473 , 1490.1520.1533,1649
,1705 -1dcatity: 602.653.657 .826.8%,855,879 5.995 . 1115 , 1453.1649.1711 . 1712 -hvisibiiity of: 655 ,793 ,886,1192,1443 ,1444,1445 ,1453 ,1567 ,1609,lToS ,1712 -Literary ~Gdition: 7M,879,886,949,1013.1019.1074.1108.1218.1443,1444,1453,
- ' 1520.1555.1567.1569,1630.1646~ 1649.1668.1688.1689,1711 ,1712 -Lot+$ Poca).: 19,20,153,497.949.952.957 .%2,983,lOOS ,1011 ,1013 ,1019.1193 ,
' 1203,1443,1444 ,1560 -Positive Lmnga oT: 601 ,625 ,707 ,879 ,886 ,927 ,1115 ,1358 ,1539 . 1SdO .I&. 1649
, -Publishing: 1092,1044,1097 ,1098 ,1102 ,1108 ,1115 , 1120.1122 ,1135 . 1141 ,1152 ,1443
,1530,1565 ,1609,1619 -R&ti- 2Q, 269,271 ,497 ,537 &l-,-602,63-&W-&~%88&886+!927, , ,-
958,968,1074,1175,1179,1233,1256,1443,1444,1558,1567 -Sexuality: 19.20.25.547.573.590,615.707,713,773,850.871.885,886 ;927,968,
1WO.1123 ,1567 ,1614 ,1712 -Subculture: 537.707 ,713 ,949,1135 ,1234,1500,1510.1540.1565,1567 ,'1630,1649,
rn d 1712 -Writers, Conditions of: 602 ,850.885 ,949,983,1011 ,1013 ,1019.1092,1179,1192,1203 ,
1539.1540 ,1630 O
L-Wririrs, Silences ol: 713.773 .9577983,1179.1192.1208 .1539,154040'. 1705,1712 5ee @: Communities of Women; Friendships. Female; Teaching - Lesbian Writing -
Lesbianism _ - -Definitions of: 12.19.269-, 497,601 ,844,879,886, loll ,1457,14%,1510,1569,1578,
1635 -Ended: 95.245 ,30$,615,713,879,885 ,886,962. %8.1457 ,1629,1712 -Previously Unrecognized: 455 ,456.497 ,655 ,983 ,984 ,1011 . 1192 ,1459 ,1496.1510.1712 -and Punishment as Narrative Strategy: 537 ,547 ,601 ,886 , 1567
See also: Comrpunities of Women; Friendships. Female
Le,tters: See Forms. Noa-Canonical - Letters
Linearity: See Language, Patriarchal - linearity ,
U t e q Worn Women and: 202,220,1234 U
Literaq Tradition -Women's: 42.120.125,146,1!51 .174,178,204,226.229.293.317,333.337,351,352.
m 410.414,442,454,456.465',477,481,482,499,500,~8,534,604,664,701,707 . . ,730,732.74f. 756 ,761 ,765,823,833,835 ,886.903 ,921 ,949,972,978 ,987,
U 1019,1058,1059,1074, :1108.1160,1171 ,1183.1186.1193.1195,1209.1218.1224 - , 1239,1242,1259~. 1264.1267,1281,1289.1293,1298.1299.1306.1309.1317. 1320,1324,132,6,1344,1359.1361.1443,1444,1453.1454.1478.1493,1520,1523 ,1536.1543,1551.1565.1566,1567.1568,1569.1572,1573.1583,1590,1593. 01594,15%. lhO4,1612.1619,1629,1630.1631.1636,1637.1646.1649.1659.1661 .1666,1667,1668,1685.1686.1687.1688,1689,1692,1707.1711 ,1712 '
-Women's Absence from: 77 ,332 ,399 ,452,474,521 ,640,646,768 ,179 ,793 ,863 ,900, 950,957,971 ,996.998.1000,1031.1033,1063,1073,1082.1160,1201,1224,1305 .1321,1435,1454,1475.1477,1478.1485.1523,1545,1549.1550.1554.1563, 1570.1572.1577 ; 1583.1593.15%. 1598,1606.1611, j612.1621 ,1630.1633.1636- ,1646,1655'. 1660,1688,1689,1690,1692,16%. 1701,1706,1707
LovePotuy,Wmen'ri:7.~7,19.20.JO.66,71,80.82,84,136.153,481,497,~9,%2,957,962 !
,983,1000,1001 ,1008.1011.1015.1019.1162,1193,1443,1444,~560
Love. Rdmantic: 35_, 82.89.93.102.144,146.153 , i69, 170,176,177 ,178.188.190,191,194, 225,235 .,280,283 ,303 ,370,414,428 ,441 ,445,458 ,474,486,493 ,506,529,569,675,
- -Dtstntctive Power of: 47 ,67 ,97 ,98 ,156 ,167 ,172,181 ,192 ,197,. 262 ,338 ,355 ,359, 398.411 ,430.444.511 , %7 ,585 .595.608.650,662.669,672.673,728 ,734,752 ,789,792 ,794 ,806.817 ,836,856,871 ,881 ,918 ,960.966.991 ,1005 ,1021 ,1036, lO45.ll82,l275.l29O, 1300,1360,1560
See also: Adultery; Courtly Love; Marriage; Popular Culture - Modem Romances; l & b F m z t e Rehdo-p
Madness, Women and: 110,147 ,168 ,270,284,340,344,385 ,388 ,393 ,399,446.507 530.582 , 584,589,594.607 ,608,636,650.668 ,704,712 ,741 ,792.820.847 ,882 ,916,925 ,931 . 967 .987,1029.1036,1065 ; 1069.1083.1172.1173 ,1216,1247 ,1295 ,1287,1295,1368 , 1566,1596,1631 ,1667 See also: Anger. Female; lmages of Women - Hysteric; Images of Women - Madwoman; * Violence, Female
Magazines: See Popular Culture - Magazines
Male Bonding: 70,73,91 ,227 ,572 ,598,623 ,827 ,829,860,1109.1274 , 1297 , 1388 See also: Homosexuality, Male; Masculinity
Male Characters in'wornen's Writing: 50'. 136,168,187 ,190,191 ,198 ,224,225 ,266,279 ,303 ,318 . 323 .327.350,360.370.376.392,431.433 ,493,517 ,523 ,558 ,567 ,570,606,614 ,630, 637 ,694,735,756,779,791 ,806,857 ,858.. 871 ,901 ,911 ,942,944,965 ,974.999 ,1002 . 1021,1042,1055,1195.1216,1226,1~33 ,1236.1282,1354,1499,1519.1631 . 1654.1667
~ ide l~erna le Relatigaships: 91 , % ,105,f26.173,174.211,241 ,247 ,279,307,328 ,337,338,357 7 382.483.520.525 ,539,. 554,558,565 ,570,579,580,596,597 ,600,618,630 637 ,643 , 2
6 6 1 . 6 7 0 . 6 7 4 . 6 8 2 . 6 8 7 . 6 9 3 . 7 0 2 . 7 0 9 . 7 1 2 . 7 ~ 6 . 7 1 9 . 7 2 5 . 7 2 8 . 7 ~ . 7 3 5 , 7 6 l ~ 8 1 4 . 817 ,821 ,828,856,866,869,871 ,883 ,904,922,925 ,929,939.95O. 960.970 : 985 ,989. 991 ,1006,lOO8 ,1015,1017 .1033,1042.1043,1055 ,1062.1065.1072 ,1076, '1156, '1164, 1176,1178.1221.1241 .1270.1312.1366.1499.1548,1575 , 1680.1699 See also: Love, Romantic; Marriage
Maori Women, Writing by and about: 1174
Marriage: 43.58.68 ,188 ,203 ,251 ,253 ,286,299,656,678,728 ,735 ,796,806,866,083 ,967 , . 1302 ,1330,1360 -Arranged: 40,81 ,167 ,170.176.194.256.308.1322 \
-and Conflict with Career: 262,283 ,308,312,314,652 ,706 ,798 , 1076.1113 , 1266 -and Conflict with Creativity: 53 ,155 ,228 ,300,317,348 ,482 ,550 ,677 ,953 ,956 ; 1000,
1012 ,1245 -and Courtship: 6.42 ,143 ,190 ,212 ,219,220,247 ,249.406 ,428 ,666.1260 , 1286.1311 ,
1348 -as Economic Necessity: 22.28.38.62,142,146.163.170.176,187.227.237,273.275,
287,344,357,365.388,435.511,554.578.613.650.714,1049.1257,1285.1289. 1310,1311 ,1582
-as Entrapment 42 : 48 .62 ,144 ,235 ,244 ,355 ,358 ,391 ,411 ,492 ,501 ,502 ,541 ,548 . 558.559. '32.633 ,648.666.706.748 ,887 ,898,1028 , 1049.1112,1259,1268, 1274.1288 ,1290,130,1310 ,1583
-and Equality/~utuality~'~3.65.99.107.108.111 ,122'. 123 ,146,149,167 ,190,191 ,194 ,216,235 ,242,284,330,357 ,360,364,376,388 ,398.44O.482.489.5O2.56~. 829.855, $59.861 ,1084.1294,1311.1322.1582
-and Male Authority: 10.26.28 ,29,34,39,49,51 ,61 .81 .94,98 ,100.10S , 120.123 , 132,138.146,148,149,154,176,191,202.225,237 ,279,303,337,363 ,368,391 ,406.410,432,434,435.527,648.718,825,1051.1054.1301 . 1310,1311 , 1329, 1582
-and Marnage k w : 142,264,368,421 ;592,825,1310,1311 ,1582
-as Palitical Alliance: _6_&,B and @olygamy: 718 ,1240
/>and Wanan's Fulfilment: 38 .40.98.111 ,120.167 ,187 .212,216.219,225,235,242 . ' 262,287,298,309,312,313,314,317,324,335,342,355,392,486,41~,421446 - ,496 ; 511 ,527 ,554,632,633 ,637 ,650,652,673 ,711 ,718 ,798 ,829,861 ,870,
cr 892,1028,1128,1134,1285,1290,1301,1~01 See also: Adultery; Divorce; Family, Women and; Love. Romantic;.Motherhood; Malefiemale Relationships; Sexuality. Female
Marxist Criticism: See Critical Schools, Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism - Marxist Critidsm
Marxist-Feminist Literary Criticism, Theory of: 1254,1434,1555 ,1561 ,15%, 1597 ,1601 ,1628 ,1662,
Masculinity: 18.92.97.105,110,136,175,191 ,1%,198,214,247,253,254,266,272,292,296, 308 ,310,402.433,460,523.560,567 ,568,575,600,606,614,623,630.663.681,694. 694,711 ,727,746,757,781 ,791 ,799,828,836,848 ,853.857 ,860,865,867 ,880,902 . %9.974,1037.1055.1133.1171,1176 ,'1269.1278,1288. ~394,1407,1508,1545,1548, 1589,1621 ,1673 -as Destructive Force: 102 ,530,818 ,1216 -and Heroism: 15 .25 .73 ,985 , 1297 7
-and Honour. 2 2.1 -23 ,81,102 ,486 -and Male Rivalry: 81 ,102 -and Mititarism: 2 . 5 .15 .23 .25 -as Mysterious to Women: 778 ,870 -as W l y Destntctive Force: 107 ,769
3 - -and Violence: 87 ,637 ,6% See also: Male Bonding; Malc Characters in Women's Writing; Power, Male; Sex Roles; Sexuality, Male
Masochism, Female: 51.337,392.501,602,613.661 .669.792.889.1142.1260.1640 See also: Madness, Women and; Renunciation; Self-abnegation; Selfsacriflce .
1
Me~stmtion: 56.291 ,653 ,745,823,845,932,1177 ,1346,1383 ,1421 ; %e also: Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Blood; Images of Women - Unclean
Woman
Me$& Literature. Women and: 135 . 155 . 1336,1366
MilitariSm. Women and: 2.5 $6 .57 .59.109,115 . l l 6 , 2 2 l . 322,458 ,503 ,561 ,562,668 ,889,995 , 1109.1114,1178,1467 See also: National Liberation, Women and; Pacifism. Women and
Miscegenation: 297,417 ,565,743,935 .1033.1035.1062.1078'. 1176,1278 !ke also: Racism; Slavery
-* P Misogynist Tracts: 21 ,40.48.63 ,78,211.212,214,1307 ,1328
Modem Romances: See Popular Culture - Modem Romances '
Money. Women and: 38 .39,142 ,163,164,165 ,189;. 1%. 203,226,233 ,268,273 ,275,294,307 . 326.335 ,357 ,365 ,382 ,388 ,407,408 ,464,494,543,547 ,551 ,568,578,592 ,613,622. 627 ,683.717,764.772.780.789,825,849.1025.1045.1054.1117.1138.1163,1232,
6
1257 ,1265 ,1287 ,1314,1328 ,1353 ,1366 - See also: Class position. women's; Poverty. Women and; work. women and; Writers. Women -
Conditions of
MotherlDaughter Relationships: 22.26.103 ,159,172 ,274,317 ,328 ,343 ,378 ,384,394,404 ,413 . 446 ,508 ; 509,523,525,527 ,536.538 ,542 ,549,555 ,563 ,583 ,620.625 ,627 ,631 ,634: 635 ,639,650,651 ,652,660,684,698,703 ,721 ,725 : 735 ,740,744,755 ; 807 ,834.838 . 847,881 .883,884,888,895,8%.903.906'. 912,916.932.973.975.982,1005.1008. 1022,1030,1034.1035,1058.1169,1173,1189,1194.1198.1199.1204,1208.1250.1262 ,1286,1331 ,1335 ,1360,1493 ,1558 ,1560 ,1579,15131 ,1587 ,1598 ,1615 ,1618 '. 1654, 1672.1683 ,1686,1698,1707 ,1709
~ o t h e r / ~ o q r elation ships: 9 ,26 ,157 ,637 ,678 I
Motherhood: 45 ,183,224.228 ,238 ,241,285,289,302 .,3l'4,3 1 ,341 ,343 ,376,386,400,403. 404.453 ,467 ,471 ,485,486,487 ,516,559,618 ,626 f631: 632 ,654,677 ,702 ,706,739 . 744.807 ,822,823 , 829 .835 .838 .878 .905 .932 ,933 .988.1004,1012.1016.1045.1055 . 1062,1096,1110.1151,1159,1164,1170,1171..1181 ,1195.12b9.1216.1239.1242.1247 ,1279,1291 ,1301 ,.1302.1313.1318 ,1319,1330,1335 ,1342,1421 ,1542,1576,1606.
6
1649 ,1665 ,1699.1704 -Women's Ambivalence toivard: 246.325.348 ,4\8.555 ,617 ,641 ,649,652,690,775,782 .
806,823 ,887 ,952,956,1277,1315.1353 See also: Fa'mily, Women and; Marriage; Pregnancy/Childbirth
/
Mysticism, Women and:" 38 .64,516.564,590: 607 ,771 ,808,826,973,1346,1640 See also: Religion, Women and; Spirituality. Women and "
Mythological Figures in Women's, Writing -Amatemu: 899 -Antigone: 762.1259 -Aphrodite: 899 -Artemis: 899.980 -Changing Woman: 1010 -Chicomecoatl (Seven Snakes): 1336 -Christ: 899 -Cihuacoatl (Serpent Woman): 899 . 1336 qirce: 991 ,1156,1626 -Coatlicue (Serpent Skirt): 1336 -Corn Goddess: 1010 ,1346 . 4- -d'Soncqua: 837 -Deborah: 401 -&meter: 342 ,651 ,690,725 , 1318 ,1698 -Dido:. 899 -pionysus: 899 - -Eristikos: 894 n
-Eurydice: 1670 -Eve: 401 ,980 ,1304 -Grandmother Spider: 1010 -Great Goddess: 64,459,625 ,725 ,760 ,762 ,763,804 ,807 ,838 ,932 ,973 ,1007 ,1150,
1604 -Helen: 7 ,971 , 9 2 -Isis: 980 -Kore: 342,651 ,1318 ,1698 ~- '
I B "B-
1
I
447 I
-
-La Malinche: 1702 -
7Lilith: 9x0 -Lot's Wife: 912 -Mary Magdalene: 37 ,760 ,980 -Medusa: 1670 . -0dysseus: 991 ,1626 -Oedipus: 1318 x?';;*< t 7 -Phoenix: 8 -Salorne: 81305 -Sphinx: 1318 -Sybil: 991 -Tonpntzin (On Mother): 1336 ,1702 -vashti: 401 -Virgin Mary: 1552 -Virgin of Guadalupe: 1336 ,1702
See also: Imagery and Motifs in Women's ~ h t i n g ; Fairy Tale lmagery in Women's Writing; Re-vision - of Myth; Revision - of Stereotypes
Naming: See Language, Women's Use of - Naming
Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing -Absent Mother: 285 ,364,384,493 ,722 ,761 ,1262 ,1277 ,1286 - -Circularity: 584,615 ,660,901 ,917 .936,940,980,1041,1618 ,1625 -Composite Protagonist: 589 -Doubling: 292,294,374,375,461 ,594,717 ,761 ,931 ,1281,1282 -Educating Hero: 323 ,376,637 I I
-Heroine's Death as Closure: 174,329.350.862 ,1260 , 1544.1546 , 1616 -Heroine's Marriage as Closure: 243 ,255 ,283 ,294,312 ,329,364,383 ,407 ,675,1195 ,
1268 ,1544,1546.1659,1671 -Maiming Hero: 323 ,350,360,398 ,406,461 ,500.1282 -Male Narrator: 323 ,567 ,657 ,836 -Multiple Heroines: 709.1618 -Punishing Heroine: 230.237 ,265 ,323 ,419,596,785 ,790.862.1142.1260.1546 . -Stream-of-Consdousness: 670.901 ,1599 -Subtext: 1 ~ 4 , 1 8 7 , 2 7 3 , 3 1 1 , 3 6 4 , 3 7 5 , 3 % , 431,620,907,1264,1279, i618.1659 -Two Suitors'Convention: 349,697 ,817 ,1596 ,1629,1631
See also: Forms. Innovative, in Women's Wri'ting; Imagery and Motifs in Women's - < Writing; Language, ~cjmen's Use of; Realism, Theory of; Lesbianism - and ~unishmckt
as Narrative Strategy Q' . National Liberation. Women and: 718 ,869 ,948; 1043 ,1166,1169 ,1181 ,1187 ,1240 ,1494
S6e also: Political Activism. Women aad .u *
.~a ture : Women and: 18 ,78 .94,103 ,126,136,175 ,306.342,478,480,516,530,535 ,549,555, :/ 564,640,758,781 ,804,812 1821 ,836,845 ,893,943 .944,964,1010.102Q, 1162,1171 ,
1250.1269.1291,1304.1318.1320.133~, 1346,1545.1710 See also: Imagery and Motifs in Women's?Vriting - Nature
New Woman, The: 244,261 ,286,304,308,309,330,346,358,425.492.502,535 ,581,627,675,
x-
4
880,902,1045,1046,1054,1083,1300,1313 ,1543 See also: Cult offrue W o i W i h ~ Wages of Women
New Zealand Literature, Women and: 555 ,717 ,747 ,768 ,829 ,943 ,1231 ,1274 ,1652
~ i r t h American Indian Religion, Women and: See Religion. Women and - Nonh American Indian - . North American Indian Women, Writing by and about: 944,1010,1162,1340,1346,1431 ,1471 ,1483 ,
1610 P " ,"
Objectivity. Myth of: 1.971,1144.1364.1389.1409.1410.1426.1545.157i: 1573 ,1577.16 .1619 ,1624 ,1632 ,1636 ,1660,1696
.-' obscenity: See language, Patriarchal - Obscenity
Oral Tradition. Women and: 7 .82 ,466,660 ,702 ,719,944 . 1162 .124{ 1 3 0 6 1325 ,1336 . 1339 , 1351.1352,1354.1355.1367,1383.1418,1466,1488.1493,151Y, 1538.1655.1Q70 -Bawdiness: 1341 -Conversation: 736,1349,1363 ,1369,1642,1657 O
-Gossip: 1343 ,1347 ,1369.1642 -Oratory: 1369 -Song: 1331,1335,1337,1338.1342,1344.1345,,1346.134$, 1353 .1356 .1359 .1361 ,1362
.1364,1369.1*485 &-="
-Storytelling: 1041 ,1332,1349,1363 ,1364.1366.1369 ,1370,1513 ,1514 See also: Folklore; Fonns. Non-Canonical
Oratory, Women's:, See Oral Tradition, Women and - Oratory - Q
Pacifism, Women and: 561 ,568 ,695 ,729,166,1056 , See also: Militarism, Women and; ~olitical Activism. Women and
Palestinian Litbature, Women and: 1232
Palimpsest: See Narrative Strategies in women's Writing - Subtext
Pardy, W~mr-~:'s: See Language. Women's Use of - Parody
Passivity, Female: 6 , 2 8 , 4 3 , 5 0 . 6 0 , 8 5 . 9 7 , 2 0 9 , 3 0 6 . 3 3 4 . 3 3 5 . 3 3 6 , 3 5 5 . 3 6 0 . 3 6 6 . 3 7 4 , 3 8 3 , 3 9 2 , . 429,440,457 ,471 ,472.507,516,519,543.563.565,574,634,647 ,662 ,680.715.752, 718,794,806'. 833,841,E(52,870.907,954,956.966.969,1001 .1017.1105,1142.1257. 1279.1B011338 ,130,1365 ,1400.1421 ,1450,1563 .1580.1619,1671 See also: Masochism, ~ e d e ; Power, Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Self-abnegation; Selfsacrifice
Pedagogy, Feminist: See Feminist Pedagogy
Personae in Women's Poetry: 12 ,19 ,20 ,50 .66 ,134,156,474,481 ,954,962 ,965 ,966 ,982 ,997 . 1005 ,1007 ,1020,1576.1577 , 1624
'
P ~ c C r i t i u s m : 4 . 1 7 , 4 5 . 8 9 . 9 3 . 1 5 0 . 1 7 9 . 2 2 2 , 2 2 6 . 3 1 0 , 3 3 7 ~ 3 7 2 , 3 9 0 . ~ 1 6 , 4 2 3 , 4 6 8 . 4 7 7 , 7 8 0 . 788.793.796,840.866,900.971,992.1197,1251 .1276,1305,1364,1475,1536.1545. 1570 ,1593 ,1607 ,1636 ,1646 ,1650 ,1661 ,1678
8 '%
Phallogocentrism: 1173 ,1558 ,1559,1562 ,1563 ,1564 ,1622 ,1638 ,1639 ,1651 ,1674 See a h a Language, Patriarchal
Physical Appezrance: 12.16.34.74.78 -79.123 ,134,152 ,154,200,272,337 ,381 ,406,464,502, 525,544,553.578,584,613,654,057,682,693,739,782,787 ,841,852,868,882,904,
1 915,916,925,993.1001,1091.1116,1117,1128,1130,1133,1137,1163,1289,1314, 1523 ,1531 .1549.1560,1604 See also: Images of Women
Pluralism in Feminist Critical Theory: 1576 ,1663 ,1691
Political ~hivism, Women and: 92,160,164,221 ,223,226,262,332,346,360,383 ,389,401 ,437 . 448,466.467,478,526.559,561,569.579.592,603,606,607,609,610,641,675.682, 695.718 ,728,730,753 ,754,762,764,765,808 ,820,834,835 ,842,875,914,935 ,939, . 948.950,952.959,%9.995,1031,1036.1047.1050,1070,1081,1103.1106,1119,1126, 1129.1131 .1150.1158,1167,1178,1185,1186.1187.1188,1189,1200,1205,1218,1224 ,1227 ,1235.1237.1240,1241.1254,1255.1268,1290,1306.1319.1356.1462,1465, 14&6,1489.1494.1497.1498.1505.1531,1555.1568,1581,1592,1595,1602,1603.1610 ,1623 .1642,1644.1646,1654.1706,1707 See also: Feminism, Pre-Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; Feminism, Twentieth Century - Influence on Women's Writing; National Liberation, Women and; ti
Sdcialisrn, Women and
Popular Culture -Comics: 1091.1123.1130.1133 ,1139 -Detective Fiction: 519 ,524,528 ,595 ,598 ,611 ,616 ,629 ,667 ,687 ,688 ,710 ,756,859 ,
913 ,1282 -Dime Novels: 1282 f -Fotonovelas: 1105 -Graffiti: 1333.1358 -Lesbian Pulps: 537 ,707 ,1567 -Magazines: 212,492,493,494,495,601 ,652,656,914,1087 ,1089,1091 ,1096,1107.
1109,1110,1112.1113,1114,1116,1117,1124,1125,1127.1128.1129,1134,1137 .1138.1145.1151,1312.1360,1411
-Madern R o d c e s : 529,687,714,778,805,839.870,892,1257,1360,1568,1671 -Soap Operas: 1132 -gs: 458 ,958 ,1313 ,1485 -True Confessions: 1142 -Westerns: 587 ,663.769.781 ,799,1139,1297
See also: Advice Literature; Gothic, Female; Sensation Fiction; Sentimental Fiction; 7 Speculative Fiction
9 Pornography: 687.867,870.1105,1123,1168.1603.1635
Portuguese Literature. Women and: 1166
post-hcturalist Criticism: See Critical Schools. Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism - Structuralismhst-Structuralism
Poverty, Women and: 155.203,229,302,360.368.512,527,575.622,627.634,639,648.677,691 ,755,769.785.835,906.938,1099.1176,1262,1266.1269.1273,1290.1356
See also: Money. Women and; Work, Women and - - - - - -- - - - --
Power, Female: 6,10,31,34,36,39,47,59,64,75,95,103.107 ,111 ,113 .131.136.140,147 , L154,184,212, 230,264,274,279,323 ,571,419,442,452, $58,459,460,471 ,481 ,535, 543,564,576,590. a 8 ,.640,657 , ,669,680.689.690.694.722 ,725,739,758 ,166,771 , 809,837,857,866,881 ,944,957,959,960,988,999,1096,1017 .1077.1085.1130.1139 1206,1208,1216,1216,1241,1260,1286,1298.101 ,1314,1318,1330.1343.1348 .
i354,1359,1366 .&A. 1579.1619,1638,1650.1654.1659.1670.1708 - -Lack of: 1 . 4 , 6 , 1 7 ,2k. 28 .47 .49.50.67 .86.87.97 ,102 ,110,132 ,139 ,141 ,142 ,148
. 150 .165 ,166 ,169 ,193 ,203 .236 .237 ,243 .247 ,294,295 ,336,340,365,373, 391 ,405,406,408.457 ,472,476.491 ,507 ,531 .544.546,547,609,613.620,651 .712,7%,805,810,824,843.853.862.892.893,928.939.1028.1037 ,1043,1099 . ,1183 ,1331 ,1384,1397 ,1399,1422 ,1489 ,1544 ,1589
-MaleFearof: 1 , 9 . 2 6 ; 5 2 . 9 1 . 9 5 , 1 0 1 , 1 0 6 . 1 1 2 , 1 1 4 , 2 1 1 . 2 3 1 , 2 3 3 , 2 5 0 . 2 ~ . 2 9 7 . 4 2 4 . 512,612.712,745.781,799,801.872.878,1057 ,U68,1329,1385.1414.1537 . 1545 ,1670
-Women's Ambivalence toward: 134,156 ,228 ,357 ,383 ,437 ,449 ,451 ,469 ,477 ,980 ,1080 ,1259.1275 ,1595 a,
See also: Class Position, Women's; Independence. Feinale; Money, Women and
Power. Male: 4.28 .49,87 ,88 .104,132.138 ,141 ,148 ,176 ; 184,203 ,227 228 ,229,231 .239. 2 7 3 . 2 7 7 , 2 8 4 . 3 O 6 , 3 l 5 . 3 ~ 8 . 3 2 3 . ~ 4 4 . 3 ~ 7 . 3 6 0 . 4 O ~ . &8.4&3.449.450.460.481. 531,561,562.580.590.614.643 ,671 . 715 ,727 ,729 ,757 .765 .772 .789 .794 ,805 .810 . 811,841 ,853,878.881 ,960.1037,1051.1112.1118,1168.1229.1258.1286.1287.1303. 1333 ,1350.1384.1476,1499,1595,1673,1690.1708 -and the Social Order: 1 . l o , 22.26.67 ,81 .94 ,%. 100 ,108 ,114,137 ,209 ,237 ,805 ,843
,914.111.2 ,1329 ,1537 ,1554,1699 See also: Masculinity
See also: Abortion; Motherhood
Prescriptive Criticism: 518,1214,1434,1541 ,1544 : 1573,1574,1590,1600.1634.~636,1648 . 1679
Prison Writing. Women's: 1271 ,1500
Prostitution: 3.45.230.368.412.465 ,691 ,699.739.846.1049.1176.1653 d
I See also: Images of Women - Black Whore; Images of Women - Whore
Protestant Reformation, Women and: See Religion, Women and - Protestant Reformation " *
Hblic and Private, Separation of: 1 ,2 ,15 ,22 .25 .27 ,67 .83.111 ,120,132,166,168 ,184,191 ,219 - ,224,225,227 ,248 ,260,268 ,315 ,343 ,345,387 ,419,439,529,607 ,627 ,714,755 ,765 .
874,1036,1037.1057.1125.1142 ;1268.1283.1339.1347,1369,1457.1493.1589,1519. 1627 ,1653 ,1673 ,1701 ,1703
6
Publishing, Women and: 189,219,319,393,418,463,494,805,1063,1089.1093 . 1140.1149,1195. 1213,1220.1223.1326,1432.1443.1500.1554,1583.1649.1667.1671 See also: Feminist Process - in Publishing
Punning, Women's Use of: See Language, Women's Use of - Pumng
Quebecoises. Writing by and about: 624,625 ,645 ,653.. 654,708 ,721 ,786 ,804,906 ,912 ,916,1043 , 1159,116$, 1180.1181,1286,1228,1238,1231.1324.3494
Racism:
C
210.297 ,322,417,513 ,525,532 ,539,545,547,570,575 ,610,618,627 ,678,686,698 , 702,730.735 .743.749,801,849,861,866.874.920,923.950,994,1031,1033 ,1062, 1063.1072,1160,1162,1163,1176,1190.1205,1208,1225,1225,1278.1287,1306,1359 ,1361,1409,1456,1555,1570,1655,1702 -Relation to Sexism: 124,545 ,637 ,1085 ,1235 ,1364,1548 -in Women's Studies: 1183 ,1445 ,1446 , 1503 ,1512 ,1524,1533 ,1646 ,1688 ,1689 ,1704,
1712
Rape: See Violence a&st Women
Rationality. Male: 26,137,168,270.377,560,590,600,604,658.670,712,1225.1270~, 1295 ,1388 ,1673 See a h : lntuitios Female: Language, Patriarchal - Dualism; Language. Patriarchal - Linearity; Masculinity; Thought, Modes of, Female vs. Male
Re-vision-of Critical Tradition: 16.17.48.51 .57,58.67,93,97,99,106.109,162,172,209,210, 254,269,293,315,319,328,329,347 ,352,354,417,423 ,443,452,455 ,468,482 ,561 ,676.705,762,780.7%. 866.897 ,929,943,1063 ,1193 ,1276.1306.1375, 1428,1536,1545,1551 ,1570.1576,1593,15%. 1619.1624,1631,1633,1636,1637 ' ,1641 ,1646 ,1655 ,1663 ,1672 ,3685 ,1686 ,1689,1691
-of Freudian Theory: 636 -of Myth: 9.14.54153,-346,401,535 ,713,729,751 ,763,795 ,804,814,876,899,917 ,
' 957.959, fi0.971.985 ,992,1002,1077 ,1156.1168 ,1169,1209,1251,1304,1318, 1626,1629 ,1672 ,1710
-of Stereotypes: 7 ,29,3A a, 47 ,66 ,76,90,%, 97 , 99 ,109 ,143 ,202 ,216 ,224,231 , 232.236.240.250,253,259,274,302.307 .,316.317.345,356,379,381,409,413 ,414,422,427 ,428,431 ,439.465 ,483 ,488 ,490,517 ,524,546,588,624,625. 646.652,654,659,680.68t4,687 ,691 ,693 ,749,758 . 760 ,774 ,789 .804 ,806 ,834 ,849,861 .882,883,914,920,927 ,937,939,950,955 ,960,972,973,976 ,980, 981,989,994,1007 .1024.1040.1043 ,1044,1062 .1063,1064 ; 1069.1077,1085 , 1116.1123.1138.1139,1164,1165.1177,1181.1215.1270,1295,1324,1431,1483 ,1531 .1537,1542.1580.1608,1633.1695
Reader-Response Criticism: See Critical Schools, Other. Relation to Feminist Criticism - - Reader-Response Criticism
Reader, Woman as: 25 .132.169,306.350,366,379,494,639,684,714,734,778 ,805,839,847 , 870,1105,1125,1132,1142,1360,1408.1478,1571,1583,1586,1587.159$, 1618,1631, 1632,1633 ,1636,1637 ,1671 -
Realism, Theory of: 265 ,270 ,375 ,736,1568 ,1590,1659
Reason vs Passion: 5,18,61,105,127,138.149,150.173.177,182.184,197,199.221,255.353, 398.600,658,686,789.1199,1275,1299,1623,1653,1699 See also: Love. Romantic - Destructive P wer of; Sexuality. Female - Women's Ambivalence toward; Thought, Modes of, Female vs &e
P ./
Reclaiming: See hnguage, Women's Use of - Reclaiming 0
. Regionalism in Women's Writing: 252 ,278 ,287 ,416 ,427 ,467 ,514,535 ,536 ,563 ,599.605 ,665, 852,906,1W8,1201,1229,1253,1263,1269,1341,1442.~447,1466.1655.1701
Religion, Womp and: 1324 -Calvinism:: 264 -Christiantty: 30 :37 -38.45 .47 .49,53 .55 ,57 .61.63 . 64 -65 .76.110. k0.122.123 .
126,130,138.155 ,176,224,294,299,315 ,394,401 ,457 ,478 .48J ,495,565 ,591 w-
,606,645,754,770; 869.932 ,1005 ,1062 ,1072,1238 ,1301 ,1304 ,1324,1328 ,1366 , , .1420,1552,1640,1710
-Classic$ Greek: 6 . 9 .,972 o
-Hind'uism: 1330 -Islam: 739,1501 , -Judaism: 22,379 ,1710 -North American In*: 564,837 ,944 ,1162 ,1346 -Protestant Reformation: 111 ,133 ,1301
Renunciation: 200.255.273,282.289,312,316,334,371 ,427 .434 ,452 .476 .503 ,672 ,1259 .1300 ,1659 See also: Masochism, Female; Self-abnegation; Self-sacrifice
Rhetorical Tradition: See Language, Patriarchal - Rhetorical 73adition .
Rites of Passage: 12 ,18 ,36,433 ,525 ,620.672,6%.703,738 ,744.823 ,837,884,932 ,933 .I022 . 1034.1261.1272,1286,1327.1346.1348,1367.1575.1698 See also: Adol-ce
Rivalry, Female: 4,536,578,626,693,747,777,787,897 , !?06,914,440,951 , 1133,1342,1343. S
1360.1436.1560 w
b See also: Isolation of Women
b .)
Role-Models, Female: l11.131 ,232,238,294,304,317,355,371 ,378,389,517,527,601 ,608. 629 .643 ,650 .652 ,672 ,679 .680 .742 ,817 ,898 ,978 ,984 ,1071 ,1189,1210,1293 , 1320. 1455 ,1467 ,1552.1560,1581.1707 ,1712 See also: Friendships, Female; Mother/Daughter Relationships
Russian Literature, Women and: 288 ,303 ,304,488 ,1013 ,1026,1300
Satire, Women's Use of: 134,193 ,222 ,223 ,287 ,422 ,432 ,484.543 , , @.. 567 ,588 ,669 ,727 ,788 . 848.921,1182.1264.1319.1321,1324 See also: Humour, Women's Use of 4 -
f i
Scandinavian Literature, Women and: 14 ,486 ,487 ,489.491 ,504 ,738 , 1065 , 1547 , 1650
Science Fiction: See Speculative Fiction
Seduction: 4.20 ;47,70,79,85 ,141 ,169,181 ,188 ,194,230,302,310,463.473 ,671 ,1272,1322 See also: Adult~ry; Violence against Women
Self-abnegation: 51 ,86,'131,138,193 ,247 ,294,316,373 ,,398 ,511 ,574.577 ,632 ,673 .811 ,844, 1142 ,1275 ,1296,1352 ,1441 See also: Masochism, Female; Passivity. Female; ~en&ciation
Self-realization: 107 ,182 ,203 ,232 ,235 ,238,246,277,286,384,397 ,426,502,504,522,526,541 ,548.576,5%,gFI,~.65?,W,6~,~,W,?N, . a , 868 ,882 ,928 ,947 ,959 ,9l2 ,973 ,976,989 .990,1006 .- 1575z8:835' 1671 - -
See also: Identity, Female; Independence. Female
Self-sacrifice: 107 , 122,250,251 ,255 ,257 ,273,296.298.304,312,313.323 ,329,347 ,403 ,419, 427 ,429 ,434,435,438 ,464,487,502,503 ,531 ,548 ,550,632,637,643,651 ,709,725. 826.844,852.938,1036.1044.1109,1133,1176,1285.1288.1315,1640,1650 See also: Masochism, Female; Passivity, Female; Renunciation I
Self, Divided: 181 ,282,292,301 ,316,400,402,451 ,460.477 ,507,548 ,582,594,640,693 ,717 , 720,778,795,833,836,837 ,841 ,881 ,893 ,907 ,931 ,969,972 ,1001 ,1029,1035.1078 . 1275,1281,1290,1320.1327,1531,1631,1633 See also: Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Doubles; Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Doubli~g
Sensation Fiction: 273 ,279,280,334,393 ,419 C
See also: Gothic. Female
Sentimental Fiction: [email protected]~. 314.315.328.334.350. 364,387,392,419,420,422,427,493,1105,1328,1619 See also: Domestic Fiction
Separatism and Feminist Literary Criticism: 1070,1206,1217 ,1543 ,1555 ,1596 ,1632 ,1633 ,1634. 1660.1667,1692., 1712
Sex Role: 8.10.24.27,41.67,69,87.92,105.108.111.120.186,234,239.271,282,324,336, 339.349.354.403.448,460.487,514,515.532,~~4,546,553 .'574,627,629.632,634, 657 ,704,711 ,726,735 ,746,757,779,798,803 ,806.810,828.835 ,833,839,841 , 846 , 867,891 ,898,905. W . 913,921.930.1037,1049.1061,1073,1090,1109,1118.1128, 1137.1168,1214,1272,1292,1302.1314,130,, 136011368,1435.1450. 1508,1519,1552 ,1577 ,1586.1671 ,1699 -Rejection of: 5 ,18,68 .80.90.91,113 ,135,136,148 ,154,164,198 ,215 ,246,258,261
,262,272,279,328,331 . 349 .382 ,383 ,389 ,391 .3%. 415,43O. 439,458,465. 472 ,488.490.502 ,530,550,552,569,576,577 ,597 ,600,649,654,667,687 ,700 . .712,750.753.782.807,819.83O.836,849,868,880,902,922,947,959,1028, 1038.1069.1076,108'!, 1130,1172.1175,1182.1288.1329,1338.1418.1580.1654 See also: Cult of True Womanhood; Images of Women; Masculinity
Sexuality. Female: 12.14,19.27,29.31,38.40,45.61,62,65,65.75.79.103,126.148.183 ,, +
169,181.183,192.1%. 222.240.246.259.261,279,280,281.282.307,310,311,328, 338 ,341 ,343 ,354,375 ,381 ,388,393,397 ,411 ,425.426,430,439,440,468.473,481. 485.502.506.525.539.541 .547,551,553.565,585,586,530.596, bb9.615.620,627, 6~.634,649.656.660.662,662,~674,675,693,697,700,706,707;715.716,733,,735, 740.773,778,784,795.803,80r1,806.816,821.824.829.833.850.853,856.871,874, 885 ,886,888 ,305.915 ,927 ,940,950,953 ,968.%9.1001.1007,1CQ9,1010,1020.1022 .1029,1034.1040 1 1043 ,1046.1061 ,1077,1105,1~09,1123.1163 .1164.1169,1176, 1182.1195.1264 : 1265.1267,1304,1341.1357,1360,1361.1407,1558.156~. 1563.1564 ,1567 ,1568 ,1583 ,1583 ,1614,1616 .,I622 ,1635 ,1653 ,1656 ,1659 ,1670,1671 ,1674 , 1681 ,1684,1688 .1699.1700.1712 -and the Double Standard: 21 ,81,93.109,139.140.143.151,171,200.218 ,230.235,
244,267,302,531 ,613.645,790.873,935,1054.1126,1285.1300,1311,1313,
4
1314,1365 ,1421 A , Fear of: &, 11,18,23 -26% Si ,Z Xa, 91 JOlJQLJWW-m71Rn3a3 ,
211,.214 ,250,263 ,288 ,291 ,463 ,533 ,611 ,612.617 ,621 ,678.745.748 ,787 ,872 ,992.1271,1278,1287,~295,1303,1337,1365,1609
-R*resse& 244,267 ,358,511 ,6+5,870,1295-,1364 -L +
-as Superior to Male: 20,. 25 ,573 ,713 ,.. -Women's -- Ambivalence toward: 88 ..123,168 ,183,205 .282 ,285 ,309,340,358 ,359,396.
398,471 ,526,529,555,574,581 ,600,617 ,620,622.650.653 ,717 ,723 ,734,748 ,761 ,822.824.830.845 ,884,887,895 ,896,909,928 ,931 ,933 ,1084,1277 , 1279 See alsa: Adultery; Ime. Romantic; Marriage; MaleIFemale Relationships; Sed~ction
Sexuality. Male: 4.20.55 ~ 1 1 4 . 1 4 9 , l l l . 181 .196.254,261.266.284.291 ,353 ,439,480 h 5 , 506 ,573,681 ,692 ,715,781 ,791 ,804.827 ,860.861 ,867 .96;1.1009,1287 ,1355 ,1407 ,1421 .1564',1681 see also: Masnliinity .
"
Sibling ddlatio~lships: & ,314 ,394.396 ,399 ,888 ,916 . 1330
Single Women: 155 ,188 ,203 ,228 ,229,236,247 ,249 ,253 ,257 ,283 ,287 ,294.300 ,301 ,311 ,314 , .. p 326,330,335 ,368 ,392,406,428.. 464,519.528 ,586,601,688 693 ,754 ,756,784,888 .
918 ,939,1011 ,1274,1282,1300.1322 A385 See also: Images ~f Women - Old Maid; &dependence, Female
l
Slave Narratives: 274 ,702 , 1707 @
/i - Slavery: 206,210 ,*224,252,274,387 ,417,466,570,627 ,660,698,702,772 . 1062,1287 . 1306.
1344.1361 ,1707 ,
-and Abolition: 389 ,467 ; 935 See also: Miscegenation; Racism
Soap Operas: 'See Popular Culture - Soap Operas
Socialism, Women and: 556,561 ,609,610,728 ,732,753,764: 765,766,834,835 ,890,891 ,948 , 1049.1106.1172,1185.1187.1214,1222,1232.1486.1650.1706 See also: National Liberation, Women and; PoIitiml Activism, Women and
Song. Women's: See Oral Tradition, Women and - Song
Songs: See Popular Culture - Songs i
Spanish L i t e k e . Women and: 242 ,803 ,851 ,1044 ,1069 ,1328 ,1343 - ! Speculative Fiction: 521 ,552 ,589,597 ,646,659,. 680.77c779 ,797 ,'808 ,809.819.820 ,864 ,872 .
908 ,926,930,1498 ,1682 See also:'~topias * a
Speech ~&terns, Female vs. Male: ,911 472 ,488 ,726 ,907,943 ,1026 . 1333,1347 ,1349 . k363 ,1367 . \
0 1370.1371.1373,1378.1379.1381', 1386,1397,1398,1399. e. 1401 ,1402. 1407 . 14011 . ,1416,1418 ,-I425 ,1495 ,1657 - S e e k . : ~anv&ational IntenN~n, MdeIFemale; Language. Women's Use of intonation; Sty , Fenqle vs. Male
1
-i+
Spinsteis: !3jx Single Women
Spitituali~, Women &d: 516.812~.'1150.1203 . 1235 u
Srereo'types of Women: See Images of Women d - Sf.ere~trping in Language: he language. Patriarchaf - Sexual Sterotyping
Stoxytelling: See Orat Traditim-WMnen and - Storytelling a
Srream-9fComdousncas: See Narntive Strategies in Woqen'r w h o g - Stream-of-Consciournfis
Suucturaiist Criticism: See Critid wools, Other. Relation to Feminist ~ri'ticish - S W t - S t l u c t u r a l i s m
i- t
Style. Fernaie vs. Male: 66 .8 125 ,472 ,761 .768 ,901 ,954 ,1002 ,1016 ,1142 . 1249 : 1271 . 1333 , 1393.1394.1395.1 & ,1528.1544,1618.1627,1633,1646.1664.1~5. 1697 See also: Conversaticid interaction, elFernale; Female/Feminist Aeslhetic; h p u a g c . Women's Use of; Speech Panerns. Fe % e vs. Male
. 0
Subculture, Female: 12,25,174,220,537,618.662.707,713.755.903 ,949,958,972. -1'101 ,1135. 1193,1195,f234,1325,1333,1335,1343,1347.1373,1401 . 1485.1500, 1510,1540,1549 ,1550.1555.1565.1566,1567.1571. 1583,1599.1619.1638.1649,1654.1657. 1670.
- 1486,1687 ,1722 Set also: Communities of Women I /
* d 1
Subject Theory of the: 1534.1618 ,1662 ' .
Subjeaive Critiasm: See Critical Schoois, Other. Relation to Fcminist Criticism - Reader-Resporise Criticism
Subjective Voiq. Women's Use of: See Language. Women's Use of - Subjective Voice
Subtext: Sct Narrative Strategies in Women's Writing - Subttxt
Suiddc. Women and: 81 .83.93.240.582.637.668.765.1017. 1062. 107?.1175.1195.1260. 1 2 9 , 1566 ,1650 See also: Death. Women and; Madness. Women and; Masochism. Fcmaie; Passivitj. Fernalc
Surrealism. Women and: #6 ,769,1175
Syntactical Expcrimentatii)a. Women's Use of: See Language, Wopen's Use of - Syntactical Expaimtptation
s -
Tag Qucstiom. Women's Use of: Sce Language. women's Use 6f - Intonation >
Teaching -Black Women: 1511 ,1513. 1514 ck Women's Writmg: 1440.1477 ,109,1531 . 1612
-Fwai.?isr Likrar)r Criticism: 1434 ,1438 ..1467 . 1475 . 1478 . 1501. . 1521 .I580 . 1634 . 1660 . i" 1692 -Lesbian Writing: 1192.1@. 1444.1445.1490.1509.1520.1533.1540 -Women's Writing: 1438.1440.1443.1444.1450. 1466,1473,1477.1480,. 1485.1490. 1493 . 1498.1499.1301.1304.1505.1Y)8.1509.1520,1522.1529.1531~ 1533. 15400.
1S43 ,1612 -Writing to Women: 1430.1441 . 1472,1480,1484.1493.1507
- -- - 'Writinn to Women in Prison: 1473 ,1488 ; 1500,1529 - - - - - --
See also: Feminist Pedagogy; Femini~t~Process
~ d " n o l o g ~ , Wmen and: 367 ,535 ,589 ,758 ,837 ,1467' . See also: lndustrialitatio& Women and *
Thtppe of the Absurd, Women-and the: 1031 - \
Theatre. Women in the: 37 .89,1025.1031,1033 ,1038 ,1041 ,1047 ,1048 ,1053 ,1056 ,1063 ,1067 , - -c1068.1~1074, 1080.1081,1082.1085,.1191 .1196.1199,1206,~211,1212,1224,1237 ,1254.1309.1342,1653 See also: Feminist P rcas - in the Theatre -
4 . ,
Thou& Modes of. @male vr Male: 274 ,345 ,402 .530 i554.566.573 ,593 ,598 ,600,670 ,712 ,820 ,858,893 ,901 .959.1006,1195,12& ,1417 ,1576.1577 See also: Intuition, Female; Language. Patriarchal - Dualism; Language, ~ a a i a k h a l - Linearity; Rationality. Male; R W n vs. Passion -
Trapsvestism: 27.105.113.271 ,458,515,622,657 ,1168 ,1314,1578,1582,1653 See also: Androgyny; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Clothing; Imagery and Motifs in Women's Writing - Disguise
'-, -
Troubadours, Wbmen: 66 .71 See also: Courtiy Love
True Confessions: See Popular Culture - True Confessions
Utopias: 136.352.403.532.589.597 ,659.807 .808.819.910.1172,1292 See also: Speculative Fiction
Vietnamese Literature. Women and: 1240 (-'-I
Violence against Women: 2 ,4.6.23 .34,70.73 ,81 ,83,147 , 171 , 180,193 ,274,297 ,337 ,473 ,501 533,584,589,617,620,637 ,653,660,671 ,678,781 ,796,807 ,.810,861,862,866,952, 1079,1086.1099,1105.1123.1214.1350,1355,1356.1364,1368,1407.1531 ,1603 See also: Power, Male /' .
violen&. Female: 6.9.26.57 ,90,365 ,669.710.826.862.881 ,896.916,1083,1086.1099.1256. 1260.1282 ,1582 -
See also: Anger. Female; Crime. Women and 1 \
Westerns: See Popular Culture - Westetems
Work. Women and: 13 ,32,39.85.164,205 ,238 ,243 ,254,283 ,287 ,289,295 ,301 ,307 ,311 ,318, 322,326.329.360.365.367.379.380,383 ,394,395 ,403,407,408 ,412,436,444,464, 492 ,502,535 ,556,561 ,585 .592,595. ,622,629,648,652,656.675 ,682,698,699,739. 746,734,665 ,770,7l2.780.785.835 ,849.852.915,918.933,938.!045,1048,, 1054, 1062.1072.1076.10W. 1099,1107.1109,1113,1114,1119.11~9.1124,, 1125,1137,1138 .1145.1151,1160,1242.1265.1266.1289.. 1353.1356,1361.1363.1435,1467,1479, 1505 ,1512 ,1523 ,1582.1598 ,1611 ,1643 ,1653 ..I665 -Domestic Labour: 21 ,212,273,300.643.755.769,1128.1129.1214,1301 -as EcoMlmic N&ty: 165 ,335.368 ,527,691 ,785,1203,1266 . -Need for UseN Occupation: 122.257.267 ,312.335.392.405.429.691 ,1117 ,1266,1265
-Professional Careers: 368 ,1080,1117 ,1214,1266 -- -
See also: ClassPosition, Women's; Money. Women and , /-
j .
Working-Class ~bmen , Writing by and about: 367 ,458 ,556 ,649'. 686 ,755 .842.966,1119 ,1127 . 1227,1233.1256,1268,1273.1345,1356,1444.1461 ,1478 ,1485,1555,1598,1643 See also: Class Position, Women's
Writers. Women -Addressing Male Readers: 199 ,561 ,668 . ,765 ,1637 -
-Anxiety of ~uthorshi*: f50,189.207 ,255 ,273 ,289.294.301 ,312 ,371 ,373 ,375,392 . 442,449,452,460,461 ,468,474.477 ,593,604,658 ,668 ,705 ,717,723,780,786 ,792,816,825,937.. 951 ,960 ,"970,971,976s, 977 ,1005.1020,1177 , 1197 ,1201 . 1204,1281 ,1441 ,1484,1528 ,1549,1551 ,1566 ,1595 ,1604,1619 ,1620.1629 : 1637 ,1672.1697
-Conditions of: 3,32.82 ; 84,126.133.13 , 1 4 4 , 1 4 5 , 1 5 3 ~ 5 5 , 1 5 6 , 1 5 8 , 1 6 0 , 1 6 2 . 1 7 9 . 206.207 ,220,222,226.241 ,252. d 5.313 .320 .322 .362 ,369 ,371 ,372 ,380 .391 392.399.400.408 ,413,415 ,416,418,421,423 ,425,443.. 470.475 ,481 ,496,
~ 9 8 . 5 0 0 . 5 0 3 . 5 1 0 . 5 5 6 . 5 6 6 . 6 0 2 . 6 1 0 . 6 1 6 . 6 3 8 . 6 5 9 . 6 6 8 . 6 7 6 . 7 2 8 . 7 3 7 ,741 ,764 a ,765,766,770.775 ,780,815 . 832 ,838 ,850 .885 .889 .896 .903 ,904,906,919.
920.925.945.948.949.951 ,952.970.978,983.984,997.998.1005.1014.1039. 1056.1063.1082.1092,1140,1165.1171.1174,1178,1179.1184.1185.1187.1188 .1190.1192,1194,1195~, 1201 .1204.1207,1208.1210.1213.1215,1217.1219, 1221 ,1222 ,1224,1228 ,1230,1236 ,1239 ,1241 ,1242 ,1243 ,1244 ,1245,1246 . 1247 ,1248,1252.1253,1293,1309,1317.1468.1481 .1500,1539,1540.1541 . 1542.
- 1549,1554.1566,1592,1606,1~7,1610,1612.1620.1621 .1630.1635.lti36.1645
b ,1646, I652.1654.1665.1688 . l e v 1703,1704,1707 -Conditions of (Re-16th Century European): 45 -Conditions of (Re-16th Century Japanese): 69 -Conditions of (15th Century British): 1301 -Conditions of (15th Century Italian): 53 -Conditions of (16th Century British): 1301 -Conditions of (17th Century American): 131 ' /' -Conditions of (17th Century British): 121 ,151 ,154,163 , 1301 ,1326 -Conditions of (18th Century Ameriw): 210 -Conditions of (18th Century British): 202 ,1305 ,1326 -Conditions of (19th Century American): 312 ,314,317 ,446 ,677 , 1344 -Conditions of (19th Century British): 257 ,300 ,321 ,368 ,390 ,429 ,459 -Conditions of (19th Century French): 351 ,352 -Conditions of (19th Century German): 386 \ *
\ -Conditions of (20th Century African): 800 -Conditions of (20th Century American): 686,754,lOOO.lOll . 1012.1019.10Zl . 1027 , 1031
' .1067,1068,1871 ,1085.1102.1198.1203,1211 ,1220,1227,1255,1345 . 1356, 1363.1683
-Conditions of (20th Century Australian): 1237 -Conditions of (2~ tb Century ~ritishj: 953,1070,1254 -0mditions of (20th Century Canadian): 1196,1199,1212 . -Conditions of (20th Century French): 825 ,884.1200 3
-Conditions of (20th Camry Italian): 55g -Conditions of (20th Century Japanese): 1126 ,1131
- -Conditions of (20th Centmy New Zealand): 7 17 -Conditions of (20th Century Palestinian): 1232 -Conditions of (20th Century Russian): 1013 -Conditions of (20th Century Viemamese): 1240
-Rediscovered: 3 . S O . 57 .77,84,129,133 ,135 ,144,145 ,150,158 ,162,204,206,223 . 2% ,252 ,26f ,R8,2%6, 28?Q€kX*, 3 3 2 ; 3 3 3 3 & 3 8 H 9 t + l k + ~ ~ 470,478,479,496;503;505.566,591,599.60$,638.649.676,695,6W,731,
~37,759,770.856.863,900.919.924.971.978,983.984, log, 1015.1181 ,1223. 1280,1282,1291,f306,1321.1326.13~9.1447.1594 1 1611 ,1629,1636.. 1685
-and Silence: 53 ,122,257 ,556,568 ,590,624,644 :645 ,653 ,713 ,736,771,773,832,850 ,924,940,944,957 ,979,983.986,1157,1178,1179,1192,1208,1227,1434,1493, 1539,1540,1%2.1566,1583,15%, 1603.1608,1618,1645.1665,1686.1705
-as Subjects of Women's Writing: 190,317 ,351 ,422 ,465 ,468 ,470 ,482 ,522 ,593 ,653 ,658 I ,724,742 ,. 777 ,786 ,792 ,814 ,820,823 ,833 ,1169,1177 ,1468 ,1481 ,1698
-Use of Pseudonym: 337 ,390 ,U, 766 ,825 ; 945 See also: Artist. Woman as *
USERS' GUIDE TO m A m O E w ? n z E INDEX
The Author-Title Index lists names of authors i d titles of works discussed in the anicles collected
in the bibliography. The index is organized alphabetically by author and worts are arranged alphabetically - after each author., The authors of the critical articles are listed in a separate index.
Z
Reference numbers: The numbers f o l l o ~ k g authors and works refer to entry numbers. not page numbers.
Numbers immediately &r an author's name indicate biographical discussions or general discussions of
herhis work; entry numbers after titles indicate more specific d k i o n s of those particular work.
e
Works written in languages other than English: When a work has been translated iqto English. the title is ' \
given in English with the original title, when available. following in parentheses. When no uansbtion
exists, or we have been A b l e to obtain a eference to it, the title is given in the o r i g w Janguage. When 3 4
a work in translation is generally available and widely known by the English title, this titlefonly will be ,*
given.
Pseudonyms: Authors writing under pseudonyms have been listed under their real names with the
pseudonyms enclosed in parentheses and cross-referenced. Authors who have changed their names are
listed under their current names with former names enclosed in parentheses and cross-refetenced.
Familiar pseudonyms such as George Eliot or George Sand are used ip place of real names.
Citing Poetry: When an article includes detailed discussion of a particular poem, the title of the poem will
be provided However, when several poems from a single collection are discussed, the q l e of the '
d- collection will usually be given.
Emily Dickinson's poem are cited by first lines; numbers assigned by Johnson. editor of The
Complete Poems of Emily Dickinsvn, follow in parentheses.' Lq
. . A U T H O m INDEX
Abby, Alain Libido Beach : 879
Abergavennie. Lady Frances: 1301
Abramovitsh, S. Y.: 379
Acosta, Teresa Paloma: 950
Adam, Margie: 958 -- &
Adams. Abigail: 221
Adams, Henry Democracy : 308 ,424 A
The Education ofHenry Adams : 424 Esther : 239 ,424
: Lcrsr Queen of Tohiti :<24 . M m Taaro: 424 +
Adcock, Betty Waking Out : 1020
Addison. Joseph. Richard Steele, et al. The Spectatw : 1322
Aeschylus: 1 n The Oresteia : 9.26 ,1589 ,1673
Ai: 1001
Ailloo, Ama Ata: 1439 " Anowa: 739
Dilemma of a G h a : 1160 "Everything Counts": 739 "A Gift from Somewhere": 739 "In the Cutting of a Drinkw: 739
Airsworth, William - -
h c k Sheppard : 279
Alke, Edward: 1028 The American Dream : 1037 ,1478 A Deiiuate &lance : 1037 Tiny Alice : 1037 Whds Apaid opirginia Wauf : 1037 ,1051 ' The Zor, S t a y : 1037
Aibiach. Anne-Marie
Alcott, Louisa May: 389.12% . , "Behind a Mask": 273 -
"Cupid and Chow-Chow": 312 . &mpitd Sketches : 312 " 6 P
Ja's Boys : 228 Llttle &en : 228 %
Little Women : 228 ,273 ,296 ,312 ,1259 An Old- Fashioned Girl : 228 t "Pauline's Passion and Puhishment " : 273
/- Wwk A Stwy of Experience : 228 ,312 ,436 ,1266
AIdiss. Brian > P ' ' "The Saliva Tree": 926
Aldrich, AM: 537
Aldridge, Sarah The Late Comer : 879
Aleichern Sholem: 379
"The Feminist Movement in Italyw: 559 A Woman : 559
. .Q
Alexander of Hales Summa thedogica : 63
Alfohso. P e l o Disciplina Clericalis : 1328
Allen, C. R. The Hedge- Sparrow : 829 A Pow Schdar : 829
Allen, Grant -- ' The W m n Who Did : 341 ,502
Allerl Paula Gum ' "The Beautiful Woman Who Singsw: 1010
" ' Alta: 1001 , 1560 I Am Not a Practicing Angel : 1626 No Visible Means of Suppart : 1626
Alther, Lisa Kin&& : 14/548 ,549 ,634 ,% ,905 - - - - -
--'
1 --,
Alvarez. Tina "Gurtdalajah. U. S. A": 955 d A A -
Amadi,' Elechi ' The C o n d i n e : 1160
1
Armado. Jorge Gobriela, Cfme and Cinnamon (Gabriela, Cravo e Caneia) : 1184 The Vide* Lrurd flerras do wrn Fin) : 1184
. u Arnes. Richard
The Fdly of Love : 1307
Anacreon: 20 ,
Anaya, Rudolfo -- Bless Me, Ultirna : 758
Andersen, Hans Christian: 1368
Anderson, Margaret: 1457
Anderson, Marian: 1362 O
Anderson. Sherwood Kir Brandon : 711 The;Man Who Became a W m n : 757 ,
Many Marriages : 711 "Out of the Nowhere Into Nothing": 535 Perhaps Wtnnen : 535 P a r White : 711 "Unlighted lamps": 535 Winesburg, Ohio : 828
0
Angelou. Maya: 1317 I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings : 671 ,1179 ,1480
Anger. Jane 4 Protection &r Women : 1536
B
Anh Tho: 1240
A~ix ter . Paul Swijwater : 6% Windigo : 6%
Anonymous
*
. ,
"Alas! Ah! the yhile": 47 - - -
Alliterative Mate Arthtue : 41 TheAnchaess'sRule:30 - e
Ancrene fiwle : 55 . . L + L - - --
Anglo- Saxon C h m - d e x 43 The Avowing of King Arthur : 73 The Awntyrs ofl Arthwe : 73 a . . "The Wring of the Door": 1337.
Ir The Bible (The Book of Ruth).: 22 The Bible : 401 3
The Book of Notable Women : 44 The Bodi ofihe Th& Nights and a Night trans. Richard F. Bunon: 11- The Boy and the Mantle : 73 "Bud's Letter": 1297 ? "The Burglar and theold Maid": 1337 - 4 ':$ C w m i ~ Btuana : 70 tpa . "The Death of Mother Jones" : 1356 "The Decision": 448 "The Differencen:'448 The Eddar : 14 -
? An Englishwoman's Home : 1050 The Exeter Bwk : 75 "The Farmer's Curst Wife": 1337
I
/
The m e e n Joys of Marriage : 48 The Findern Anthdogy : 50 Hwe et Jkhane : 39 h 4' HmCRIs and Blanche* : 41 Go Ask Alice : 790
(" Gdagrm and Gawane : 73 Haii Meidenhad : 48 "Huc Usque, Me Miseram" : 70 The kaste of Syr Gawane : 73 Jeu if Adam : 54 - "Johnny Sands": 1337 @
King Arthw and tho King of CwnwalI : 73 " Kyrie, so Kyrie" : 47 a
L' Atre Perilleu : 73 Lo Vengeance Rnquidel: 73 -- "The Ladiw Madich": 214 LclzanYio de T m e s : 1328 '
Le Chevatier a PEpee : 73 "Ma and Pa": 1356 Nibelungenlied : 57 17)\ "The Nine Ladies Worthy ": 59 "The Old Maid Song": 1337 On the Secrets of W m e n : 56 " A Panegyrick Upon Cundums" : 214 Physical Force : 1050
- "Pistol Packin Mama": 1356 Roman De La Rose : 41 The Seaker : 43 Sir Gawain and the Green Knight : 73
a Sir Loncelot of make : ,73
464
. - '& - ;&- *,?
Sir Luun&l: 41 Sir Percevd of Gdes : 73 - -- -
The S tay of the Brdhers : 1330 Ten Clowning Street : 1050 - Tt&an rurd M d e : 67 Ttue W a M n h d : 10% The Turk and Gwin : 73 The Wanderer : 43 9
The W@'s Lument : 43 - * \ :? @
The W m n With a Pack : 1050 "Woman's Sphere": 448 "A Young Lady's Soliloquy": 448
6
Y wain and Gawain : 73 4
Q . . Antin. Mary
' The PrcRnised Land : 527 ,639 - Anyte: 3 , 2 4
8 - A p u l c i ~ Amar and Psyche : 1575 The Gdden Ass : 1314.1316.1710 I
Aquinas. Thomas .
Summa of Thedogy : 63 . . -.
Arbuthnot, John, Alexander Pope, Jonathan S ' f t John Gay. Thomas Pamell. and Roben Harley O
Memdrs of the E~~rawdinqry Lif i , Wwks, and Discoveries of Martimcs Scriblem : 211
Arden, Jane: 1070 - -
. . Arjstobe: I
Ethics : 1 j Poetics : 1673 Pditics : 13
:" Y, Armah. Ayi Kwei 4 * "The Offal Kind": 739
Two Tharsrrnd Seasons : 739 '
Arnold, June ApNeSrnLCe : 782 The C d and the Carpenter : 1540 Sister Gin : 886
Arnold, Matthew Tristmm and Iseult : 471
- - Ascham, Margaret: 1301 -, I - -
Ashton-Warner, Sylvia: 1296 SjJiruter : 1274
. > -
Asimov. Isaac: 646 ,779 The Gads Themselves : 926 I, Rdot : 872
Aske, James ,.
Elkabetha: Triumpham : 116 1 a
Askew. Anne: 77 ,1301. +
- / Ahell. Mary: 121
- Bart'lemy Fair w an The Christian Religion as of the Church of England : 120 An lmporfid Enquiry into the Causes of Rebellion d, Civil War in This Kingdom : 120 Letters Concerning the b e of Gad : 1% A Seri ty Propawl to the Ladies #r the Advancement of Their Tme and Greatest Interest : 120
g 1322 ,1326 Some~~Rejections upon Marriage : 120 ,1311 ,1326 C
Atherton, Gertrude I Adventures of a Novelist : 425
Awhirl Asunder : 425 The Cali@nians : 425 Los Cem'tm : 425 -
42
Patience Sparhawk and Her Times : 426
Atwood, Margaret: 518.961 , 1001 ,1207 .'12m.'12 1251 , 1455 The Animals in That Carntry : 985
- - The Circle Game : 985 ,1018
'"B Dancing Girls : 652 "The Director of Proqpl": 991 "Dream: Bluejay or Archeopteryx " : 990 The Edible Woman : 558 ,898 ,942,992 ,1281 ,1633 "Interview with a Tourist": 991 The hwnrrls o f S u w n ~ M d i e : 1018 ,1156,1171 ,1320 ,1626 Lady Oracle : 548 ,577 ,652 ,912 ,1298 ,1583 ,1698 Lifi be@e Man : 1186 Power Pditics : 985 ,991 ,1018 ,1171 Rmedaues fi Undergratnd : 985 ,1018 "Procedures for Underground" : 990 "The Shadow Voice": 991 S w - i n g : 558,564,594,640,651 ,652,664,750,792 ,812 .'824,837 ,871 ,882
941 ,992,1156,1157 ,1171 ,1267 ,1295,1318,1631 ,1633 Swvivd : 975 ,1536' "A Sybil": 991 Two- Headed Poems : 1018
-h
rC
6
j -
Ylac Are Happy : 985 . -991 ,992 ,1156 ,1626 - - - -
Audeley. Lady Eleanor: 1301
Augusthe, Saint ' De Gerresi ad litterrm : 63 \
Austen. Jane: 293 ,666,1321 ,1542 - -
Emma : 235 ,326 ,327 ,354 ,405 , 7 ,432 ,433 ,1279 ,1329 ' 5 we and Friendship : 1260 . Mansjeld Park : 354 ,407 ,433
"9, +
:Northanger Abbey: 275 ,501 ,1264 4
Persuasion : 354,433 ,1264 Pride and PreHce : 228 ,276 ,336,343 ,354,357 ,433 ,1268 ,1501 Sense ond Sensibility : 354 ,407 ,433 ,1691
7
Avdeev, Mikhail .. . The Reef: 303
Avison, Margaret: 992
A w m , Kefi b. "Just To Buy Corn": 739
Axelam. ~ c D o u g a l Birth (Ufi Begins) : 1170 A Child Is Ban : 1170
Bacon. Lady Anna: 1301
Bage. Robert 'Barham Downs : 194
Bagehot Eliza Wilson: 429
Baldwin, James - - The Amen Caner : 11324 Amher Cawitry : 923 Go Tell h on the Mountain : 923
- Ballantyne, Sheila N u m a kan the Tennite Queen : 548
', Balzac. Honore de
"Adieu": 270 The Girl with the Gdden Eyes (La Fdle aux yeux d'w) : 271 ~
Le Lys dans la Volle : 375 p "A Woman of Thirty" : 341
\I ' Barnban, Toni Cade "Medley": 1183 "My Man Bovannen: 618
-
Bannon, Ann: 537 ,1567 - - - L
_aarplra, Ixnamu Amiri ( ~ e k o i Jones): 1683 %
A Blak M a s : 1062 + - .
Experimentat Death Unit # I : 1062 - --
Mcrdheart: A Mwality Play : 1062 P
&ba, Sharon: 1001 O
Barbadd, Anna Laetitia Fmly Lessons* Children : 202 "'The Rights of Womenn: 202 "To a Lady with Some Painted Flowers": 202
I
mbeau, Jean a ;
Sdange : 1043 4
Barf009 Joan 4
Abra : 652 ' a \ r I .
Barker, Jane .t Love Intrigues : 168 . fi60 A Patch wwk Screen $Y the 'I-abies : 168
*
Barker, Lady Mary Station Life in New Zealand : 1274
1 Ti
Barnes, Djuna: 1224 /',
b Lrrdies Almanack : 657 ,713 ,1567
fi N i g h t w d : 657 ,879 ,1157 ,1168 ,1633 y
m e y , Natalie: 949 , 1234 ,'14% , 1567 I , The One Who Is Legion : 657
1 Barrac~. H.: See d'Altemont, Louis '
- - t"
I
/ De PEdtrCdtion des Femmes : 122 B r Dg PEgditedesdeuxSexes: 117,122
; 1 \* De PExcellence des Hommes : 122 3" Educatim des Dames : 117
Y - Barreno. Maria Isabel. Maria Teresa Horta. and Maria Fatima Velho da Costa .
New Pwtuguese Letters : 645',,l166 L
Barren Browning, Elizabeth: 445 ,1687 d Awwa Leigh : 351 ,4101,443 ,453 ,461 ,465 ,470 ,474,482 , 4 8 4 , 5 0 0 , 13180 "A Child Asleepn: 453
- "A Child's Grave at Florence": 453 "The'Cry of the Children": 453. "A Desire" : 454 a
'Woman Springs fm AUcgory to Life": 921 + - -
fkaumnt. Francis and john Retcficr The Maitf.5 T m p t y : 141 Phiipptr : ll3
-
Beituman~ I w m - M e Ltprincc de . &mcty& the &a9 (La BcNe cr la Bete) : 162 . 1360
Ciuon, Rd tie Bwgo : 162 E
M a g P t i n des Mdcxents : 16.2 & Magwin d u En#h.s : 162 a
*. k Mogattn des Pmrprts, des An-. des DMcsriques. er des Gens de Campgne : 162 Lt M e w M u i m : 162 N w w v W&n FrCUCCQiS : 162
I 1
Beuvoir. Sirnoat dc: 1214.1241 At1 Men A n M d : 600 A t l W r v r d D o n r : 8 4 0 , 8 8 7 . l B 3 The Boaf ofOthvs : 500 Tke Comtqg uf&e : 915 The ~wwk$~irhunaance : 387 ,915
JJ \ -
~ A S Mcf Imogrs : 915 fheMandQrtm:fr00.915.1200 Memdrt ofa Dutijbi Drzvghier : 887 . 1293 , 1296 Tht 6 o f L f F : 88t ,915 ,1296 T h c S d S e x : 600,887,915, 1200 S h c C m r o S t u y : 600.1200 A Y n y .&my &&A : 600,887 The Wrmon 0e:flm)ul: 600, lZOO
6
BEcttu Smucl Wdrirtg jbr Goda : 1038
B4Cklty. zoc A Chance ro Luc :- 753
Ekechtr. Henry Ward: 1710
Bcgm. Elisabah: 1291 . 1324 I
Bchn Aphra: 150.151 Abdeluzs : 153 T k M v e ~ w e s i f the Block Lady: 158 Agnes dc Gyro : 1260 The Cam of the King o/B4nim : 1511 'The Disappoinmttnt': 153 The Dutch h e r : 153 Thc F& &t. a The 'Amaus of Prince Tarpin and Mirunria : 158 .12W The F&Cauu,a. A New WaytoPiayanOidGwne: 146 The F d Moniogc . a, The kdau Bridgepun : 146 The Hfrray of the Nun, a The Fair Vow- Breaker : 158 , 1260
"A Letter to a Brother of the Pen in Tribulation": 153 ,214 "IxweARn"Q":l53 - -
Love Letters between u Ndleman and His Siaer : 158 The Lucky C h m e , ar, The Aldermun's Bargain : 146 ,153 _ The Lacky M& : 1260 The Nun, a The Perpfd B e m y : 158 "00 Desire": 153
' 9 . . . O r w d o , ,ar The RUM SIuve : 153 ,158 Sir Patient F m y : 146 ,153 The T w n Fop, or, Sir Timdhy Tuwdrey : 146 The Unmunote Happy Lady : 158 The Wondering Beauty : 158 The Widow Ranter : 158 "The Willing Misubs": 153
Bellamy, Edward Loarcing k k w o r d : 403,597 .'1292
3
* *
klli, Gioconda firing Line : 948 3
Bellow, Saul: 1197 "LeavingtheYellowHouse":831 '
I
Bemet Agnes Maria De Ydcarrt : 191 I
I
Benneft. Arnold The Old Wives Tale : 341
Bennett Gwendolyn: 1306 , 1 6 2
Bane& John & Letters to a Ymng Ludy : 276
Bennett, Stephanie ' Madame Blackboas : 998 . -
Beresford-Howe, Constance: 1455 The B o d of Eve : 558 ,652 ,750 A Population of 0ke : 652
Berge, Carol: 1001
Berper, Thomas Little Big Man i 663 '
, i &mardin0 of Siena: 65
Bemikow, Louise, ed.
The W d d Split Open. Fau Centuries of Women Poets in E~gland and Ameriu2J5i;tlIed(L: 1443 ,1444
Bersia& Louky: 1324 L'Eugwlionne : 625 ,1169 ,1181
r
Le Pique- i q u e w PAcropde : 708,1169,1180
Beti. Mongo: Biyidi, Alexaadre F Bern- Tho&
The Revenge, or A Mach in Newgate : 143
Betts, Doris "Still Life with Fruit": 1327 ' '
Bevinvinm Helen Beautiiir, LojZy People : 1020 Make q Verse of: 1020 When Fatnd : 1020
Bhattacharya, Bhabani "A Goddess Named Gold" : 538 - "He Who Rides a Tiger": 538
f Wusic for Mohini": 538 "Shadow From Ladakh" : 538 "So Many Hungers": 538
Biyidi. Alexandre (pseud. Mongo Beti) Perpetue : 869
Bjorn, Thyra Ferre Pap's Wif i : 527
Blackamore, Arthur k k at Lart; w The Happy Unfmunate : 1322
Blackmore, Jane: 839 i -
Blais, Mane-Claire: 1324 C
Dwer's Angel (Les Apparences) : 653 ,786 La Belle Bete : 625 ,916 The -Manuscripts of Pauline A r c h g e (Les Manuscrrpts de Pauline Archange) : 653 ,786 ,912 Nights in the ~ n d e r ~ r h (Les Nuits de PUndergrmnd) : 653 ,912 . 1f81 fleasun in the Lifi of Emmanuel (Vne Saison d m la Vie d'Ernmarure1) : 653 ; 78f1 -- Vivre! Vivre! : 786
Blake, Nicholas: See Lewis. C. Day &
Blake, William: 1595 ~ m e r i k : 209
Aphaisms OR Man : 209 T h e M o f hds2QL Europe : 205 509 The F w Zarrr : 205 ,209,
-. k&em : 2QS .W Milton : 205 ,209 Songs of lnrulcence' : 209 Visions of the Daughters of Albion : 205 ,209
- Blank, Arapera "One Two Three Four Five": 1174
B'eecker' %H%y of Mario Kittle : 221 "Written on the Retreat From Burgoynew : 221
Blixen, Karen: See Dinesen, Isak 4
Boccaaio, Giovanni Concerning Fomars Women : 32 ,59 ,1537 Decamem : 29
Boethius The CoRsdatitm ofPhU~sy,ph y : 41
B q p . S. Diane: 1179
Boissonas, Edith " Accalmie " : 954 "Le Regard": 954 "LeVideW:954
Boland. Eavan "Tirade against the Mimic Musew: 996
Bogan. Louise: 1551 Achievement in American Poetry, 1- 1950 : 951 The Blue Estuaries : 997 Body 01Thi.s Death : 951 "Body of This Death" : 1005 "Come Sleep": 1005 Dark Summer : 951 "Fifteenth Farewell ": 1005 "Little Lobelia's Song" : 1005 "Medusa". 1670 The S&d$nng Fury : 951 "Sonnet" : 1005 "A Tale": 1005
P Bolitho. Hector Sdemn Boy : 829
P
Boll, .Heinrich The Clown CAnsichten eines Clmns) : 531
Bollandist Fathers Acta S a n c t m : 64
Bolc Carol ,
Red Emma : 1224
Bombeck, Erma / -
At Wit's End : 588 ,905 T h e G r m IS Always Greener over the Septic Tank : 588 ,905 I Lart Ev'erphing in t hbq&- Natal Depress@ : 5118 /ust Wait Till Yac Have C.' dren of Y a u Own : 588
Bonaventure. Saint Commentaria in secundwn libnun sententiarum : 63
Boothe, Clare The Women : 1028 ,1224
Borland, Hal When the Legends Die : 696
Bosc. Jacques du The Compleat Woman (Z'Honneste j2mme) : 118
Bosco. oMonique: 1324 U s Wife (Ln Femme de Lath) : 912 Un Amwi rdhdrdt : 912
b Boston, Lucy "Hybrid Perpetual " : 996
Boucher. Denise: 1324 Cyprine : 1169
. + , The Fairies Are Thirsty (Zes fees ont s@- 645 ,1169 , 1180 , 1238
Boucher, Sandy A d t s and Rituals : 1540
Boudier de Villemert, PierreJoseph L'Ami des Femmes : 201
Boulle. Pierre Planet oft he Apes : 646 -
Bowdon, Mme.: See Lippens. Mathilde
Bowdler, John "Thoughts on the Proposed Improvement of Female Educationn: 256
Bowen, Elizabeth: 1496 . x
"; The Harse in Paris : 542 -
6 Bowles, Jane: 1224
Boyd. Blanche , - Mauning the Death of Magic : 547
Boyd, lohn- The Pdlinatws : 646
Boyd. Nancy (pseud.):-See Porter. Katherine Anne
Boyle, Kay: 701
Bracken, Peg The .' Hate to Cwk Bodc : 905
Bracket& Leigh: 646,779,864
Braddon. Mary Elizabeh -
Ludy Audley'; Secret ; 279 ,393 ,419 ,1282 . Thar Art the Man : 1282
Bradley. Marion Zimmer: 797 ,864 +
k The Ruins o/Lvis : 779
Bradstreet Anne: 131 ,1321 "BeforetheBirthofOneofHerChildren":1315 "Contemplations ": 126 "The Four Elements": 126 "In Reference to Her Children": 1319 "Of the Four Humours in an's Constinition ": 126 "The Prologue": 128 "To Her Bookw: 1319 "Upon the Buming of Our House" : 126 '
\
Brand. Max - Singing Guns : 781
Brand. Michele: 1130
.Bran& Anna B. "Si and I": 448
Brecht Bdrtolt: 1057 "A Worker keads History": 1485
Bremer, Fredrika: 1300
Breton. Andre Naa'p : 636 ,712 ,760
Brewster, Elizabeth: 1224
Brieux, ,
A woman on Her Own : 1058 - - - - -
0
Bright, Susan "Live Oak"; 1008 L
"Unaccompanied": 1008 r)
,, Brinson-Pineda, Barbara: 950 I
Brittain, Vera: 695
Broner, E M. Her Mothers : 1698 - A Weave of Women : 1279 f - ,
Bronte, Anne: 300,390 r
Bronte, Charlotte: 229,300 ,390 ,410 ,977 ,1685 Jane E y e : 235 ,255 ,277 ,283 ,284,292 ,326,337 ,344,350,360 ,365 ,382 ,384 ,38&., 398
, ,500,501 ,507 ,1257 ,1268,1287 ,1295 .1300.1303.1473 ,1499 The Professor : 255,360 - 'Shirley : 236,255 ,283 ,294,335 ,360,398 ,408 ,1300 ,1595 Villette : 232,255 ,283 ,311 ,360,370,371 ,381 ,398.402 ,1300
Bronte, Emily: 300 ,390 "Cold in the Earth" : 4:s "Fall. Leaves, Fall": 459 "The Linnet in the Rocky Dells": 459 "There Should Be No Despairnr 459 -
. "Why Seek to Know What Date. What Clime": "459 - - - ' Wuthering eights : 402 ,1501
Brooke. Frances: 1455 ' The -don : 190 -'
The Hutmy ofEmily Montague : 190,191 ,1224.1260.1281 The History ofLudy Mia Mandeville : 178
Brooks, Gwendolyn: 1165 ,1317 ,1612 "Jessie Mitchell's other": 1560 "A Lovely Love": 989 "Maud Martha": 1183 "The Mother": 1315 "When You Have Forgotten Sunday" : 989
Brophy, Brigid Y
In Transit: An Her* Cyclic Novel : 782
Brassard, Nicole: 1180,1324 A Ba& (Un Livre) : 624 French Kiss : 624,1159,1169 . L' Amer : 624 ,625 ,1159 ,1169 Le Centre B l q : 624 ,1159 Mecanique hngleuse : 1159
Made en so Choir : 1159 Turn of a Pmg Rdd- Ota): 624 - -
Broughton, Rhoda Belinda : 279 Not Wisely but Too Well : 350
Broumas, Olga "Sleeping Beauty": 1443 ,1444
Brown, Abbie Farwell "The Blessed Privilege": 448 .
Brown, Rita Mae: 701 h Her Day : 1179 Rubywt hngle : 879 ,886 ,905 Six of One : 547 O
Brown. Rosellen "Good Housekeeping" : 755
Browne; Charles Farrar: 2%
Browning, Elizabeth Barrett See Barren Browning, Elizabeth
Browning. Robert "MY Last ~ucheis": 501 "Porph yria's Lover" : 473 The Ring and the Ba$c : 230 ,445 ,473 ,501
Brunswick, Ruth Mack , . "The Analysis of a Case of Paranoiaw: 1684
Brunton. Mary ' Disciplrne : 251
Ernmeline : 251 -
Self Contrd : 251
Bryant Dorothy Ella Price's kwnal : 639 , 1093 Garden of Eras : 871 The Kin of Ata Are Waiting* You : 597 ,807 ,808 ,1093 Miss Giardino : 1093
Buchanan, Cynthia Maiden : 669
Buckstone, John Baldwin Luke the Lubtwer, a The Lmt Son : 419.y
d
Bulkin. Elly and Joan Larkin, eds. I
Amazon Pcetry: An Anthdogy : 1193 ,1443 ,1444 - -
Bullins, Ed The Duplex : 1062 The Fnbulacs Miss Marie : 1062
I
The Gentleman Caller : 1062 . Gang a B u m o : 1062 In New England Winter : 1062 In the Wine Time : 1062
Bulwer-~ytton,'~o~ina: 391
Bunton, Mary Taylor A Bride on the Old CAishdm Trail in 1886 : 1297
Burnett, Frances Hodgson The Secret Garden : 1262
Burney, Fanny: 189 ,'I296 ,1321 C d l l a : 163 ,165 ,168,191 ,193 Cecilia : 163 ,165 ,168 ,191 ,193 E v ~ ~ M : 163 ,165 ,191 ,193 ,1260,1286 The Wanderer, w Female Dificulties : 163 ,164,165 ,191 , 193
Burnside. Heather Heather of the S d h : 829
Burr. Anne: 1064
B-. Mary They That Sit - in Darkness : 1063
Burrows, Louie: 863
Burton, Annie Louise Memwies of Childhad's Slavery Days : 274 4
- Bussy. Dorothy Strachey Olivia : 1567
Butler, Samuel Hudibras : 137
Byron, George Gordon, Lord: 1595 Don Juon : 506
Cadieux, Pauline Lu h p e dam la Fenetre : 708
Caillard, Mme. . Paul: 404
Caldiera, Cataruzza: 53
Callentgkk, Ernest Ectopia : W re
Cam Thanh: 1240
Cambria, Adele b Amme c m e rivduione : 1036
Normante Gramsci : 1036
Cambridge. A& Hand in the Dark and Other Pwms : 332 ,496 A Marked Man : 332 ,496 Thirty Y eats in Aurtraiia : 4%
- Unspken Tharghts : 332 , 4% "Up, the Murrayn: 4%
Cameron, AM^ (pseud Cam Hubert and Cam Cameron): 1253
Cameron, Cam: See Cameron, Anne
Campbell. John W.: 864
Campbell. Roy -
TheGemgiad:685 .
-ion. Edith: 768 r
Canfield, Dorothy The Bent Twig : 526 The Homemaker : 755 Racgh Hewn : 526 --
Cant~, Virginia: 950
Capecia, Mayotte k Suis ~ar t in i~uaise : 570
Capella, Martianus De Nuptiis Phildogiae er Mercurii : I537
Cappelle-Lafaqe, Marie H w e s de prim : 1271
Cardinal. Marie Les M a s parr le dire : 979 ,1173
Carey, Elizabeth, Lady Falkland: 1301
Carlyle, Jane: 257 ,320 ,410,1629
Can, Emily - . Hundreds and Thasands : 1320 Klee Wyck : 837
Carraud, Mme.: See Touranger. Zulma
Carrighar, MY Home to the Wilderness : 1480
caniigton, h o r a '
The Hearing Tnunpet : 760 -- Carroll, Lewis: See D O ~ & ~ Charles
Carson, Josephine Drives My Green Age : 526
Carter, AngeJ4 .- Hems and Villains : 646
Carter, Elizabeth: 151
Cartland, Barbara: 529
Carvic, Heron: 688 -
Cary, Elizabeth The Tragedie of M(ZTZ~M, The Faire Queene of Jewry : 138 ,145
Cary,Joy= The Ajiican Witch : 801- A i m Saved : 801 - -
0
Cary. Phoebe: 1321 4
Case4 y-Hayford, Adelaide: 1439 "A Black and White Encounter. A Tale of Long Ago": 800 "Mista Courifer": 800 a
Casely-Hayford Gladys (pseud. Aquah Laluah): 1439
Castighone. Baldassare The Book of the Cowtier : 1537
Castillo. A m "Our Tongue WaS Nahuatl ": 955
Catacalos, Rosemary "Ariadne El" : 1008 "The Lover and Namesake Grandmother": 1008 "The Teeth Mother Demands of the Poet": 1008
Cather, Willaa A,- Lady : 359 ,791 ,836 Y
Lucy Gayhecut : 359 - MY ;Intoniu : 359,497 ,535 ,657 ,769,791 ,836.12~ My Mmd Enemy : 359 ,836 ,12540 N
0 Pimers! : 535 ,836 ,1275 Oh Pioneers! : 648 a
"Old Mra' Harris": 836 One of Ours : 836 The Song of the Lmk : 359 ,526 ,535 ,836 ,1698
Cavendish, Margaret: 151 ,154 CCXl Socirrble Letters : 136 %
The Descriflion of a New W d , Called the Blrrzine Wwld : 136 The Ltfi of WIIiiam Cavendish : 125 Ngtures Pictures : 136 p l a p : 136 Rap, Never BeJbre Printed : 136 Poems and Fancies : 136 ,1305 The W t W s Olio: 136
Centlivre, Susanna The Barset- Table : 237 A ~ d d ~ t r a k e j r a w&: 217 Love at a Venzure : 146
Cervantes. Lorna Dee: 950 . a
"Beneath the Shadow of the Freeway": 955 "Refugee Ship": 955
Chamberlain, Anne *
\
The T& Dark Man : 526
Chambers, Jane -- ---. Lud Summer at Bluesfish CI we : 1074 .- A Late Snow : 1074
Chambers. Jessie: 863
Chang Yu-Hua: 592
Chm Shu-li: 592
Chipone, Hester # /
Letters on the Impmement of the Mind, Addressed to a yarng Lady : 202 ,256 C
A Matrimonial Creed Addressed by M e Mulso to Mr. Ricirardwn : 202
Charles; Martie Black Cycle : 1034
Motherlines : 797 ,809 ' a ,
The Vampire Tapestry : 797 -
C Wdk to €& 7 5 i o m e W w l d 797,8W - ~ - -- -
Chase. Amos + -
On Female Excellence: or a Disccurse . . . OccasioRed by the Death of His Wl'fP : 1283 - e
Chateaubriand, Francois-Rene de . . - Rene : 375.506
Chattejee, Bankin Chandra Debi Chmrdharani : 1284
Chatte jee, Sarat Chandra Letter jiam a Wife (Tagwe: Streer Para) : 1284
3 I Chaucer. Geoffrey: 46
The Canterbwy Tales ("The Clerk's Tale") : 51 " h e Canterbe Tales ("The Merchant's Talea) : 47 P
The Canterbury Tales ("The Reeve's Talea) : 47 The Canterbury Tales ("The Wife of Bath's Prdogue " ) : 40 . 73 - The Canterbwy Tales (*The Wifi of Bath's Tde") : 40 The Canterbwy Tdes: 31,33,34.36.38,41,49,58,61 , 6 2 . 6 8 , 1 3 3 7 The kgend of Gad Wtnnen : 1537 Trdtus and Crisepie : 28 ,47 .72'
J Q
Chewer. John Falconer : 1293
Cheever, Susan Lookingjhr Wwk : 1293 ,1583
Chekhov, Anton - "Darling": 1026
The Seagull : 488 Three Sisters : 488
Cheney, Ednah Dow *
Faith@ to the Light and Other Tales : 389 Lau'so May Alcott, Her Lifi, Letters and Juunalsj 389 Memdr of Susan Dimclck : 389 3 Nwds Return : 389 Reminiscences of E d ~ h Dow Cheney : 389
Chernyshevsky. N. G. What Is to Be Done? : 303
Cherryh, *C. J.: 797
Chester, Laura and Sharon Barba, eds. Rising Tides: 20th Century American W m e n P ~ t s :' 1443
(=heske, Thomas
a-ill, Caryl: 1070 &@dons to Sex and Vtdence : 1081
~ibd;; Wlcy ThcCureIess tfdmd : H10 ,1311 The &dys taa Stake : 1311 -, h e ' s La;n Ship : 218 .1310.1311 . 1322 The h o # d Husband : 1310
. e
C i s n k ~ Sandra 'North Avtnue/1600 NC&": 953
C i x q Helene: 1535 ,1559.1639 ,1651 "Castration or Decapitation?": 1564 -
The &ugh ofthe ~ e d - : 927 ,1562 ,1622 ,1694 *
Rprutifi de Noces mr- dela de f Abime : 927 3 Swfles : 927 ,1590
Cixous, Helene and Catherine Clement fu kurv N e e : '571 ,1563 ,1622 ,1674
_cbL Brian W h w Lifi Is h Anyway? : 1038 a
C l a . Walter van Tilburg The Ox- BOW Incident : 769 '
Clarke. Arthur g. Childhanfs End : 872 3001: A Spoce O d p y : 872
Clauses Jan :Likenessm: 1443 "Stories": 1493
Cleland John The Mema'n of Fanny Hill : 194
Crlmcn~ Catherine: 1694
Clifford Lady Anne: 1301
Clifton. Lucille: 1001 . 1243.1317 'Earth w e Woman": 1493 Good Times : 975 "Good Times": 989 "Granma Crowdog" : 1493 'The M a s Mama": 1493 An Ordinary Citizen : 975 An Ordituvy Wanon : 1626 "An Ordhary Woman": 989
Colem. Sidonie-Gabrielle Bre& of Day : 873 Cheri : 796 ,873 Cfmrdine a ~ h n s : 7% Claudine at +hod (Claudine a PEcde) : 796 ,884 Claudine Yen Va : 7% Gigi : 7% L'Envers du bur Hail : 796 L4 Chatte : lj73 Lu Fin de Cheri : 796, La h e l l e lyaire : 7% Lu Maim de Clmcdine : 796 My Apprenticeships : 825 My Maher's Hcuse (Zo Maison de Claudine) : 884,932 The Patriarch": 888 Paysages : 7% A Pmee de la Main : 7% The Rue and the'lmpure : 573 Sido : 932 "The Tender Shoot" : 740 The Vagabond : 7%. 873 ,1546
Collins, Willie - 2 W r w n n n l n white : 667
Collyer. Mary Feficia to Charlotte : 1260
Colman, Benjamin \O
The Duty and Honau of Aged Women. A Sermon on the Death of Madam Abigail Foster : 1283 -- ,1302
- . I -
Colqui tt, BetsyaFeagan -"Honor Card": 1008 "The Lie and the ruth of the Land": 1008
Conan. Lam: 1291 ,1324 - -
Angeline de Montbrun : 645 ,1181
Gmgreve, William: 1310 " , The M l e Deaier: 143 -
The Old Bachefar : 143- I *
The Way of the W d d : 1311
I I
Conner, Ralph Block Rock : 938
-
The Doctar : 938 1
The Foreigner ~ ! T a i e of Saskatchewan : 938 - I
Converse. Florence . ,. - --
The Burden of Christopher : 754 -
Children of Light : 754 Dicuur Victrix : 753 ,754
cook-Lyn, Elizabe_& "Then Badger Said Thisw: 944
cook El& "Song of the Ugly Maidenw: 464
Cooke, Gfice MacGowan A Gaud Fiddle : 638 The h y Bringer : 638 Their First Famal Call : 638
Cookefirace MacGowan and Alice MacGowan, The Straight R w d : 638
, The Trad of the Little Wagon : 638 '. Wild Apples : 638
Cooke, Grace MacGowan and Annie Booth McKinney - Mistress hy : 638 - -
Cooke. Grace MacGowan and Caroline Wood Momsbn William and Bill : 638 t
Cooke. Marjorie Benton t
The Threshdd : 753
Cooper, Anna A Vaicefiom the Sarth : 1707 .
3- I Cooper. James Eenimore
Ajwt and Ashore : 385 The Deerslapr : 460 Home Farnd : 385 Homeward Bmnd : 385 The Ldst of the Mohican5: 297 Miles Wallin&d : 385 The Prairie: A Tale : 781 ,1269 The Ways of the Hour : 233 ,385
Coovers. Robert: 701 ,
Corneille, Pierre Aclcherie : 148
q
Cortazar. Julio - - "Homage to a Y& Witch": 628 ,
Ubro de Manuel : 628 62 A Madel Kit : 628
1 --
Cota-Cardenas, Margarita: 950 Noc-hes Despmando in Conciencias : 1004 Siete Poelos : 1004
Cothran, Kay "Coal in theStoveW: 1356
Cotton. John: 1283
Catherine (pseud Tasma) Sovereign : 1280
Piper of Piper's Hill : 1280
Craft William O.
Running a Tharwnd Miles to Freedtnn, w the Escape of William and Ellen Craj jiwn Slavery : 274
Craik, Dinah Mulock Christian's Mist& : 392 The Head of the Fomily : 392 John Hrrljb, Gentleman : 392 The Little Lome Prince : 392 Olite : 392 The Woman's Z n g d m : 280.392 A Wtnnan9s Tharg hts a b t ~ Women : 392
Crane, Stephen Maggie: A Girl ofthe Streets : 431 , 1272
Crawford Isabella Valancy : 498
Crawford, Joan My Way offifi : 12%
Crichton, Michael The T e r m i d : 646
Croft Eve Brainchild : 1256
Crosbie. Sharon: 1652
Cmby. Jean "The Continued Story of Me": 1552
cross .Amanda: See Heilbrun, Carolyn
Crossland, Jackie A
TheLcrstofrhe&~G~e).Tee: I056 Orient Express : 1056 The Passion of Rubella Mae Mucho Malone : 1056 Rinse Cyde : 1056 Ruins of S- Permar- : 1056
- -
Crothers, Rachel I
Criss C m : 1045 r.4$ %+A- \ 6 He and She : 1028 ,1045 ,1054 ,1076 ' A Man's Wwid : 1045 ,1054,1076 Mary the Third : 1054 ,1076 Myself Bettina : 1045 ,
Ourselves : 1045 The Rectw : 1045 Six One- Act Plays : 1076 The Three of Us : 1045 When Ladies Meet : 1054 ,1076 Y cung Wisdom : 1045
Cummings. E E: 963
Cummins. Maria: 315
Cunningham, Veronica: 950 . -
Curran. Leigh: 1064 .
d'Agoult, Marie (pseud Daniel Stem) Vdentia : 375
d'Altemont, Louis (pseud. T. H. Barrau) Des Devoirs des enfants ver leurs jwents : 404 Le livre de moral pratique : 404
. d'hduza, Clara: 71
d'Anunzio. Gabriele 6 0
The Triumph of Death : 341
d'Aprano, Zelda Zelda- The Becoming of a Woman : 11 11
Dacier, Mme.: 151
Daae, Anne. Countess of Arundel: 1301
Daele. Christa Van: 1025
Daly. Mary: 1555 "
TheoChurch and the Second Sex : 1552 - Daly. Maureen
Seventeenth Summer : 817
Dalziel. Margaret: 1652
Danforth, John: 1302
Daniell, Rosemary R S e d Tau of the Deep Sarth : 1020
Dam. Aldophus van , "Elizaw: 116
-
Dante: 46 The Divine Comedy : 41 L4 Vita N w a : 1308
Dantec, Denise le Le @ews de Go : 979
Dark. Eleanor Prelude to Christopher : 732 Return to Codami : 732 Waterways : 732
/
Davies, Robertson At M y Heart's C a e : 1320
-- . 4 a
Davis. Hallie Flanagan: 1309
Davis, Rebecca Harding Lifi in the Iron Mills :'367 .535 ,832 , 1273
De La Crut. Sor Juana: 155 Obras : 135 Redondillas : 135 "Reply to Sor Filotea": 1184
de la Ramee. Marie Louise (peud. Ouida) Under Two Rags : 279,350
Deagon, Ann: 1560 . Carbon 14 : 1020 Poetics Sarth : 1020 There Is No Balm in Birmingham : 1020
Defoe. Daniel: 1260 M d l FIanders : 194,196 ,203 ,1314,1501 Roxana : 1%
DeFord, Miriam Allen: 864
Delaney, Samuel R Babel- 17 : 797 ,929
i
Triton : 797 - - - U
- --
Delicado, Francisco La L o c a ~ A n d h a : 1328
Delynn. Jane Some Do : 547
Demby, William Beetlecreek : 923
Demda, Jacques: 1694 d~
~eschar i~s , Eustace Oeuvres completes : 59
Dessaulles, Henriene Fadette, J w n a l dHenriette Dessaulles : 1181
Devanny, Jean The Butcher Shop : 609 Cindie : 610 Dawn Beloved : 609,829 -
Devil Made Saint : 609 Lenare Divine :'609 Paradise Row : 610 P m Swine : 609 Riven : 609 "The Springs of Human Action": 609 Sugar Heaven : 610 Working Bullocks : 610
Deveaux, Alexis "The Riddle of Egypt Brownstone": I183
Devere, Anne: 1301 D
Devi, Mahasveta "DraupaBin: 875
.? '* Devinne, Paul
The Day of Prosperity : 1292
Dia, Countess of: 71
Dickens, Charles Bleak Harre : 316 ,343 "The Boarding House " : 409 David Copperfield : 356 ,501 Dmbey and Son : 227 ,435 Great Expectations : 268 "Miss Lirriper's Legacyw : 409 "Miss M p e r ' s Lodgmgs" : 409
Nichdas Nickleby : 409 - -- me Nd Curiosity Shop : 419 ,501
Oliver Twist : ,919 .- - -
~ i c k m s , Hazel: 1 3 5 ,1356
Dickinscm, Emily: 442.4%. 455 ,456,472,475,481 ,977 ,1459,1551 ,1560,1577 ,1712 "'Nature' is what we see -" (J 668): 468
- "After great pain, a formal feeling comes -" (J 341): 446 ,477 "As if the Sea should part" (J 695): 468 "The Bible is an antique Volume -" (J 1545): 1304 "The Brain - is wider than the Sky" (J 632): 1304 "Come slowly - Eden!" (J 211): 449 ,468 ,1304 "Conferring with myself" (J 1655): 451 - "Crumbling is not an instant's Act" (J 997): 477 "A Door just opened on a street -" (J 953): 468 "The Drop, that wrestles in the Sea" (J 284): 468 "A Dying Tiger - moaned for Drink -" (J 566): 476 "Empty My Heart of Thee -" (J 587): 446 "Exhilaration - is withia -" (J 383): 468 "Experience is the Angled Road" (J 910): 451 "The fm Day's Night had come -" (J 410): 4 f i "Give little Anguish -" (J 310): 449 "God gave a Loaf to every Bird -" (J 791): 476 "God is a distant - stately Lover -" (J 357): 1304 "God is indeed a jealous God -" (J 1719): 1304
b "The going from a world we known'(J 1603): 446 "Growth of Man - like Growth of Nature -" (J 750): 449 "He fumbles at your Soul" (J 315): 477 "He put the Belt around my life -" (J 273): 477 "He scanned it - staggered -" (J 1062): 477 "He was my host - he was my guest" (J 1721): 449,452 - "The Heart asks Pleasure - frrst" (J 536): 446 "The Heart is the Capital of the Mind" (J 1354): 446 "Heaven is so far of the Mind" (J 370): 1304 "How happy I was if I could forget" (J 898): 469 "I am afraid to own a Body -" (9 1090): 449 "I bring an unaccustomed wine" (J 132): 476 "I dwell in Possibility -" (J 657): 468 ,469 "I felt a Cleaving in my Mind -" (J 937): 477 "I had been hungry, all the Years -" (J 579): 476 "I heard, as if I had no Ear" (J 1039): 452 - "I know that He exists" (J 338): 451 "I never hear that one is dead" (J 1323): 451 "I think I was enchanted" (J 593): 452 "I would not paint - a picture -" (J 505): 449 ,468 ,477 "I'm 'wife' - I've finished that -" (J 199): 460 "I'm ceded - I've stopped being Theirs -" (J 508): 460 ,477 "If pain for peace prepares" (J 63): 469 "If recollecting were forgetting" (J 33): 469 "It might be lonelier" (J 405): 468 ,469 "It would have starved a Gnat -" (J 612): 476 "A little East of30rdann (J 59): 449,452
One dare not sound -" (J 777): 468 "we "me iba Lone= If - to baW-" CJ 64% 6 , m T - - -- ---- "The Mind Eves on the Hemw (J 1355): 446 "Much Madness is divinest sense -" (J 435): 477 "My Life had stood - a Laaded Gun -" (J 754): 460 ,477 "My Soul - accused me - And 1 quailed -" (J 753): 449 "Myself was formed - a Carpenter -" (J 488): 477 "Not seeing, still we know -" (J 1518): 1304 "Of Consdousness, her a w N Mate" (J 894): 449,1304 "On my volcano grows the Grass" (J 1677): 477 "One need not be a Chamber - to be Haunted -" (J 670): 451 ,468 "The Province of the Saved" (J 539): 477 "Put, up my lute!" (J 261): 452 "Rearrange a 'Wife's' affection" (J 1737): 460 "The Soul unto itself (J 683): 451 "The Soul's distinct connection" (J 974): 477 "A still - Volcano - Life -" (J 601 !: 477 "Sweet Mountains - Ye tell Me no lie -" ( 722): 452 ,1304 1 ;b "There comes an hour when begging srdps. J 1751): 1304 "There is a Langour of the Life" (J 3%): 477 "There is a mom by men unseen -" (J 24): 1304 "They shut me up in Prose -" (J 613): 468 "This Consciousness that is aware" (J 822): 477 "To be alive - is Power -" (J 677): 4$8 "To own the Art within the Soul" (J 855): 468 "Tried always and Condemned by thee" (J 1559): 449 "Twas like a Maelstrom, with a not& (3 414): 499 "Unable are the Loved to dieF (J 809); 1304 "Undue Significance a starving man attaches" (J 439):-476 "Victory comes late -" (J 690): 476 c
"We shun it ere it comes" (J 15823): 449 "Wen Thou but ill - that I might show thee" (J 961): 451 "What is - 'Paradise' -" (J 215): 1304 "Who never wanted - maddm Joy" (J 1430): 476 "Who were 'the Father and the Son'" (51258): 1304 "Wild Nights - Wild Nights!" (J 249): 468 ,469 ,1304 "A Word made Flesh is seldom" (J 1651): 452 ,1304 ' "You left me - Sire - two legacies" (J 644): 468
Didion, Joan A Bmk of Common Prayer : 594,733 , Play It as It lays: 647 ,669,1466,1583,1633 .
Dik, A. M.: 379
Dinesen, Isak "The Blank Page" : 1604 rp.
"The Deluge of Nordemey" : 657 Seven Gothic Tales : 738
Diop. Birago "An Errand": 1351 " bguiani-Malgam " : 135 1
Disney, Walt: 1365 C
- - -
Diuguid:~ancy: 1070 .
Dix, Dorothy: See Gilmer, Elizabeth 4
Dizeno. Patricia '
Phoebe : 790 %
Qebar, Assia F -- Lo Sdf: 940 Les Impatients : 940
Dobkin. Majorie The Making ofa Feminist: Eatly Jwnals and Letters of M . Carey T h m : 1510
I
/
Dobson, Rosemary: 1016 .>
Dodge, Mary Abigail (pseud. Gail Hamilton) Wod- Gathering : 422
Dodgson, Charles (pseud Lewis Carroll) Alice in Wonderland : 230 ,331 Thmgh the Lading G l m : 331
Donne. John: 1305.1710
Donovad Josephine Black Sail : 1269
Doolirtle. Hilda (H. D.): 1006.1551 ,1629 Bid Me to Live : 960.993 End to T m e ~ : 657 Hed#us : 993> Helen in Egypt : 231 ,960 ,970 ,972 ,975 "Helen": 993 Her : 960 "The Master": 590 Palimpsest : 993 Tribute to Freud : 590 ,657 ,970 Trilogy : 973 ,980 ,993 Winter Love : 971
Dorsef - - "Countess of i)orcheste-rn : 214
Doubleday. Rompn: See Long, Lily ~u-&ta
Douglas. Carol Anne -
Mary Anti- AfGyc 1552
Buglass. Frederick Narrative ofthe Lij% ofF~cle&k Datgltw, AR A m e r i e d l a v e L W P
d
Doyle.ArthurConan '
Sherlock Hdmes : 667 D ,
Dabble, Margaret: 1239.1242 ,1583 The Gawick Year : 626 ,706', 761 ,822 ,933 The Ice Age : 626 ,706 ,822 Jenrsalem the Gdden :' 542 ,596 ,634 ,706 ,761 The Millstone : 626 ,706 ,7617-933 ,1268 ,1450 The Needle's E p : 626,706 ,761 ,822 ,933 The Realms of G d d : 626 ,689 ,706 ,761 ,822 ,933 "A Success Storyn : 633 A Summer Bird- Cage : 626 ,706 ,761 The Waterfhll: 626,706,761,822 ,824,833 ,874,933 ,1293 ,1327 .-
Dragu, Margaret: 0 9 6
' Dreiser, Theodore '
I
s
Sister Cam'e : 535
Dreder, ~osalyn I Am the Beautijirl Stranger : 1275
Droste-Hulshoff, Annette von: 369
Druzhinin, Aleksandr Pdinka Sah : 303
9
Dryden, John: 151 An E m y of Dramcrtlc Poesy : 1305 Maniage A- lrt- Made : 1310 --
Du Bois, W. E. B. "The Damnation of Womenw: 513 Darkwater : 513 ,
Du Jardin, Rosamond Class Ring : 817 A Man fa Marcy : 817
'a I&
* . \ 4
, ' . - > . Da Maurier, Daphne Rebecca : 1257
Du Maurier, George Trilbj: 231
DuBois, Margaret Constance "The Lass of the Silver Swordn: 601
-
The Matchbox H a w : 1274 Over the Fence B Orct : 1274
-
B " Duley, Margaret
- Cdd Pm~1d : 605 The ENS of the GJI : 605 Highway to Valau : 605 - "Mother Boggan": 605 P
Novelty on ErYth : 605 --
Dunbar-Nelson, Alice: 984 ,1612 "I Sit and Sew": 1306 "Sonnet": 1306
Dunbar, William The Twa Maritt Wemen and the Wedo : 47
a Duncan. Sara Jeannette: 1224 . Carsin Cinderella : 1263 ,1281 C
A Daughter of T h y : 1298 The Imperialist : 1298 Simpie Adventures of a Memsahib : 1298 A Social Deportwe : 1298
lhnham, Mabel ' I
Grand River : 599 KristlPs Trees : 599 Toward Sadam : 599 - - The Trail ojthe Conestoga : 599 The Trail of the King's Men : 599
DuPlessis. Rachel Blau "Eurydice": 1670
i
Duras. Marguerite Destroy, She Says metmire: DitA elle) : 1216 Le Ravissement de Ld V . Stein : 979 Maiemto Cantabile : 1216
\ The Sailer* Gibraltar : 1216 -
The Sea Wall (Vn Barrage c a r e le Pacijque) : The Square : 1216 The Vice- C d : 1216
Dykewoman, Elana ( E l m Nachman) River-nger Woman : 879.886
Eden, Dorothy: 787 ,839
Edgeworth, Maria: 1687 "The Absentee": 174 "Ennui": 174 Letters jb Literary U i e s : 202 "Vivian": 174
/-
a+
Egerton, Elizabeth: 1301 li
- - --
Egoart Elizabeth <
ME^ : 350 0 . v
Warnan's- Wroog : 350
Eisenstein, Phyllis: 864 I
Eldershaw, Flora Pahidan and Maqorie Barnard (pseud. M. B g u r d Eldershaw) A Haise Is Built : 731
Eldershaw. M. m d : See ~ldershaw, Flora Pahidan and Marjorie Bamard
Eliot George: 410,421 ,1321 ,1542 ,1620 ,1629 ,1685 Adam Bede :. 230.323 ,329 ,343 ,514,1293 " Agatha " : 464 Anngart : 348 ,444 "Brother and Sister": 306 Daniel Deronda : 237 ,289 ,323 . j29 ,348 ,432 ,444,1289,1604 " Erinna ": 348
- Felix Hdt, The Radical : 437 "Janet's Repentan&" : 289 "The Lifted Veilw: 323 "The Love Story of Mr. Gilfil": 348 Middlemarch : 235,243,289.323,329.348.350.381 ,432,666.1259.1268.1290. 1293 , , 3L
1544 The ill on the FZm : 230 ,289,306,323,329 ,334,386 . 1293 . 1 3 0 , 1501 . 1544 . 1616.
-~ 1659 - Romda : 289 ,329 Scenes of Clerical Life : 323 ,329 31
Si la Marner : 289
Eliot T. S. The Waste Lmd : 981 ,1168
-
Elizabeth of Bohemia: 1301
t Ct Ellis. Sarah Stickney
The Daughters of England : 253 ,410 The Mothers of England : 253 ,410 The Wives of Englqnd : 253 ,410 ' The Wpmen of England : 253 ,410
i
Ellison, Harlan "A Boy and His Dog": 926
/ Ellisqn. Ralph
The Inivisible Man : 671 ,894
mlmann. Mary %'
Thinking abow W m e n : 1536
\
r - Alcestic : 5 EaccAoe: 9.18
- --
d
Hefen : 5 . - Medea: 5.9 - The Tmjm W a e n : 5
% - E v m . Mari: 1165.1317 - "I Am a Black Woman": 989 - " W h e ~ Have" You Gone": 989
Everen Carolyn h e @cud Elizabeth Kent) The H~tcse oppasit'e : 1282
- Who? : 1282
_ Faker. Doris The LifP of Laem Iiickok: Heanw Rorseveft's Friend : 1510
Faderman, Lillian Sw-n err Ramontic Friendship and Love between Women jiom the
Re Resew : 1712
Fair- &.'!jam Maitland, Valerie Miner. Michele Roberts and Michelinc Wandor Tales I Tell M y Maher : 1648 ,1666
-.. i Farah. Nuruddin
F t a aCrodred Rib : 810 .. A-Naked Needle: 810
Sweet and S a u &ilk : 810 I
Fanner. Frances Will There Really Be a Mwning? : 671
Farmer, Joyce: See Sutton, Joyce
Farmer, Philip Jose: 646
, Fuquhar. George F
The Beaux Stratagem : 1310 ,1311 The Inconstant; w, The Way to Win Him : 1311 The Rectuiting O&er : 1311 Sir Hany Wildair : 131 1
Farrar. Rowena Rutherford 3
--;;fWondrol~s Manent Then : 935
Faulkner. William A b d a , Absrrl0m.I : 698 "The Fire and the Hearth": 698 . Light in Augu.a : 698 Sorsrxis : 698 Sddier's Pay : 698 The Sautd and the Fury : 774 The Lirrvanquished : 698
Fauset Jessie Redmond: 1306,1317 ,1612 I I
i --- -
Fedele. Cassandra: 53
Fell, Alisan I "Girl's Gifts",: 996 - - (r
1
I Fenelon, Francois I
Avis a une qame de Q d i t e : 122 Traite de PEpucation des Rlies : 117 ,122
Ferber, Edna I 1
So Big : 6481 I
Fern. Fanny: See Parion, Sara Willis
Ferne. John The B ~ O Z O ~ of Gentrie : 59
I
Ferrier. Susan I I
The Inheritance : 364 . Mamiage j 364
I
I
Fiedler,Leslie I'
The Ret n o the Vanishing American : 1278 7 Fiel,d, Amy W.: llli9
- - t"
Fielding. Henry: ll/tXI ~ \
Amelia : 188 ,1322 Jonatha Wild : 188 , h e p h ndrews : 188 The M ern Husband: 1314 3 Tom Jo s : 188 ,1303 ,1322 7
Fielding. Sarah: 2 6 The Ad entures of David Simple : 191 t
Finch. Anne. Countess of Winchilsea: 151 , 1536 "An Aspiration": 129 P
"Free-lbhkers": 1305 . "The Lawrell": 129
"No Gnce": 129 ,1305 he Poem of Anne, Countess of Winchilsea : 134 "Song": 1305 "Spleen " : 1305 "A Supplication for the Joys of Heaven": 129 J
"A Tale": 129
Finchandler. Zelda: 1309
Firestone, Shulamisth I
The Dialectic of Sex : 1571
First Ruth and AM Scott Olive Schreiner : 1468
Fisher, Dorothy Canfield: See Canf~eld. Dorothy
Fisher, Vardis The Maihers : 769
Fitch, Clyde The City : 1046
0 Fitch. James: 1302
Fitzgerald, F. Scott: 741 -
The Grea Gatsby : 902 Tender Is the Night : 704 ,1450
Fitzgerald, Zelda: 704 Save Me the W d t z : 741 ,889.1450 ,1698
Flamer, Janet (pseud Genet): 1457
Flauben Gustave L'Edwion Sentimentale : 361 ,375 Madame Bovary : 235.272.361 ,366,411 ,794,1258 . 1290
Flavell. John: 1302
Fleming. Marjory: 1296
Flores, Juan de Grisel y Mirabella : 1328
Foote. Mary Hdock Led- Hwse Claim : 769
Forbes. Kathyrn Bank Accarnt : 527
The Goad Sddier : 1501 Parade's End : 581 S a e Do Not : 675
The Liberatron of L n d Byon Jones : 935
Ford J he Broken H e m : 141
0
Fordye, James a
Sennons to. Y arng W a e n : 276 I
Forrestor. Mrs. Fair Wumen : 279
Forster. E M. ~ddswt&h Lowes Dickinson : 685 Howards End : 685 Mavice : 685 '
A Passage to India : 685 ,861
. . Fortson. Deborah: 1064
Foster, Jeanette Sex Variant Women in Literature : 1712
4
Fothergill. Jessie The First Vidin : 279
Foucault Michel Histaire de la Sexualite : 1674
Fouiller, Mme. (pseud Georges Bruno) Fmcinet : 404 - -
Foxcroft, Thomas: 1302. A Sermon Reached . . . ajer the Funeral of Mrs. Elizabeth Foxcroj•÷ : 1283
Foxe. John Acts and Momunents : 76 ,116 The Book of M a r t p : 76
Frame. Janet: 768 ..I463 , Owls Do Cry: 608 ,1274
Francis. Dick
Francis. Marianne: 770
Francisco, Nia "Friday Noon Feelings": 1010 "I ' escent Child": 1010 w h i t rning and Myself": 1010 "TO~OITOW N m " : 1010.
Frank, Lawrence K. and Mary Frank How To Be a Woman : 798
Franklin. f . E Black Girl : 1034 ,1062
Franklin, Stella Mana Miles (Miles Franklin): 1119 All That Swagger : 333 Brent of Bin Bin : 333
- MyBdUiaut Career : 333,337 .515 - - - - - - -
The Net of Circumstance : 1178 Oh Dearborn Street : 1178
a Prelude to Waking : 1178 Sam Price fiom Chicago : 1178
- Fraser, Kathleen: 1201
New Shoes': 1626 What I Want : 1626
. Fraser, Sylvia .
The Candy Factory : 652 ,687 ' A C d A f i r : 652
Pandora : 651 ,652 ,912
Freeman, Mary Wilkins ' TheCopyCatandOtherStwies: 247 \
' A Humble Rovnawe and Other Stwies : 247 A New England Nun and Other Stwies : 247 t
"A New England Nun": 1501 . .
Six Trees : 247 The W-iming Lady and Other Staries : 247
b
French, M d y n : 701 The Women's R m : 526.547 .594<. 639.684.733 ,806.862.871 ,911 11224. 1583 . 1631 .
1666 P
Fresne, Yvonne du: 768
Freud, Sigmund: 1684 7
D m Fragment of an Anaiysis of a Case of Hysteria : 636 The Interpretation of Dreams : 636
. $ a - - Studies in Hysteria : 636
Frey, Cecilia Breakaway : 652
Ftiday, Nancy My Mdher, Myself: 684
Frost Frances Innocent Summer : 526
"d' Fry, Elmbeth: 226
Fuller, Margaret: 389.1321 , 1629
Gage, Matilda Josl yn , ,
Wornon, Church and State : 401
Gager, William "William Gager to Queen Elizabeth": 116
-- -
Gagnon, Madeleine: 1180 ,1181 ,1324 - - - -
i Antre : 1169 Lueur:1169 .
Gaines, Ernest The Autobiography ofMiss Jane Pitman : 545
L
Gaite, Carmen Martin Retahilas : 803
Galdos, Benito Perez '. Tristana : 242
Gale, Zona Daughter of the Mwning : 753 Fn'endship Village : 526 Miss tulu Bett : 1076 When I Was a Little Girl : 526
Gallant Mavis A Fairly G d Time : 652 Green Water, Green Sky : 651
Gallegos. Manuel d Dona Barbara : 1184
Galloway, Grace Growden "Diary of Grace Growden Galloway": 159
Garland. Hamlin Main Travelled Roads : 781 Rare ofDutcher's Codly : 535 A Son of the Middle Border : 1269
Garneau, Michel Quatre a quatre : 1043
Garner. Helen Monkey Grip : 1111 Y
Garrett, Zena The Mulberry Tree : 526
Gashe. Marina "Village of Toilw : 1160
Gaskell. Elizabeth: 423 ,1321 CranlQrd : 229 ,1266 The Lifi of Chadatte Bronte : 229 "Lizzie Leigh": 318 Mary &man : 318 ,345 ,349 ,383 Nmh vlnd Sarth : 318,345,349- Ruth:230.*345
"The Sexton's Hero" : 318 SHvids Lovers : 345
Gas, William: 701
Gaunt, Mary Alone in West Afiica : 772 -
A Broken J w n e y : 772 Reflection - in kuMica : 772 "
The Uncounted Cost : 772 Where the Twain Meet : 772 A Woman in China : 772 4
Gauthier, Xaviere: 1324
Gearhart, sally The Wandergrand : 809
Geffer, Edward "I'm a Union Gal": 1356
Gems, Pam: 1070
Genet: See Flamer. Janet
. Genlis, Caroline-Stephanie Adele et Theaiwe ou Lettres sur PEducation : 185
Gens. Pam Ajter Birthday : 1082 Dusa, Fish, Star and V i : 1082 M y Warren : 1082 Queen Christina : 1082
*
- - Gerrnain, Jean-aude
Les Hmcts et les bas dla vie dune diva, Sarah Menard par eux- memes. Une Mondoguerie buufle: 1043 ,
Gemsback, Hugo: 864 -.-+
Gerrard, Alice: 1345
,( Gibbon, Edward The Decline and Fdi of the Roman Empire : 161
Gibbons, Stella Cdd Cqmfm Farm : 514,1666
Gide. Andre L'lmmwaliste : 794
Gidlow, Elsa: 1203 - - Ask No Man's Pardon : 1019
-
Mokings& Meditatrtatrm : 1019 - --
On a Grey Thread : 1019 Wild Swan Singing : 1019
Giguere, Diane: 1181 Whirlpod (Z'eau est pro&onde) : W
Gilboord, Margaret Gibson: 1455
Gilrm. Caroline Howard: 315
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins - Herland : 807 The Yellow Wallpaper : 340 ,882 ,1295 ,1631 ,1637
Gilmer. Elizabeth (pseud Dorothy Dix): 1099
Giwffi. Daniela: 1001
Giovanni, Nikki: 1001 . 1317 "Mothers": 1493 "My House": 989 "Nikki-Rosa" : 989 "Seduction" : 1560
Gipson, Fred Old Yeller : 6%
Gisborne. Thomas An Inquiry into the Duties of the Female Sex : 256
Gissing. George The Emancipnted > 299.330 ,502 In the Year of Jubilee : 299 ,330 I S h l Ciarendon : 299 New Gmb Street : 502 The Odd Women : 330,341 ,502 ,734,1259 I ~e
The Whirlpod : 299 ,330 Warkers in the Down : 299'
Glasgow. Ellen The Ancient Law : 852
7 Barren Ground : 535 ,648 ,918 ,1275 The Buttle G m n d : 852 The Delivemnce : 852 The Descendant : 852 In This Ow LIP : 1288 ,
LIP and Gabriella : 535 The MUIer of Old Church : 852 The Ramance of a Plain Man : 852 The Sheltered bfi : 526 Vein oflm : 918 ,935
The Voice of the People : 852 The Wheel o f f i f i : 852
Glaspell, Susan -
Ambrose Hdt and fidelity : 1276 Inheritors : -1083 " A Jury of Her.Peersn: 1473 ,1637 Tripes : 1076 ,1224' The Verge : 1076 ; 1083 .
Woman's H o w : 1076
Gudwin, Gail: 1204 The Odd Woman : 734,862 ,1259,1293 ,1533,1631 "A Sorrowful Womann : 632 ,633 Videt Clay : 1583
Godwin, William . Cdeb Williams : 413 An ~ n ~ u i r ~ ~oncern in~ '~d i t i cd &ice and its Influence on Virtue and Happiness : 177
< Fleetwoad, or The New Man of Feeling : 173 Memoirs of Mary WdlstonecrajZ : 177
Goethe, Johann The Sorrows of Y amg Werther : 177
Goldsmith, Oliver The Vicar of Wakejield : 194 -
Goncharov, Ivan Aleksandrovich _- Oblomov : 304
Gonmurt Edmond de and Jules de Goncourt Genninie Lucerteux : 347 L.q Rlle Elisa : 347
Gonzaga, Cecilia: 53
Gonzales, Sylvia: 1702 "Chicana Evolution " : 955 - "On an Untitled Theme": 955
Gordimer, Nadine Burger's Daughter : 1205 The Conse~ationist : 641 A Guest of HOIUIL(T : 614 TheLateBavgeaisWorld: 641 . The Lying Days : 641 - Occosion fiK Loving : 641 A Wwld of Strangerr; - 641
Gordon. Mary Final Payments : 547 ,871 ,1583
"Nancy Creighton" : 1327
Gore. Catherine Cecil : 225 The Dean's Daughter : 225 The Diamond and the Pearl : 225 The Diary of a Desennuy?e 1 225 The Hamiltm : 225 Morhers and Daughters : 225 Mrs. Armpage; or Femtrle Dwnination : 225 Pin Money : 225 Progress and PreMice :. 225
Gotlieb, Phyllis: 864
Gould. Lois: 1620 Final Analpis : 669 ,792 ,1583 A Sea- Change : 547 ,669 ,862 Such Goad Friends : 669 ,1583
Gournay, Marie le Jars de Egdite des hmmes et des fimmes : 122 -,
Grief des dames : 122
Gowan, Elsie Park 1224 I
. . -- - -
Gower, Jehn Confissio Amantis : 35
Grace, Patricia: 768 W4iarik.i : 1174
Graffigny, Mme. deL151
Graham, Catharine Macaulay: See Macaulay, Catharine
Grahn. Judy: 1001,1555 "The Common Womann: 1443,1444,1560 Edward the Dyke and Other Poems : 995 ,1560 . "A Woman Is Talking to Deathn: 995 , 1193 ,1443 ,1444
Grand, Sarah /
M s the Impasibie : 286 The Heavenly Twins : 286 Idealo: A Studyjiom Ljfe : 286
Grant, Cynthia: 1025
Grant, Diane What Glartart0us Times They Had : 1047
Graves, Robert '. The White Gcddess : 1OOO
Gray, Francine du Plessis - ppppp- - Lavers and Tyants : 548 ,
Cynthia Wakeham's Money : 1282 The Gdden Slipper and Other M l e m s J 6 r Videt Strange : 1282 In Lad Man's Lone: A Second Episade in the Lifi of Amerlia Buttenvu-th : 1282 The kavenwarth C c i : 1282 '
Miss Hurdr An Enigma : 1282 Three Thcusand Ddltvs : 1282
Greene, Robert h e s W : 113
Greenfield, h b e t h Taylor: 1362
d 0
Greenspan, Judy . "To Lesbians Everywhere" : 1443
Greenwood, Grace ?Mistress 0'Raffert.y on the W o w ~ u k o n " : 921
Gregory, John A Faher's Legacy to His Daughters : 177 ,256 ,276
Gregory, Roberta: 1130
Greiffenberg, Catharina Regina von: 133
Grey, Zane . Desert Gdd : 799 \
The Heritage of the Desert : 799 --
Riders of the Purple Sage : 7% --, I
Grierson, Edward The Second Man : 667q
------A~'
,
Griffin, Susan. 1001,1560 "Breviary " : 1443 - .
"ILikemThinkofHarrietTubmanw:952 '
Like the Iris of an Eye : 1626 "Mother and Child": 975 "Nineteen Seventy-Qne " : 952 "Nineteen Sixty-Eight" : 952 "The Song of the Woman with Her Parts Coming Outw: 952 "The Tiredness Cytle" : 952 "White Bear": 975 "The Woman Who Swims in Her Tears": 952 W m e n and Nature : 1325
The H&wy of U y Barton : 194 - -
Grifiths. Linda Maggie and Pierre : 1226
Gridce. Angelina Weld: 983 ,1317 . 1612 ,1705 Rachel : 1063 "Tenebrism: 1306
6
Grimm, Brothers: 1365. U68 - "Aschtnputtel": 1360 "King Thrushbeard": 1329,1360 "Snow-Drop": 1360
+ "The Twelve Dancing Princessesn: 1360
Grossman, Edith Searle The Heat? of the Bush : 1274
Grove. Frederick Philip FrJts of the Ervth : 746 ,1269 In Search of M p l f : 746 Master of the MU! : 746 ,1467 Ow Doily Bread : 746 Settlers of the Marsh : 746 ,938 Two Generations : 746 Yoke of Ufi : 746
Grumbach, Qoris Chamber Music : 547
Grymeston, Elizabeth: 1301 Miscelanea Meditations Memwatiues : 123
Guerin. Michelle Le Sentier de la lmve : 912
8 2-
Guemmte, Claire Mathilde et Gabrielle : 404
Guevrernont Germaine: 1.324 Murk- Didace : &I ,1181 The Outlonder (Ze Surue~nt ) : 654,1181
Guilbeault, Luce: 1324
Guilbeault, Luce, Marthe Blackbum, et al. La Nef des Sacieres : 1043 ,1169
Q
-
Ciuillet, Pernette du Rhynes : 80
Guiney, Louise Imogen: 472 Gme QuiII Papers : 503 Happy Ending : 503 Lovers' St. Ruth's and Three Other Tales : 503 The Martfls Idyl and Sharter Poems : 503 A Roadside Harp : 503 Songs at the Start : 503 The White Sail and Other Poems : 503
Gunn, Jeannie (Mrs. Aenas Gum) Little Black Princess : 1280 We of the Never, Never: 1280
Gutluie. A. B., 31. The Big Sky : 1278 The Way West : 769 -
Guthrie. Woody *
"Union Maid": 1356
Gutridge, Molly: 221
Gutzkow, Karl W d y die Zweifletin : 1270
-- -
--- , /-- -
-
Guy, Rosa Ruby: 547,1179 ,
H. D.: See Doolittle. Hilda
Hacker, Marilyn: 1209
Haggard, Elizabeth Nobady Waved G d b w : 790
Hale. Sarah Josepha Nwthwoad : 387
Hall, Hazel Cry of Time : 915 --
Curtains : 945 Walkers : 945
r
Hall. RaddyfTe: 14% "Miss Ogdvie Finds Herself": 844 The Unlir Immp : 602 ,844,886 The Well of h l i n e s s : 602 ,657 ,685 ,713 ,844,879 ,886.1567 ,1578 . 1712
Hurp Pbuong: 1240
H m k a Chat).: 1652 I *
&usbay. Lcrmiec: Ha?, 1482 I h c ihnivaf af Mr. Todog': 1031 f h e &nbng Grrvrd : 1031 ,1062,1063,1085 'in Mare uf the Equality of Ma': 1031 .lo68 l uB le rJu : 1068.1f.m A Rdsn in r k Sun : 1024.1027 .1062.1063.1068 ,1071 .I085 ,1165
I 7Ae Sign in Sdiwy Bnra&n!s Windw : 1033 .1W ,10850 'Slaw#rr dt b u p o i r md The S& Sex : An American Commentarym: 1031 To& Yasry. G 4 ~ r r n d B k c k : 1068 Whar Use Am Rwbqt: 1031
"A Double Standardw: 1306 - I& &Roy, Or Shadows UpIijed : 466 : 1570 Light beymd the Darkness : 466 The M m y of Alabama and Other Poems : 466 Maws. A S t a y of the Nile : 466 Poems (1871) : 466 Pmnu (1893): 4% 0
Peenu on MisceUoneacs Subjxts : 466 Sketches of Saithern Lik : 466 ,467 ,1306
Harper, Olive ' S n o W c y AbroadW: 290
Hanis, Bertha Catching S a d o v e : 879 C o n ~ s s i m of a Chembino : 879 h e r : 886 ,1539
Harris, George Washington Suit &win& Yarns Spun b Bwn Durn'd Fod : 259
Harris, Valerie - ke Game : 1?12
Nights Alone :, U12 Redesther Play : 1212
Harrison. Susan Frances (pseub Seranus. h4eduG and Gilbert King) Canadian Birthday Bodc : 505 Cruwded Our and Other Sketches : 505 The Faea of Baug- Marie : 505 In Nuthern Skies and Other Poems : 505 Pine, Rase and Flew de lis : 505 RinglEeld : 505
Harte, Bret "The Idyl of Red Gulch": 769
a - t
Hanrko. Hiratst& (pseud Hiratsuka Raicho): 1126 . 1131
Harvor, Beth: 1224
-004 Gwen: 1016
Hasanovich. Elizabeth ' L
One ofThem. Chapters fm a Possionme Auditgraph y : 527 --
Hatch, h4xy R P. Tire Bunk Trugedy : 1282 The Missing Man : 1282
. The Srrange Disoppcarunce of Eugene Cmsocks : 1282 The U#wd Myzlery: A Tragedy ofNew England : 1282
I
Haupc Enid
6
"Seventeen" Bwk of Y&g Living : 798
Hauptrnann. Gerhart Mand of the Great Maher : 532 .
Hawkes. John: 701 4
Hawthorne, Nathaniel: 420 8
"The Birthmark": 506 The Blithedde Romance : 506 "Rappaccids Daughter": 250 The Scatlet Letter : 230.306 ,1261 ,1276 ,1278
" "YoungGoodmanBrown": 506 V
Haywood, Eliza: 219.226 The Adventures of hm. : 1260 Agreeable Ca/edonian : 1260 Bath Intrigue? : 204 - The C w t of Caramnia : 204 Eovaai, Prince;ss.of Lpveo : 204 , The Female Spectatw : 204 The F a n a t e FOURCUings : 204 The Histcry of k m m y and k n n y Jessamy : 204 ,1260 The Histay of Miss Betsy Thacghtless : 168 ,204 JbSt?iia: 204 . - A L e t t e r m H - G - G, Esq. : 204 Lave in Excess : 204,1260 Memairs of a Certain Is lad Adjzcent to the Kingdom of Utopia : 204 The Mercenary Laver : 204 ., 1260 Philidore and Phentia : 1260
' The Virtuous Villager, or Virgin's Victwy : 204
Head, Ann Mr. and Mrs. Bo b hnes : 790
5
Hearne, James Margarer Fleming : 1054 '
Shwe Acres : 1054 t
Heben h e : 1324 Children of the Black Sabbath ( L a Enfhnts du Sabbat) : 912 "Eve": 1181 Kamou~uska : 645 ,708 Le Tombeau dds Rds : 1018
I Le Tiurent : 625
Hedges. Elaine: 701
Heilbnm. Carolyn Toward a Recognition of Androgyny : 1674
Heilbrun, Carolyn (pseud Amanda Cross): 616
- Heinlein, Robert Stranger in a Strunge Land : 646
Hellman. Lillian The Children's H w : 1224 Pentimento : 909 , 1480
Heloise: 751
Hemingway, b e s t A Forewell to Anns : 612 ,929 "Fathers and Sons": 1278 "The Indian Camp": 1327 A Moveable Feavt : 900 The Old Man and the Sea : 696 "Th@Short HappyLife of Frances Macomber" : 781 The Sun also Rises : 900
Hendemn, Zenna: 864
Hen&. Vivette "Leda and the Swan": 989
Q He- Martha: See W e n , Emma
Henry. Alice: 1119
Henry. h g h , Bob y, h g h : 1060 .-
Lulu Street : 1060
Henry, 0.: See Poner. William Sydney
Henryson, Robert "Complaint of Crisseid": 47 Fable of Charuecleer: 47 Marail Fabillis of Esope the Phrygian : 47 "Robene and Makyne": 47 Testament of Cresseid : 72
Hene, Caroline Lee: 315 Edine; CR Magndia Vale : 387 Linda, ar The Young P h of the Belle Crede. a Tale ofSowhern L.& : 279 .387
Herbert, FEU& DWK : 646 ,926
Herbert, Mary (~idney): 1301
Herodotus: 1 .23 Histwies : 6
Old- New Land : 532
Hesiod: 1 " Theogeny : 21 Wbtks and Dap : 21
fl
Hesse. H ennan Glass Bead Game : 532
Hewen. Dorothy The Beat&@ Pwtland : 1215 Bdbin Up : 1185 ,1237 Catspow : 1215 The Chapel Perilous : 607 ,1215 ,1237 Greenhaue : 1185 k u n : 1215 The Manjvm Mukinupin : 1215 Mrs. Pmer and the Angel : 1215 Pandm's C r m : 1185 ,1215 The T@y Hdlow Stwy : 1215 ,1237 This Old Man Comes Rdling H m e : 1215 ,1237
2
Heywood. Thomas The Exempkry tives and Mewable Acts of6ine of the M M Worthy omen of the World :
59.116 'k
A Wanan Killed With Kindness : 85
Hill. Joe "The Rebel Girlw: 1356
8 .
Hill. Roberta: 1010 ,I'
"Conversations Overheard on Tamalpais ~ & d " : 944 4
/
/
Hirsh. Charlgp Teller /
The Cage : 753 I . ,/'
Hodge. Merle Crick Crack Monkey : 716
0 , A -
Hogan. Linda "Blessings" : 944 "Woman Gardening": 1010
Holiday. Billie: 1361 . 1362
Holleq. Marietta: 2% ,1321 hawh Allen on the Wanan Question : 431 haah Allen's W i k as a P. A. and P. I. a Samuntha at the Centennial : 431 My Opinim and Betsy Bdbet's : 258 ,287 ,422 ,431 ,921 My Wayward Pardner : 287 Samantha ~ u l n g the Brethren : 258 Samantha ammg the Cdaed F d h : 258 Samantha at S m q p : 431
Samantha at the World's Fair : 258 ,431 Samantha on the Woman Question : 258 Samantha vs. losioh : 258- Sweet Cicely : 258 ,431 Widder Daxile's Love A&t : 431
Holmes, Mary- Jane: 315 Edith Lyle : 279
Halmes, Oliver Wendell A Mortal Antipoth y : 269
-
Halt, Victoria: 787 ,839 -
Kirkland Revels : 1257 The Mistress of Mellyn : 824 ,1671 On the Night of the Seventh Mwn : 824 The Pride of the Peacock : 1671
. The Shadow of the Lynx : 824,1671
Holtby. Winifred: 695 S d h Ridipg : 1666
Homer lliad : 2 The Odyssey : 7 , 1 0 -
Hook, Lucyle @ . She ventures and He Wins : 146
Hooper, Johnson J. Adventures of Captain Simon Suggs : 259
Homer, Hattie "The Difference " : 448 -
Hough, Emerson Nwth of 36 : 587
Howard, Elizabeth Jane Odd* Girl Out : 1450
Howard, Maureen Befie My Time : 591 Bridgepwt Bus : 591 Facts of Li> : 591 N a a Ward abact Nightingales : 591
Howatch, Susan: 839
Howe, Florence and Ellen Bass, eds. NoMwe M m h ! An AnthdogyofPoems by Women : 1443
Howe. Tina: lW
-. Howells. Annie
"LeCoureur deshis": 265 Reuben Dale : 265
- "A Visit to a Country House": 265 a .
Howells, William Dean: 265 Annie Kilburn : 295 A p d Hopes : 248 ,249 ,295 A Chance Acquaintance : 295 Doctor Breen's Practice : 295 ,308 A Hazard of New Fmunes : 249 Indian Summer : 249 The Minister's Charge : 295 A Maiern Instance : 249 Mrs. Fanelf : 248 An Open- Epd Compirac y : 249 The Rise of Silas Lupharn : 249 ,296 The Stwy ofa Play : 248 Suburban Sketches : 248 Their Wedd6ng Jburney : 296 A Woman's Reason : 295 ,308
Hoyos. Angela de: 950 "The Greatest City": 955
Hroswitha Abraham : 45 Calimachus : 45 Dulcitius : 45 P
Gaificanp : 45 Paphnutius : 45 Pn'mwdia : 45
. Sapientia : 45 e
Hubert, Cam: See Cameron, Anne I
Langsmn - - "Madam Poems" : 994
-
"Mulatto": 1165
Hull. Helen R "Tile Fire": 601
~ ~
Labyinth : 886 -- - -
Hunt Violet The Celebrity at Home : 856 The Celebn'ty's Daughter : 856 A Hard W m : 856 The Maiden's A.Ogtess : 856 M a e Tales ~ f t h e Uneasy : 856 S m r cw Later : 856 Tales of the Uneasy : 856 ,857 Their Hems : 856
' . Their Lives : 856 IFrdcist, IFrrkrtlrf: 856 -
White Rme ofWeary Leaf: 856
Hunter. Kristin . Gad Blesr'the Child : 1165 -
Hwst, Fannie Imitation of Life : 1266
Hwston, Zora Neale: 919,1165 ,1317 ,1612 ,1629 "Gilded Bits": 866 hnah's Gaud Vine : 866 Mmes, Man of the Mantain : 866 Seraph on the Sewanee : 866 "Sweat": 866 Their Eyes Were Waching Gad : 554 ,719 ,866,883 ,922 ,1164,1265 ,1570,1683 /
Hutchinson, Anne: 131
Hutchinson, Lucy: 121
Huxley, Aldous Brave New Wwld : 1467
Hyde, Robin The Godwits Fi'y : 829 ,1274
' L
Hyvrard, Jeanne Les P m s de C ~ h e r e : 1173 Mere la mwt : 1173
Ibsen, Henrik A Ddf's Hause : 486 ,487 ,489 ,491 ,504 ,1650 An Enemj ofthe People : 487 ,491 G h m s : 9 7 Hedda G&er : 487 ,491 ,1650 John Gabriel Bwkman : 487 ,491 The Lady fiom the Sea : 487,491 Lady Inger of Ostraat : 491 Little Ep ' f : 491 The Macter Builder : 487 ,491 ,96 0 &c~ma : 491 The Pillars of Society : 491
13 : 487 ,491 , 1650
hen W e Dead Aw&n : 487 ,491 487,491 .
- Inchbald, Elizabeth
Nature and Art : 194 A Simple Stwy : 189 ,191 ,194,1260
Irigaray, Luce: 1559,1651 ,1656 ,1709 -= mecWque bes rlmdes" : 1584 --
"An0 the One Doesn't Stir without the Other (Et I'une ne huge pas sans l'autre)": 1558 ,1615 The Sex That Is Ncif One (Ce Sexe qui den esr pas un) : 979 ,1173 ,1558 ,1622 ,1647 Speculum of the Other Warnan (Speculum de i'mrtrefim%ze) : 979 ,1173 ,1558 ,1571 ,1622 ,
1.647 ,1694 "When Our Lips Speak Together" ("Qiimd nos levres se parlent"): 1557 ,1614,1616
'L'
Iron, Ralph (pseud): See Wreiner, Olive
Irving, John . The World Accwding to Garp : 862
Isabel. Sharon Yesterday's Lessons : 871 ,879
Ishvani The Brocaded Sari : 700
Isidore of Seville Liber sententiarum : 63
Ivalw.~ Judith "In ihe Lodge": 1010
Iverson, Lucille and Ka- Ruby, eds. We Became New: Poems by Contempwary American Women 1003 2
Iyrioun, Ifa: 1683
Jaakola, Pirkko Ladlabps fw Illegitimate Children : 1065
Jacker. Corinne: 1064 Bits and Pieces : 1028 0
r Jackson. Bessie: 1361 1
a Jackson, Elaine: 1064 Toe kun : 1034
jackson, Helen Hunt: 472 Ramona : 1466
Jackson. Mahalia: 1362
Jackson,Mol!y: 1356 Lb 7
Jackson, Shirley The Bird's Nest : 826 Come Along with Me : 826 I
Hangsamon : 526 ,826 The Haunting of Hill Haue : 826 ,1277
Life among the Savages : 588 ,921 - - - - -
t
Jacobs, Harriet j Incidents in the Ufie of a Slave Girl : 274
lames, $ L R. Minty Alley : 716
James, Henry: 1276 The American : 358 e
"The Aspern Papers" : 378 The Bostonians : 260 ,269 ,308 ,338 ,438 ,675 Daisy Miller : 234.295 ,378 The Gdden Bowl : 358 The Pmrait of a Lady : 235 ,290,295 ,355 ,358 ,363 ,378 ,434 ,1259 ,1261 "Rose-Agathe": 358 The Spoils of Poynton : 378 Washington Square : 378 , 1501
f
James, P. D. Inment Blood : 1293
.- An Unsuitable I& j iw a W m n : 667
Jameson, AM^ Brownell: 226 ,1566 Characteristics of W m e n : 1298 Diary of an Ennupe : 1298 Merndrs of Celebrated Female so&eigns : 1298 Memairs of the Loves of the Poets : 1298 Winter Studies and Summer Rambles in Canada : 380 . 1298
Janson, Kristofer Sara : 412
0
Jenkins, John Holmes, ed. Recdlectiom of &rly T e m : The Memoirs of John Hdland Jenkins : 1297
J e ~ i n g s , Kate Come to Me My Melanchdy Baby : 998
Jennings, Kate, ed. Mother Pm Roded : 998 ,1111
Jerrold, Douglas The Rent Day : 419
Jewett, Sarah Orne A Country Ductw : 308 ,497 ,1266 The Carntry of the Pcinted Firs : 497 Deephaven : 497 ,1266 "Martha's Lady": 305
Jewsbury, Geraldine: 257 ,410 Constance Herbert : 301
0
The Half Sistetx' A Tale : 301 MrrrianWfie~ : 3lX - - - - - - - - -
Rlght w W m g : 301 . The Smows of Gentility : 301
4
Zoe: The Histcry ofTwo Lives : 301 .
Jhabvala, Ruth Prawer ~ e m a n d ~ w t : 508.635
Joceline, Elizabeth: 1301 - ' The Mothers Legacie to Her Vnborn Child : 123 ,1294
1
-Johnson, Charles: 1310 '.. Johnson, Diane
Burning : 1450 The S h h Knows : 862 ,871
Johnson, Eleanor and Judah Kalatoni A Girlstarts Out . . . : 1086
Johnson, Georgia Douglas: 1317'. 1612 An Awwnn h e Cycle : 1015 B m e : 1015 ,1164 The H e a of a Wolman : 1015 ,1164 "The Heart of a Woman": 1306
Johnson, Helene "Bottled": 1306 "Magalu": 1306 "Poem": 1306 "Sonnet to a Negro in Harlem": 1306
Johnson, Josephine Winslow Wild W a d : 526
Johnson, Samuel Rarsela : U22
Johnston, Jill ksbian NL&M : 936
Johnstone. Sir Harry Mrs. Warren's Daughter : 675 -
, ,
Jolimeur. Marie-Ange "je Suis": 989
<
Jones. Gay1 Almeyia : 1161 Beymd Mpeif(The Midnight Confkssion) Fw M h e r Ahh : 1161 C m g u i m : 618 ,660 ,719,1161 ,1179,1249 EW'S M a : 618 ,1161,1179.1249
"The Gathering": 1161 "The Roundhow": 116l -
"Sentences: A Storyn: -1161 White Rat : 1179 , "The Woman": 618
Jones, Leroi: See Baraka, Imamu Amiri
Jones, Suzanne Hdly ' CrHng in the Garden : 674 -
Jong, Erica: 1001 -. IC
i
"The Commandments": 1182 ae , Fear of Flying : 520,551 ,585 ,697*. 733 ,777 ,792 ,795 ,823 ,824 ,862 ,868 ,871 . 905 ~1177
,1246,1275 ,1546 ,1583 ,1631 ,1698 Fruits & Vegetables : 823 ..I177 ,1182 ,1246 Half Lives : 823 ,1177 ,1182 ,1246 How to Save Yarr own Life : 547,733 ,1182 Loverax : 823 ,1177 ,1182
b , Jonspn. Ben
The Alchemist : 152 ' Bcuthdmew Fair : 142
The Devil is cuz Ass : 152 - Epicwne, or The Silent Woman : 152
Masque of Queens : 116 S e @ m : 152 Vdpone : 152
Joplin, Janis: 1345
Jordan. June: 1219
Joubert; Alain "Wrecker of the Senses": 760
Jouffrey. Alain "Double Flight": 760
Jouve, Nicole Ward Le spectre du gris : 979
Joyce. James: 1694 Ulysses : 671 ,1168
Julien, Pauline: 1181
Junger, Ernest , Glass Bees : 532 Heliopdis : 532
Xahiga. Smuel The G i r l j i a Abr-14
Kalliakati. Chrysa: 1335 '
Kasten. Kate On the Elevatw : 1074
Katherine of Sunon "Depositio Crucis": 37 "Elevatio Hostiae": 37 "Resurrexio Dominica": 37 "Visitation: 37
Kaufman. Shirley "Mothers. Daughters": 1560 * D rn
Kaufrnan, Sue Diary of a Mad Hacsewifi : 1583 ,'1631
'
Fdling B d i a : 792 . -
Keats. John "Cold Pastoral " : 506
5
"Endymion" : 506 c ~ c ~
"The Eve of St Agdes": 457 ,506 . L
"La Belle ~ & e Sans Merci" : 471 ,506 " "Lamia": 506
Keckley. Elizabeth Behind the Scenes: Thirty Years a Slave a& Fw-Years in the White H w e : 274
a
Keene. Carolyn The Hidden Window Mystery : 1262
Keese. Oline: See Leakey, Camlihe Wmlrner
- Kellermann, Bernhard The Tunnel : 532 :
Kelley. Edith Summers: 1685 -
The Devil's Hand : 649 Weeds : 648 ,649 ,1273
Kello. Esther: 1301
Kelly. George Craig's Wifi : 1054
Kelly. Hugh- Memairs of a Magdden : 194,
\
Kemble, Frances Anne Butler - - - - -
J w d of a Residence on a &gio Plantation in 183s 1 8 s : . 1278
Kern*, Margery The Ba& of Margery Kempe : 38
Kempis, Thomas a Imitation of Christ : 506
Keneally, Thomas: 745 - 0
Kennedy, A F e m e : 1067 Funnyhalse of a Negro : 1029 ,1035 3 6 2 The Owl Answers : 1035 ,1062 ,1078
~enned;, John Pencilem Swallow Barn : 387
Kenrick, William ,* The Whde Duty of Woman : 177 ,276
Kent, l3ahet.h: See Everett, ~aro lyh Kane
The Tail of the Fish: Maori Memories of the Far Nwth : 1174
Kemochan, Sarah: 1064
Ken. Jean The Snake Has All the Lines : 588 ,921
,
Kesey, Ken \
One Hew over the Cuckds Nest : 623 ,663 ,681 ,749 ,781 \ l-,
Khalifeh, Sahar: 1232 8
Kidman, Fiona: 768 ,1652
Killigrew, Anne: 1305
King, Gilbert: See Hamson, Susan Fr.ances >
King. Grace MoAsieur Motte : 252 Tales of a Time and Place : 252
khgdom, Karen: 989
Kingsbury. E A.
1) "An Unreasonable Womanw : &8
-@I. Swab Keqbit: 1321 The bwnrrl or/Wdam Knighr : 1319
~,dloaei. dcuwln ' A G r a t m-: 1300 '"k tavft0fRm.e ~ t i o r r s - : 1300 "fhc Pkw waeanm: lsoo Red Low (ah rnar Free Lore ): 13fM -sb&f$*: 1m
K d u . hPrt A W a o n m Her Pnmc : 739
. Kuan Hua: 592 -
Kumin. Maxine: 1001 ,1247 .1250 +
Labe. b u k : 84 Elegies : 82 Senncts: 80.82 Works : 82
Lacas J&W: 1694
I&, s ! ! C&zire- Sdange, Arne Aficaine : 570
Lados, Choderlos de De Pedmion des fimmes : 169 LRs Liukm Dangereuses : 169 . 176 .180.181,192
Lacrosil: Michele Sawilk et le Serin BArgile : 570
Lafayew. W e , Mme de Lo Princesse de Cleves : 172 ,1659
Lafmet, Carmen Nrrdo : 851
blonde. Michele: 1228 "Speak white": 1181
h u b . Lady Caroline . Glenorvon : 174 Graham Hamilton : 174
Lamb. Mary: 1321 "Essay on Needlework" : 399 Taies jm Shakespeare : 399
lamb, Myrna: 1064 The Mad DWYILI : 1028
Lamben. Betty Sqriewr- d e Dieu : 1061
*lamy, S u z z ~ e DEUes : 1180
Lancaster. G. B.: See Lyttletw. Edith
cL
I
h d i s . Paul 1 Making the W e f 3 % ~ Marriage : 798 -
Y w Mambge and F d y Living : 798
. Landon, ~eti&a - - "The Secret Discovered": 464
M e , Mary Bradley Mizarza- A Fontasy : 807
Lang. Lucy Robins Tomwow Is Beautijirl: 527 ,
iangland, William Aers Plowman : 46
Langley, Eve The P e e Pickers : 515
W e r . Emilia "Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum": 1304
.I+rsen, Neh: 1317 ,1612 Passing : 897 ,924,1611 ,1683 Quickwurd : 924,1164,1611 ,1683
~assvhtz. Kurt Two Planets : 532
Lathen, Emma (pseud Martha Hennisart and Mary J. Latis) The Longer the Thread : 524 Murder against the Grain : 524 Murder to Go : 524 A Place fb Murder : 524 : . A Stitch in Time : 524
Latis, Mary J.: See Lathen, Emma
Laurence, Mgrgaret: 1221,1298 ,1455 ,1620 A Bird in the H a w : 665 The Diviners : 522,541,558 ,577,652.665.673.783.784.837 ,868.912.941 ,942,1171 ,
1269 ,1320 ,1467 ,1546 The Ere- Dwellers : 536 ,541 ,558 ,665 ,673 ,1171 A kst of Gad : 536.541 ,542,651 ,665 ,693,750, 784,912 The Stone Angel : 536 ,541 ,664,665 ,784 ,912
Lawrence. D. H.: 514.572 ,1708 "Coldness in Love ": 863 "The Fox": 601.685.1168 "The Horse Dealer's Daughter": 1501 M y Chatterleys Lover : 235 ,671 ,715
L
The Rainbow : 675 ,685 '--
S m and h e r s : 675 ,863 . I478 . a Study of Thmas Hardy : 309
"Tickets Please" : 841 - - The Tresprzsser : 863 / The White Peacock : 863 Women in Lave : 685
Lawrence, Frieda: 863 - - Lawrence, G. A. P
Guy Livingstone : q79
Lawrence, James The Empire of the Nairs; or, The Rights of Women : 1292
Lawrence, Margaret -
The Schod of Femininity : 1536
Laye, Camara The Radiance of the King : 1163
Lazarus. Emma: 472 -
Le Gallienne, Julia: 1309
Le Guin, Ursula IC: 797 ,864 The Dispmessed : 597 ,779 ,807 The Lejt Hand of Darkness : 552 ,640,646 , 779 ,809 ,819 ,926 The Tombs of A- : 646 Wild Angels : 947
w
Leadbeater, Mary Annals of ~ a l l i b e : 278 Cottage Dialogues among the Irish,Peasantry : 278
Leakey, Caroline Woolrner (pseud. Oline Keese) - The Brad A m Being P O S F O ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ the Histmy ofMaria Gwynnharn - A Lijkr : 333' w
Leclerc, Annie P d e de Femme : 927 ,979,1674
Leduc, Violette La Batarde : 11.94
-
Lee. Harriet "The German's Tale: Kruitzner" : 191 1
Lee. Jeanette "The Cat and the King": 601
Lee, John A. Children of the Porw : 829
The Hunted : 829
Lee. Sophia The Recess : 168 ,186 ,191 1 a
Leffland, Ella Mrs. Munck : 871
4 Lehrnann. Rosamoncf The Batlad and the Sauce : 690 A S e e Gmpe Tree : 690 '
Leigh, Dorothy•‹ 1301 The Mathers Blessing : 123 ,1294
Lelchuk. Alan Miriam ot Thirty* : 67 1
Lennox, Charlotte The F e d e Qlcixde : 168 ,191 ,1260
Leon. Luis de La Perficta Cawda : 1328
Lerman, Rhoda Call Me Ishtar : 551
Lesage* Gil Blm : 1314
Lessing. Doris: 1224,1532 ,1620.1685 Briejing& a Descent into Hell : 530 Childten ofVidence : 607 ,641 ,742 ,812 ,8$4 , Eiach His Own Wilderness : 1055 1 The, F m Gated City : 508 ,635 ,689 ,820 882 ,1295,1318 The Gdden Notebook : 508 ,553 ,635 ,724,742 ,820.871 ,1163 ,1275 ,1299,1434 ,1450, 1 1583 ,1587,1698 ,1708 . -
e The Grass Is Singing : 742 Martha m: 542.608 : : The Memain of a Swviva : 530~. 589 ,742 ,752 , I268 \. "Not a Very Nice Story": 633 Hay With a Tiger : 1055 I i =
A Pmper Marriage : 553.608 ,1163.13h7 The Summer be* the Dark : 530.55j. 679,697 ,720 ,742 ,752 ,882 The Temptation of kzck Orkney and other Sttuies : 742 "To Room 19": 666 - I ,
1 htte. Kathy and Garbrielle Carey Arbcrty Blues : 662 4 I
Ltvcrtov. Denise: 1001 I -
"Growth of a Poet": 1604 "Hypomite Womenw: $630 "In Mind": 1560 0 Taste and See : 959 ,976 ,1007 Relearning the Alphabet : 959 ,1007 "Song for Ishtar" : 1670 The Smow Dance : 959 ,976 . To Stay Alive : 959
Levi-Strauss. Claude The Elementary Stnrctwes of Kinship : 1674 Tristes Tropiques : 1316 ,1323
Lewis, C. Day (pseud. Nicholas Blake) The Smiler with the Knife : 667 -
T h m Shell of Death : 667 /
Lewis, Sinclair Ann Vickers : 5.3 ,1327
t - - The : 535
Main Street : 535
Lewis, Willie Newbury Between Sun and Sod : 1297
Lewis. Wyndham %
The Apes ofGod : 685 ,776 The Revenge fbr Love : 776 Snooty Baronet : 776 Tarr : 776
I
Li Fang-Ling: 592
Li Yu: 592
Lifshin, Lynn: 961
Lindbergh, Anne Morrow "The Unicorn in Captivity": 1670
Linder, Adele The Arrogant Beggar : 755
Lindsay, Karen: 1560
Linzy, cm& < A- -
"M": 1008 i
"Scorpio": 1008 7
Uppens, Mathilde ( p u d Mme. Bourdon) ,
LEI Vie ~ e e l l e : 404 --
Lhvesay, Dorothy: 1188 ,1222 ,1224 - -
O Cdlected Pwms: Tlte Two Seams : !W " "The Three Emilys": 1320
Livesay, Dorohy, ed F~rty. Women Pwts of Canada : 1223 t
Lo Pin-chi: 592
h k e . David Ross: 2%
Lqpn, Olive Apropar of Women . - and Theatre : 1309
Lombard. Peter Baks of Senrences : 63
London, .Jack Adventure : 880 Burning DaHight : 880 A Daughter of the Snows : 880 The Iron Heel : 880 Little L d y of the Big H a m : 880
8 Martin Eden : 880 The Sea- Wdf: 880 The V d e y of the Moon : 880
4
Long, Lily Augusta (pseud Roman Doubleday) The Hemlock Averrue Mystery : 1282
Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth Kavanagh : 269
Longstreef kB. - Gewgia Scenes : 259 '
h, Anita: 1321 Gentlemen Prefir Blondes : 543
Loranger, Francoise Mathieu : 625
Loranger. Suzanne: 1324
Lorde. Audre: 1179.1208 . 1210 , 1225 . 1317 "~loodbirth": 989 Cables to Rage : 988 The f i rs t Cities : 988 F m a Land Where Other people Live : 988 " b v e Poem" : 1443 ,1444 -- The New Ywk Head Shop and Museum : 988 "Poems Are Not Luxuries": 1626 ,1644
4 "Power": 1443 ,1444
"Scar": 1444 '"The Woman Thing": 989
Loms, Guillaume de: 78
Loschi, Antonio The Temple of Chastity : 52
Lotman, Loretta: 1064
Lowell, Amy: 1459 ,1635 Pictures of the Flwting Wwld : 962
Loy, Mina: 1551 "Aphorisms on Futurism": 953 "Cafe du Neant": 953 "The O ~ t a Giorgio" : 953 "ParturitionR: 953 "Three Italian Pictures": 953 "Three Moments in Paris": 953
1
Luhan, Mabel Dodge: 863 C
Ludey. Joanna: 77
Lurnley. Lady Jane: 1301
Lurie. Alison Love and Friendship : 733 The War between the Tates : 733 1 792
Lyly, John Eupheus:78 , + Gdlathea : 113
Lynch, Lawrence L: See Van Deventer, Emma Murdock -
Lynch, Marta Cuentar de Cdwes :726-- Lm Cuentos Tristes : 726
Lynn. Elizabeth A: 1682 The Dancers of Arun : 757 A Different Light : 797 The Northern Girl : 79? Wafchtawer : 797
Lynn, Margaret A Stepdrmghter of the Prairie : 526
Lw, Sandra
"It Is the Season of Widows": 1008
~ynieton, Edith m u d G. B. Lancaster) Pageant : 1280
Lyvely, Chin: 1130
McBride, Mary Margaret Out of the Air : 1363,
r McCaffrey, Anne: 864
Decision at Doovur : 779 Drapnjigh t :/779 The Ship That 'Smg : 646
*
McCarthy. Mary > e
The C m p n y She Keeps : 788 The C m p : 526,788 ,886 "Letter to a Translator": 788 Mernafes of a Cathdic Girlhoad : 788 ,932 ,1480 On the Contrary : 788 The Seventeenth Degree : 788 "Up the Ladder from Charm to Vogue ": 921
McClung, Nellie: 1047 ,1455 In Times Like These : 938
, Painted Eires : 938 Pwple Springs : 938 The Second Chance : 938 Sbwing Seeds in Danny : 938
McCullers, Carson: 1635 J
The Ballad ofthe sad Cnfi : 544 ,830 ,1277 The Heart Is a Lunely Hunter : 526 ,830 ,874 ,928 ,1272 The Member of the Wedding : 526 ,830,928 ,1272 Reflections in a Gdden Eye : 657 ,830 "Wunderkind": 1499
MacDonald Betty: 1321 The Egg and I : 588 Who Me? : 588'
MacDonald Cynthia: 1001
McDowel, Catherine W., e d Now Y ac Hear My Hwrr The J w n a l of James Wilson Nichds, 1 8 B 1887 : 1297
McGinley, Phyllis Times Three : 921
MacGowan Alice and Enuna Bell Miles M i t h ofthe Cumberlands : 638 '
The Swwd in the Mountains : 638
The Wiving of Lance Cleaverage : 638
MacGowan Alice and Perry Newbeiry The Midion Ddlar Suitcase : 638 The Mystery Wrxncur : 638 +
The Seventh Passenger : 638 Shaken Down : 638 , Who Is This Man : 638
McGrag, John Fuh in the Sea : 1081
McIntosh, Maria: 315
McIntyre, Vonda N.: 1682 D 7 n u k . e : 797 ,809 s
The Exile Walting : 797 -
"Of Mist, and Grass, and Sand": 797 ,926
McKay, Claude B ~ M M Bottom : 716,1176
,Banp : 1176 Dialect Poetry : 1176 Hame to Harlem : 1176 Selected Poems : 1176
M c K e ~ e y , Ruth: 1321
MacKenzie Henry The Man of Feeling : 168 ,194 ,334
MacLane Mary The Stwy of Mary MacLune : 601
MacLean Katherine: 864 f , Contagion : 646
MacLennan Phyllis: 864
. McLennan, Hugh The Watch That Ends the Night : 1467
McMurtry. Larry Leaving Cheyenne : 1297
McNeil. Florence Emily : 1320
~ c ~ h e r s b n , James Alan Elbow Room : 539 Hue and Cry : 539
McReynolds, Janet
Hey, Rube : 1086
Macaulay. Catharine The History of England : 160 Letters on Education : 160 ,276 -
Magogo, Princess: 1342
Maheux-Forcier. Louise Amrzdou : 912 L'lle pywse : 912
- Une Faet parr 2ke : 912 .-'I.
MaHlabisa of Hlabisa: 1342
Maiden. Jennifer Tactics : 998
Mailer. Norman The Primer ofSex : 617 Why Are We in Vietnam?' : 6%
Mailhot Michele: 1324 Lcr Mwt de P~r~l~gnee : 1169
Maillet, Andree Le Miair de Saiome : 912 Lettres au Swhomme : 912
Maitland, Sara Daughter of krusaiem : 815 ,1648
Mdele of Hlabisa: 1342
Makereti The Ol& Time Mami : 1174
Makin, Bathsua: 1294 An Essay to Revive the Antient Education of Gentlewomen : 119
Mallet, Franwise The illusionist : 1567
Malory. Thomas M a t e M h u r : 41
- Malpede, Karen w
The End ojWar : 1233 - - - - - -- ---
bent fbr Three W m e n : 1233 Making Peace : 1233 -
L Rebeccah : 1233
Manch. Jan Natya Pdice Charitram : 1079
Mander, Jane Allen Adair : 1274 The Stwy of a New Zealand River : 829 ,1274 The Strcutge Attraction : 829 -
* -
Mangua, Charles Son of Woman : 914 A Tail in the Mouth : 914
MaNgwane of Embongolwane: 1342
Manley. Mary Delariviere: 151 ,222 Almya : 204 The Fdr Hypocrite : 204 The Last Lover, or, The Jealous Husband : 143 ,146 ,204 Memairs of the Lifi bf Mrs. Manfey : 204 The New Atalantis : 204 The Power of Luve : 204 The Secret Histwy of Queen '7arah and the Zarasians : 204 A Stage- Coach J w n e y to Exeter : 204
Manner. Eva-Liisa Burnt Orange : 1065
Mansfield, '~atherine t
"At the Bay": 542 ,555 ,747 ,1274 Bliss": 747 ,943 The Daughters of the Late Colonel": 747 The Garden Party": 747
In a German Pension : 555 "A Married Man's Story": 747 "Prelude": 542 ,555 ,747 ,1274 The Shwt Stories of Katherine Mansfield : 717 "The Woman at the Store": 1274
Manuel, Juana: See Owl Woman
Mao Tun: 592
Marcet, Jane: 226
Marchessault Jovette: 1180
- LA Mere des herbes : q 3 Les Vaches de Nuit : 625 TryptQtre Lesbian : 625-
Marholm, Laura: See Hansson, Laura Mohr \ Marie de I'incarnation: 1291 ,1324
Marien, Marcel "The Children's Marquis de Sade": 760
Marivau~ Pierre Lo Cdonie : 215 te spectatev f MCCjS : 200 Up* the Carntry (Le Papan
. ,
Markandaya Kamala Nectar in a Seive : 700 " , $
Two Virgins : 700 , _
Marks. Elaine and Isabelle de Coumvron, eds. New French Ferninisms : 1656 New French Ferninismc. An Anthdogy : 1553,152J;. 1592 ,1613
t
Marlaa Daphqe: 992 h i
Marlowe. Christopher . . Dido Queen of Carthage : 110 u - DoctH&IcsTm Edward 1': 90,110 Herr I r d Leantier : 79
' The Jew of Malta : 110 The Massucre at Paris Tambwlaine : 110
Marlowe. Julia: 1309
Marquez. Gabriel Garcia One Hundred Years of Sditude (Cien A m de Sdedad) : 1184
Mamott, Alice Hell on H m s and W m e n : 1278
Marryaf. Florence Woman Against W-oman : 27?
Mars. Lee: 1130
Marsh. Ngaio: 1652 - - I
Marshall, Paule: 1612 Bnnvn Girl, B m n s t m s : 639 ,694,755 ,1163 ,1183 ,1683 ,1707 The Charen Place, The Timeless People : 694
"Reenan: 682 ,694,1183 "SomeGet Wasted": 694 Sarl CIap ~ d - s and Sing r 694 *To Da-duh, In Memoriam" : 694 "The Valley Between": 694
Martin, Claire: 1324 In an Iron Glove @am un Gant de Fer) : 1181 ,1224 I
Martin. Gillian The Gdrr, the Wdf and the Crab : 666
Martinau. Harriet: 226 D e e r b 6 M 3 4 1 Iliudrations of Pditical & o m y : 368
Martinez, Alfonso . Cwbacho : 1328
9
MarGell, Andrew "The Garden": 1304.
h s m g e r , Philip I
The Duke of Milan : 141
Maraira, Katarina Mawi Legends for Y aing New Zetalanders : 1 174
Mather, Cotton Ornaments fbr the Daughters of Zion, w the Character and Happness ofa Vlrtuars Woman :
- 1283 ,1302 Tabitha Redivivc An Essay to the Memory of. . . Mrs. Elizabeth Hutchmson : 1283
Mather, Increase The Life and Death of Richard Mather : 1302
+ Sermon Concerning Obedience : 1302 - C
Mathers. Helen B. .-, Coming Thrd the Rjv : 279 -
< Matute, Ana Maria
Primeria ~emori* : 851
I Maupassant Guy de a
"Maroccan: 281 "Moonlight": 281
Maybury, AM^: 839 I
Maynard, Fredelle Bruser Ruisins and Almonds : 1269
i Meynell, Alice Cdlected Poems : 478
Middle& Thomas Mare Dissemb1en"Beshies Wmen : 139 ,
W m n Beware W a e n : 139
Mien Ying: 592,
Mihwd, Miguel L4 BeUa Daaea : a1069
Mildmay. Lady Grace: '1301, a
Miles, Judy "Litany": 989
. J
MilfoId Nancy Zelda- A Biogmphy : 741 ,
Millay. Edna St Vincent: 1459 ,1551 ,1635
M i l k , Arthur: 1028
MilIcr, Heather Ross The Edge ofrhe W d s : 526
Miller. Henry -7
Tropic of Capricarn : 671
Miller, Isabel Patience and Sarah : 879 ,886
Miller. Joanna ~n~ernm$rgeur~: 1086 .
Miller, Mgy Gmven Images : 1063
Miller. Susan Rux: 1064
' Miller. Vassar 'Anotber Dayw: 1008 .Apjumching Nuda : 1008 "Hcmtaaaing Blues': 1008 My Barccs Being Wiser : 1020 Cin&ms and Ra#s : 1020 Rage War on Sikikmc 71020
", ' ~ i th twt ~cremony*: 1008 4
Sexual Pditics : 1536 ,1571 ,1628 ,
Situ : 871 .I627 ,1681 -
. - I
Milner. Ron The Warking - A Theme @r LEndrr : 1062 i
What the Wine- Sellers Buy : 1062 4
Whds Got His Own : 1062
Milton, John Christian Doctrine : 149 Canus: 132 The Doctrine a d DisciNine of Divtuce : 149 Of Eiiucation : 119 ,121 ,130 Pamdise Lrrd : 127 ,130,132 ,149 ,230 ,285 ,1388 ,1595 Samstm A g W e s : 132 Tetrahadon : 149
Minty. Judith "Letters to My &ughtersn: 1022
Mishima. Yukio * The Temple of the Gdden Pavilion : 621
Mitchell. Margaret Gone with the Wind : 6 7 ,785 ,849 7 Mohr, Nicbolasa El Bronx Remembered : 755 "Old Mary": 755 . ,
Moix. Ana Maria - iulia : 851
I Moliere. Jean I
k s Femrnes ~mantb : 117 ,217 Les Precieuses Ridiculesl: 157 ,1329
Montagu. Lady Mary Wortley: 13211 ,1459.1687 The CanHete Letters o i k d y Mary Wmley M~ruogu : 1322 "Turkish Embassy Let&+": 1326
I
~ b n t c f i o r e , Janet 1 "The Mistress to Her Lover":. 996 -
-Montgomery, Lucy Maud- ,
Anne of Green Gables : 55'7 ,1262 - d M y of New M a m : 557"~~
Montorgeuil. George 3
- Le Ca* m e n : 1643 I
Moodie. Suwma: 1224,1455 Lifi in the Clearings : 1320
4
Rcughing l i in the Bush : 380 ,941 ,1298 ,1320 , i~
Moody, William Vaugh, The Fdth Healer 1046
Moore, Cath 'ne L: 779,864 - 'P &re of h r Y : 657 "NO. W& Born": 646
Moore. George ' -
"Albert Nobbs" : 622 Esfe Waters :'341
Moore, Honor: 1001 m
Moore, Marianne "Maniage" : loOOO a
"The Miad l5 an Enchanted Thing": 975 "New York*: 975 . "Silence": 975
More, Hanoah , -
Bas Bleu : 202 Ceelebs in Search of a Wij% : 202 o
Strictures an the Modern System of Female Education : 202 - P
More. Sir Thomas: 1294 Utopia : 1292
Moreno, Dorinda: 1702
Morgan. Claire The Price of Salt : 879 , 1567 k
Morgan, Robip: 1001 "Lesbian Poem": 1560 "Matrilineal Descent" : 981 "Monsterw : 1670 "Voices from Six Tapestries": 1670
Morin, Sister Marie: 1324 t
Morley. Mary Castles of the Soil : 829
Moms. William N e w s h Nowhere : 403
Morrison, Toni: 1317 ,1612 . The Bluest Eye : 525 ,584,618,703,925,1183,1318,1477 Song o f S d m : 517 ,525 ,618 ,925 ,1183 St& : 508 ,525 ,584,618 ,635 ,719,735 ,871 ,925 ,1183 ,1688 , 1689,1707
Mortimer. Penelope Long Distance : 792 = I
I .
Morungen, H M c h von: 47 I t 2
" I - - - -- MOSS. Hazel A -
"Mirrorw.: 989 , 4
Moss. Mildred: 1500 I
Mueller, Lisa: 1001 - 1 Mui&nberg, Walter J.
Prairie : 1269 1 I
Mutford, Wendy: 1662 3 1
Mulgan. Alan Spw of the Morning : 829
Mulgan, John 1 Man Alone : 829
Mullen, Hanyeae The Big One": 1008
i I
"Eyes"m the Back of Her Head": 1 p 8 "No More Arguments, No More Anythiag": 1008
I
Munro. Nice: 1455 "Boys and Girls": 1224 h e of the Happy Shades : 821 Uves of Girlsand Wanen : 510, 3 ,620,664,821 ,868 ,912 ,1171 ,1224 "Material": 510 "The Oflice": 510 Sanething rye Been Meaning to Tell You : 821 WhoDoYouThMYarAre?:111.1202 , f
M urdoch. Iris The Bl&k Prince : 567 The hahut Girl : 567 I The Sea, the Sea : 567
I . A Severed Head : 567 1
Under the Net : 567 1
I A Ward ~ h h d : 567 I
Murray. Judith Sargent I
The Gleaner: A MisceUaneaus Prtduction : 177 ,221 The Traveller Rewqed : 1319 1 V i n w Triumphant : 1319
Murray, Michele The Great Maher : 1012
..,
Nachman, Elana: See Dykewoman, Elana
Naden, Constance: 479
Nakos, Lilika . Boetian Earth : 895
"And the Child Lied": 895 ,896 The Children's Infirm : 8% lkorion Dreamers :. 895 The La t : 895 ,896
k
My Peter's Ba& (The Deflowered One] : 895 ,895 "The Nameless One": 895 ,896 "Pho$injw: 895 ,8% Toward a New Lifi : 895
Nanda, Savitiri Devi The City of Two Gateways : 700
Naranjo, Carmen: 1187 9
0
Narayan, R K. The Dark Roam : 700
Narrative strategiek in Wmm's writing - Heroine's G g e as Closure: 350 /
c' Nashe, Thomas, d
"Christs ~ e a r e s o v ~ r Jerusalem" : 78 7 ;6-
4 4
Neal. James A //
~ Education and genius of the Female Sex : 177
Neal. Joseph C.: 294
N e g Holly: 958 7 /'
Neeper. Gary -A Placr Be@ Man :'779
I Nelson, Alice Dunbar: 1317 L 9
Nelson, Tracy: 1345 d I
Neruda, P a b l o a
Newsome. Effie Lee: 1306
Ngugi, Thiong'o Wa Petals of Blad : 813
Harse at HawKs End : 1257
Nightingale, FIorence +
Suggestions fw Thacght to Searchers ajer ~e1 i~ i cus '~nr th : 394
Nin, Anais: 802 ,1224 ,1296,1620,1629 ,1687 The Antris Nin Reader: 676 "Birth":1327 The Diary of Anais Nin : 526 ,676 Ladders to Fire : 657
Niven, Larry R i n g w d : 926 '
Niven, Larry and Jerry Pournelle The Mote in G d s E p : 521
Njau. Rebeka' -
RippIes in the Pod : 8 13
Nkabinde. Thulani: 1683
Noe, Ito: 1126,1131
Nogarola, Ginerva: 53
Nogarola. Isotta: 53
Noomin, Diana: 1130.
Noms. Frank The Octopus : 781
Norton, Andre: 646 ,864
Norton, Caroline: 226 The k t ters of Cardine Norton to Lord Melbaune : 346 .
Lad and Saved : 350
Nossis: 3
Nostredame, Jehane de Les Vies des Plus Celebres el Anciens Ptxte's Rmencaux : 55 '28"
&
Nova&, Carol Living A i m Withcut a Dictionary :' 998
Nwakuche. Flora Nwapa: 1439
OWien, Edna A Pagort Place : 542
O'Brien. Mary
The k n a i s of Mary CYBnen, 1828- 1838 : 380
O'Connor, Flannery: 920 *
"Good Country People": 563 "The Life You Save May Be Your Own": 563 "A Stroke of Good Fortune": 1277 "A Temple of the Holy Ghost": 1277
. Wise B i d : 1277
O'Higgins. Harvey Julie Cane : 601
O'Neill, Eugene: 1028
Oates. Joyce Carol: 701 ,1629 Do with Me What Yac Will :' 574 ,650 ,697 ,1293 "Dreams": 811 Expensive People : 650 A Garden of kbthly Delights : 648 ,650 The Gaidess and Other Women : 574 "The Heavy Sorrow of the Body": 811 Mamiage and Inpdelities : 650 Them : 650.1450 The Wheel of h e : 650 Where Are Ytm Gaing, Where Have You Been? : 1318 With Shuddering Fall : 792 Wonderland : 650
Oculi, Okello "Orphan": 914
Ogot Grace: 1439 "The Family Doctor": 1160 b n d with@ Thunder : 1160
-%
"The Otner Woman": 1160
'-7 >
Oliver. John d
A Resent fw Teeming American Women : 1302 .i
Olsen, Tillie: 701 , 1227 '
"I Sfand Here Ironing": 631 ,744 , 1279 ,1478 "I want You Women Up North to Know" : 556 "Oh Yes": 744 Silences : 556 ,1566 "The Strike": 556
1
Tell Me a Riddle : 556 ,744 "Tell Me a Riddle": 634,775 ,832 ,835 ,1478.1485 "There Is a Lesson": 556 "Thousand-Dollar Vagrant" : 556 Yoinnondia- From the Thirties : 556,744 ,832 ,835
Opie. Amelia ,
Oppenheim, James and Caroline Kohlsant '
"Bread and Roses": 1356
Omelas, Bena C a e Down the Matnd : 955
!
Oniz, Simon " ~ u h y Mustache 101-Y ear-Old Navajo Man": 1M0 "To lnsure Survival": 1010
0 s - Anders "Karen: A Novel" : 601
Osaragi. Jiro The Jactney : 621
Ostenso, Martha ' ( -. Wild Geese : 664 ,938 ,1269 ,1467
Ouida: See de la Ramee, Marie Louise
Ouvrard, Helene L'Herbe et la Varech : 1181
Ovid: 70 Herddes : 75 1 The Metamorphoses : 4 Remedia Amoris: 1307
Owens. Rochelle: 1001
Owenson. Sydney. Lady Morgan Rorence MacCarth y : 226 F m e : 226 haiy : 226 The Novice of St. Dominick : 226 The QBriens and the O'Flahettys: A National Taie : 226 Q h n e l l , A National Taie : 226 The Princess, w, the Beguine : 226
8 Sf. Clair, w First Love : 226 Wornon and Her Master : 226 Wanuur, or, Ida of Athens : 226
Owl Woman (Juana Manuel): 1346
Otick, Cynthia "Passage to the New World": 1493
0
Page, P. K..: 992
Paki, Ron: 1174
Paley. Grace Enotvnacs Changes at the Lust Minute : 551.792 The Little Disturbances ofMan : 551 "The Long-Distance Runner": 755 "Used Boy Raisers": 755
Palmer, Janet Gertrude (Nettie): 148
Palmer, Millie Renouf "Woman's Day": 448
Palmer. Stuart: 688
Panshin, Alexei Rite o/Passuge : 926 B
Panther, Abraham - "The Panther Captivity": 175
Paradis, Suzanne Ernmanuelk en nair : 912'
Pardo Bazan, Emilia Dona MiIagrm : 242 Memariar de un sdteron : 242
Parent, Gail David Meyer Is a Maher : 905 Sheila Levine Is Dead and Living in New York : 905
21 Parker. Dorothy: 905 ,1321 "The Banquet of Crown: 1182 "Big Blonde": 921 . 1182 Condant Reader : 1182 "The Custard Heart": 1182 Elracgh Rope : 1182 "Indian Summer" : 921 "Lit?le Curtis": 1182 --? Sunset Gun : 1182 " A Telephone Call": 1182 "The Waltz": 907 ,1182 "The Wonderful Old Gentleman": 1182
Parker. Pat: 1179,1255 "For Willyce": 1560
. Parnok, aSophia8
At Halflace : 1013 Music : 1013 Raws of Pieria : 1013 Sobrenie Stixotvovenij: 1013 .a
The Vine : 1013 t
I /-\. Pw, Katharine: 77 , 1301 ,/-
-'.- ., /
ParSCmS, Eliza The Mysteriacs Warning : 187
Parton, Sara Willis (pseud Fanny Fern): 315 Fern Leaves jiom Fmny's P-io : 422 Rae Clark : 1637 Ruth Hail : 420
a
Pastan, Linda "Notes from a Delivery Room" : 1327
Paston. Margaret: 58
Patemore. Coventry The Angel in the Hacse : 440 The Unknown E m : 440
Pateraki, Alexandra: 1335 ' , U
'f Payne. John Howard
Clari, a the Maid of Milan : 4 .d Peacock, Thomas Love
Cruichet Castle : 256 GrNl Grange : 256 Headlong Hall : 256 Maid Marian : 256 Melincarrt : 256 Nightmare Abbey : 256
Peattie. Elia The Precipice : 535
Peck. George W.: 296
Peck, Robert Newton A Day No Pigs Wadd Die : 6%
Pellctier. Pol A ma mere, a ma mere, a ma mere, a ma vdSjne : 625
M d d Merimeri: 1174 . \
Peng Lun-Hu: 592
Pennington, Mary: 121 -
Peralta, Rosalie Otero "Las Dos Hennanas" : 618
A
Pereira, Francesca Yetunde / \,
"Two Strange Worlds": 1160 ' ",- \
Perkis, Catherine Louisa A Red Sister : 1282
'' ~ e & u l t Charles: 1365 "Bluebeard": 501
P
4 1_ "Cinderella": 1360
- "Diamonds and Toads" : 1360 "Sleeping Beauty" : 1360
Perry, Carlotta "A Modem Minervan: 921
Peter. Hugh A Dyigg Father's Last Legacy : 1302
Petesch. Natalie The Odyssey of Katinac Kuldcovich : 1698
-9 * d
Petrarch. Francesco: 74
Petronius The Satyricon : 1314
Perry, AM: 1317 "In Darkness and ConfusioIf " : 1163 The Narrows : 743 The Street : 755 ,923 ,1183 ,1688
Petzler, John Lifi in Utopia : 1292
~ . ,-. ., Phelps. Elizabeth Stuart Ward
Doctor Zay : 2% ,308 ,317 -3 The Gates A& : 317 ,
The Silent Partner : 317 ,1611 The Story of Avis : 317 ,'I566 ,1698
Phelps. Elizabeth Stuart, Sr. m u d . H. Trusta) "The Angel over the Right Shoulder, or the Beginning of a New Year" : 317
I "Husband of a Blue": 317 "A Peep at Number Five": 317
'z,
"de S m y Side": 317
Phelps. Kate: 1070 '
*
Philips, Catherine: 151 ...
Philipson. Morris u. ,
The ~ a l l ~ p e r Fox : 666
Phillips, David Graham ., Susan Lenox Her Fail and Rise : 691
Phillips. Esther: 1361 1
Philo Judaeus . Questions and Answers tm Genesis : 63
$
Phlipon; Manon ( W e . Roland) Appei a f imjmrtiole phrterite : 1271
Piercy. Marge: 701 ,961 ,1001 ,1555 ,1682 Breaking Camp : 1006 2 D m e the h $ e to Sleep : 1172 ,1220 Hard Loving: 1006 . The High Cm oftiving : 547 ,603 ,871 ,1583 . SmcrlI Chunges : 634.806.868.1172.1220.1.268 ~1450,1540,1583 To Be of Use : 1006 ,1172 Warnan on the Edge @Time : 589,594,597 ,603 ,807 ,808 ,819.1172 ,1295 ,1504
Pinzer. Maimie: 699 The Maimie Papers : 1611 ,1687.
Pisan, 'Christine de: 58 Autres Hades - 66 Cent Baiades : 66 City of lodies (Cite des Dames) : 59 "Dit du Duc des Vrais Amans" : 66 "Dit le Debat de deux Amans": 66 "Le Dit de Poissy": 66 Le Ditie w kame &Arc : 1536
c Le Uvre de la Cite des Dames : 32 Le Livre de la Ahtacion de Forttrne : 32 Le Live des Trds Yehis : 32
Piserchia, Doris Star Ruier : 646
F Pix, Mary: 144,151
The I m e n t Mbress : 146 The Spvlish Wives : 146
Plath. Sylvia: 701 - 1 . -
"All the Dead Dearsh : 975 - - - - - - - -
"Among tbe B u m b E i : 88 1 "The Applicant": 946 ,956 Ariel : 976 ,977 ,1560 ,1604 "Ariel": 956 The Bell Jar : 526.582 ,882 ,931 ,977 ,1327 ,1450 ,1508 ,1633 "The Birthday Presentw: 956 "Childless Woman" : 956 The Cdarnrs : 9 7 C-ng the Water : 977 e "Cut": 946 "Daddy": 956 ,981 ,1560 "The Daughters of Blossom Streetw : 881 "Day of Success" : 881 "The Disquieting Musesw : 1560 "Elm": 956 "The Fifty-Ninth Bear": 881 ,977 "Gening There ": 956 "The Green Rock" : 881 "The Hanging Manw : 956 "Hansel and Gretelw: 975 "Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams" : 881 ,946 "Kindness": 956 "Lady Lazarus" : 956 "Lesbos" : 1560 ,1577 "Morning Song" : 956 "Mothers": 881 "The Munich Mannequins": 823 ,946 "Nick and the Candlestick" : 956 "The Night Dances": $56 "Ocean 1212 - Ww: 881
-Y
"Purdah ": 975 - I. "Tbe Shadow": 881 P
"Stings": 956 "Stone Boy with Dolphin ": 881 I
"Sunday at the Mintonan: 881 . "Superman and Paula BOwn's New Snowsuit" : 881 "Sweetie Pie and the Gutter Men" : 881 c --
7 "Tulips": 946 , Winter Trees : 977 .- i
"The Wishing Box": 881 ".
Republic : 13 , 1 6
Plan, Sir Hugh Delightcsb Ladies, To ~ d w n Their Tables, Persons, Clmcro, and Distilldaics w t h ~ k d r e s .
Banquets, PerjLrnes and Waters : 152
Plutarch Lives : 1537 M& : 1537
4
d i
S
4
f
Poe, ~r~: 372 The Mystery of Marie ~ o & t : 1684
I
Polyanin, Andrei,(gseud): See Pam& Sophia
Ponicsan. Darryl Cinderella Libm y : 1450
Pope. Alexander Dwrr:iad : 211 ,1305 El& to Abelard : 168 "Epstle to a Lady": 211 ,213 M a o l h a y f l : 208 The Rape of the. k k : 208 Windm FWCS : 208
- , * <
~o&ragues, Atalais de: 71
Porter, E l w ' r H.. . P d m : 1262
\
Porter. Gene 5uam.m A Dmrghrer of the tend :&526 -.. A Girl of the timlrct-iaa : 526 I
Poner. Katherine Anne: 619 . 1261 'The Circus": 672 'The Fig Tree': 672 "The Grave': 672 ; 1272 w&
"Xhe Jilting of Granny Weatherall": 535 'The Journey': 544 ,672 'The Last Leaf: 672
Y' . Uid A4a?ditr : 544 ,672 Pale H a r e , P d i Rider : 526 ,544 .672 'The Source": 672
Pomr, Wiiliam Sydney ( p u b 0. Henry) a 'The Last Leaf: 601
Pouer. Beatrix: 737
L t
?c&cn. Eriing: 714 %
Powell. Elizabeth: lSOO
An Awdian Hcroint : 1-263 Lcnglea of K d b y n : 332 Pdtcy and Parsion : 1263 Thb Staim Head : 332
&
Pretty-Shield: 1346 L
Price. Richard Bladbrdhers : 860 Lodies' Man : 860 '
The Wonderers : 860
'chard. Katharine Swamah $- --
~ l a c k 0 p d 730 Camardw: 730,891 Gdden Miles : 891 Haxbys C i r w : 891 Intimate Strangers : 891 The Pioneers : 891 The Rwn'ng Nineties : 891 Subtle Hame : 891 Winged Seeds : 891 Working Bullocks : 730 ,891
R w r . ~delarbe Anne "Three Evenings in a Lifen: 464, -
Pro+t Marcel Albertine D i s p u e : 794 La Prismmiere : 794
Provannitti. Arturo "Pan e Rose": 1356
Prudentius Pswhamachia : 46 '
?
Pure. Abbe Michel de
Pynchon. Thomas: 701 The Cryng of Lot 49 : 576 ,639
Radcliffe. Ann and Dwrbayne : 168
ofthe Black Penitents : 168 ,191 ,198,1264 ,191 ,501 ,1264.1277
A Ranance of the F m : 1264 A Sicilian Rmuznce : 168 ,1264
d
Radigue~ Raymond Le DiablemcCorps: 794
Unfinished W m e n ~ r ~ i n - ~ o Man's h n d While n Bird Dies in a Gilded Cage : 1064 - -v
Raicho. Hiratsuka: See Haruko, Hiratsuka I
-
RaiR Bonnie: 1345 -
t
Rambouillet, Mme. di! 151
Rarnirez, Juana: See de la Cruz. Sor Juana . Rand A m
Atlas Shrugged : 643 ,661 The Fatntuinhead : 661
Randail, Julia Adam's Dream : 1020 The Ruitan Carpenter : 1020
. Randall, Marta
Dangerau Game : 797 Islands : 797 Jwney : 797
i;
* ,* Randel. Narena: 768
Raskin. Barbara Lmse Ends : 666
Ravel. Aviva: 1230
Rawlings. Marjorie K i m m The Yearling : 696
Reade, Charles ,
A Woman- Hater : 395
Rechter. Judith "Fay Wray to the King": 1560
* = - Reedy, Juanita: q500
Reese. Lizette Woodwo@l: 472
Reeve. Clara "
Old English Baron : 168 The Two Mentors : 194
Regester. Seely: !Sp Victor, Mena Victoria w
Renders. Kim: 1025 - -
Reuter. Gabriele Aus guter Fm-lie : 1285
& $ F ~ F ~ e ~ n o l d s . h r ~ e W. ha. w&H
The Mysteries of LoPldon : 419 , 'p
?- - 'The Mysteries of the Crud of London : 419 2 Rabert McNaire in England : 279 i
Rhys. Jean: 1224,1587 - Ajer Leaving Mr. MacKenn'e : 507 ,,634 ,904
s=G== #
Goad Mwning, Midnight : 507 ,300 ,904 B *
Quartet : 507 ,789 ,792,904 Tigers Are Bettet- Lmking : 904 V o m e in the Dark : 507 - - Wide Sargawo Sea : 507 ,542 ,847 ,904 ,1287 ,1295
h Rich. Adrienne: 701.961 ,1001 .1062.1235.1472.1555,1576.1577,1604 - s
"Autumn Equinox": 1017 "The Burning of Paper instead of Children": 996 " Cartagraphies of Silence " : 986 Diving into the Wreck : 959 ,976 ,1157 ; 1318 ,1626 "Diving into the Wreck": 990 ,1473 ,1670 The Dream of a Common Language : 957 ,1325 1626 ,1681 "From a Survivor": 1017 "From an Old House in America": 1017 Of Woman Bwn : 1192 On Lies, Secrets, and Silence : 818 "The Origins and History of Consciousness" : 986 "Orion": 1017 "The Phenomenology of Anger" : 1017 Poems: Selected and New, 195& 1974 : 976 ,1626 "Re-Forming the Crystal": 1017 ,1473 Snapshas of a Daughte~ in- LUW : 959 ,1192 ,1560 "SnapSh~tS of a Daughter-in-hw" : 981 "Tear Gas": 1017 "To Judith, Taking Leave": 1017,,a1444 "Transcendental Etude" : 996 ,1443 ,1444' "Trying to Talk with a Man": 1017 Twenty- One Love Poems : 1193 ,1443 ,1444 "An Unsaid word": 1017 "Walking-in the Dark": 1017 The Will to Change : 1157 1 . ,
Richardson, Dorothy: 1629 - Pilgrimage : 566 ,630,657 ,670 ,901 ,1698 - "Women and the Future": 566 "Women in the Arts": 566
Richardson, Ethel Henrietta (Henry Handel Richardson) The End of a Childhad : 730 ~ h : Fortunes of hchard Mahoney : 730 The Getting of W i @ n : 730
Richardson. Samuel: 189.190.1266 ~ l a r i s ~ ~ : 167 ,171 ,176.177 ,180.188,192,194,203 ,1303,1322,1619
- Pamela : 176 ,180 ,183 ,188 ,194,714 ,1619
9
Sir Charles Grandism : 168 ,188 ,193 ,863 -- -
Riidell, A. S.: 1702
Ridge, Lola: 1551 B
' 3 . . 9 Riis, Sharon - ,f .
The True Story of Ida Johnson : 1025 O
i? " +' Riley. azabeth 4
All That F ~ S ; lmtruction : 674
Rin $w ood, Gwen PhaPis: 1224
Ritter, Erika B
\ - -
Automatic Pilot : C- , . s-
Rivera, Marina: 950 h i
:The Lion Tamer's ~ i k : 955 .1R_
I
Rivers, Caryl Aphradite at Mid- Century : 1552
< . Robbins, Trim 1123 ,1130
Robert of Melun: 63 / -
Roberts, Charles G. D. The Heart of the Ancient Woad : 342
Roberts, Elizabeth Madox ri
"The Haunted Palace": 1655
Roberts, Michele A Piece ojthe Nigh1 : 815 , 1648 , 1666
Robins. Eliza$et$ , Anci&fs Share : 765 The Convert : 1167 , A Dark Liznfern : 1167 Votes* Women : 1167 c'
I i
8 . ." Robins. Margaret: 11 19 *
-a +
Robinson, Edward Arlington: 483
Robinson, John: 1283
Robinson, Mary
4- "The Rothers": 464 "The Wise-Woman": 464 k
.- ? d
b
ocha, Rim Garcia
"Chicana Studies": 955 "The Trutb in My Eyes": 955
Rochefort Christiane Encwe H e w m Qu'on Va Vers PEte : 804
. . , ~ o b n ~ u e z , silviha - & T . ;
"Untitled": 955
Roiphe. Anne Richardson. Long Division': 520 U p the ~aitdbq; : 585 ,1583
Roland, Madame: See Phlipon, Manon
Rolle, Richard "The Beginning of Man's Lifew: 78
Rolvaag. 0. E >
G i m s in the E&th : 535 ,648 ,769,1269,1297 7
Peder Victtriacs : '169 ; 1269 L-
, Roper, Margaret More: 77 ,1301 - -
Roper, M& The Narmtive ofthe Adventures of Moses Roper : 274
Rose. Wendy "The Parts of a Poet": 1010 4.
(
Ross. .Judith: 1064 -i*
Ross. Sinclair A s k Me and My H w e : 673 ,938 ,1467 The Lump at Nam : 938
Rossetti. Christina: 1604 "A Birthday": 1670 "Goblin Market": 449 "The Lowest Room ": 457 " k e Prince's Progress" : 457 " Repining" : 457 "A Royal Princes*: 457 "Why": 457
Rosseni. Dam Gabriel: 1710
Rossner. Judith W n g & Mr. Goodbar : 617 ,669 ,792,824,862,871 ,1583
Rouil. MaiieTherese "Enfance" : 989
t ' . . . -Rousseau, ,Jean-Jacques - - - Discme 6ii tneqrdt y : 166
Emile : 173 ,176 ,177 ,185 ,201 .. Essay on the Origin of Lunguclge : 166 -,
La Nouvelle Helabe : 176,177 ,181 ,192 ' La Reine Fantas~lre : 173
+ Letter to d' Alembert : 166 a
- 1
Roussin, Claude Une Job : 1043 .
Rowe, Nicholas The Ymbitiarr S t e m h e r : 216 The Fdr Penitent : 216,1322 The Rr& Convert : 216 The Tragedy of h e Shore : 216
~owl&dson, Mary: 1321 P
The Soveraignty and Goodness of Gad, Together with the Faithjulness of His. Promises Displayed; Being a Nha t i ve ofthe Captivity and Restatuation of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson : 124
I - Rowson, Susanna Haswell d
Charlotte Temple : 194,1272 1619 Slaves in Algiers,. w a Struggle Freedm : 1319
Roy, Gabrielle: 1324 ,1455 Garden in the Wind (Un Jardin au Bact du Monde) : 786 The Raad Past Altamont (La Racte d Altamont) : 721
, Street of Riches : 721 The Tin Rute (Bonheur dOccasion) : 654 ,1181 7
1
Rubio, Jose Lopez 4 - .
ta Venda en L a OM : 1069 . a P'
Rudahl, Sharon: 1130
Rudel. Jaufre: 55 !-" '3 . .
Ruedebusch. Emil F. Die Eigenen : 532
t
Ruheni. Mwangi The Future Leaders : 914 What a Life! : 914
k
Ruiz, Juan The Book of True Love mbro de Buen Amw) : :.328
.s
Rukeyser, Muriel: 657 ,701 ,1001 ,1189 ,1551 P+.
"Ajanta": 990 s3 Breaking Open : 959 "Myth": 1318 < ,
- -
\ "Orpheusn: 959 The Sped of Darkness : 959 ,1443 ,1444' - 2 - - -
* . - Rule; Jane: 1455 a
- -
a "Homew: 652 --
Lesbian Images : 850 1712 .A
This I; Not fw Yac : 793 ,850 The Yatng in One Andher's A m : 850 -
Rush, Bknjamin I P
"Of the Mode of Education Proper in a Republicn: 177 - i
Ruskin. John b
-- -, S e m e and Lilies : 440 rC
I i . . Russ. J O G : 864,872
P kRd C h m Died : 659 The Female Man : 521 ,589 ,659,779,807 ,809,816,1498 : 1540
h - I Kfttafinny: A Tale of Magic : 680
On Strike against Gad : 659 Picnic on Pardhe : 779 The Twa of Them : 680 "The View from This Window": 659 . We Who Are Abmt T o : 659 ,
"When It Changed": 646 ,659 ,926 . Russell. Lady Elizabeth: 1301
Sackville-West, Vita: 1496.1567 . 1578
Sade. Marquis De: 176
Sadji. Abdoulaye Ni& to Mulatresse : 739 '
&
Saintes, A E de '
L'Ange de'la Maistm : 404 Los Delersernents de ma $lie : 404 .
Therese : 404
Salimbene: 55
Samuelson. Janet "Balance " : 1008 "Ourside Jermynw : 1 ~ 8 j "Run-Awayw: 1008 "Texas Homecomingw: 1008 "West Texas Seriesw: 1008
Sari Pedro, Diego de '
. Sanbom. Kate. ed.
P
he-wit of W a e n : 296
i
1 d* .4
-. Sanchez, &a -
XBlues B d @ r Blue Black Magical w m e i : 1020 H m e Covning : 1020 Love Poems : 1020 "Present": 989 W E a BaddDDD People : 1020 e e
Sand, George: 352 ,410,1496 ,1629 ,1635 EIleerLui: 1300 Francas le Champi : 376 Histare de ma Yie : 328 ,376 I n d i d : 374 ,1300 k q w s : 303 ,1300 Lo Confission bum fewre Fdle : 328 .
P
Leh: 328.396.13OO Mmcjuat : 304.376.1300
*b ,&'
Sandoz, Maxi - Old Jules : 52? ,769
Sappho: 7 ,12 .19 ,20 .25 ,949 #
Sargent Pamela: 1682
Sargent Pamela, ed. Mwe Women of Wonder : 908 W m e n of Wonder : W 8
Samzin, Albertine Jbwnol de prim 1959 : 1271
Sarton. May: 877 ,1245 - -
As W e Are Now : 939 /aud of a Sditude : 939 Kinds of Love : 939 "The Lady and the Unicornw: 1670 Mrs. Stevens Hears the Mermaids Singing : 593 ,792 . 1443 ,1444,1539 ,1698 "The Muse as Medusa": 1670
- "My Sisters. 0 My Sisters": I670 Plant Dreamhg Deep : 939 The Reckoning : 547
. *
Saunders, Mme. J. Direction Mat ernelle de la pune flle : 404
...-
Savard, Marie
Sayers. Dorothy L. B ~ S on em : 519 ,756 ,859 Gaudy Night : 519,595 ,756 ,855 ,1268 Have He Carcase : 756 Strong Paisovl : 519 ,756 ,859 Unnatiud Demh : 519
A-
Scanlan. Nelle M. Pencarrow ; 829
&arron, Francoise d'Aubigne, h$ne de Maintenan: 122
Schaefer, Jack , Sham : 781
Schaeffer. Susan Fromberg Anja : 775 Fding : 520
Schmidt, Arno Republic of the Learned : 532
Schmidt, Lorenza C.: 1702 7
S c h n e i d e m Rose , AN jr One : 527
Schopenhauer. Arthur: 1710 \o
Schor. Lynda , a
Appetites : 551 ,871 -
Schott, Penelope: 1001
Schreiner. Olive "The Buddhist'$ Priest's Wifen : 245 D r e w : 241 . $56 F m Man to #an : 241 ,245
-- - The Story of an Afircan Fann : 241 ,245 ,322 ,502 ,766 ,1300 Thacghts tm S w h Afiw : 322 "Three Drcatns in the Desert" : 245 ' T m p r Peter Hidkt of Mashadand : 766 Undine : 245 ,322 W m dad L46w : 241 ,322 ,766 ,1566
Schwamm, Ellen
i
Schwarz-Bart, Simone %% %- Bridge of BeyPind : 570
-
f Pluie et vent w Telumee Miracle : 847
, Scott, Sarah and Barbara Montagu MUlenium Hall : 1260
Scott, Sir Walter The Bride of lammemow : 168
(
- . Scudder, Vida
A Listener in Bubel : 754 On h n e y : 754
L &udery, Madeleine de . *
Clelie : 117 Entretiens de M a a l : 117 Le Grand Cpus : 117
4
Seabury. Florence Guy - - The Delicatessen Husband : 921 .
I
Seam, Esta: 755
Secker. William * . A Wedding Ring : 1302
Sedgwick, Catharine Maria: 314 ,315
Sedley. - "In the Fields of Lincoln's Inn": 214
Segalas, M s A Ma Alle : 404
Segun, Mabel Imoukhuede Jolaosa: 1439
&lfiidga Employees The Sufiage Girl : 1050
Sembene. Ousrnane Barm Sarret : 7 39 Ceddo : i39 Emitai : 739 G d s Bits o f W d (ZRs-Bouts de Boic de Dim) : 718 ,842.1527
L'~onnartan : 718 "The Mother": 739 0 Pays, Mm Beaa peuple! : 739 "Ses Trois Jours": 718 "Vehi-Ciosanen : 718 White Genesis : 739 -- X a h : 739
%'$art ": 1163 . I
Seranus: See Hanison, Susan Frances A
Seward, h m a : 1459 -.
Sexton, Anne: 961 ,1001 ,1177 ,1247 "The Abortion": 1315 AN My Pretty Ones : %7 ,987 The A w j d Rowing Towurd Gad : 967 The Bodr of Fdly : %7 ,976 The Break" : 823 "Consorting with Angels": 1560 "Dancing the Jig": 982
- "The Death Baby": 982 The Death Ndeboaks : 967 ,976 "The Divisioarof PaFefw : 982 "The Double Image": 982 "Dreaming the Breasts" : 982 "Fifth Psalm": 1017 --- - "Flee on Your Donkey": 1017 1 "Food": 982
, "The Fury of Beautifid Bones": 1017 I "The Fury of Cocks": 1017
"The God-Monger": 1017 "The Hoarder": 982
I
"Housewife " : 666 "Hurry Up Please It's Time": 982 "In Celebra6011 of My Uterus": 823 ,982 "Iran Hans": 101? "Jesus Dies": 1017 "Little Girl. My Stringbean, My Lovely Woman": 982 "A Littie Uncomplicated Hymn": 982 "Live": 982 Love Poems : 976 "Loving the Killer": 1017 "Menstruation at Forty": 823 "Mother and Daughter": 982 "Ninth Palm" : 982 "The Opeqitim" : 982 "Rapunzel " : 1560. "The Red Shoes": 1017 "The Risk": 982 "Snow White and the %yen Dwarfs": 1560
-
"Song for a. Red Nightgown": 823 "Talking to Sheep" : 982
- -- -
"Those Times . . .": 823 -- To Bedlam and Pat? Way Back : 987 , "With Mercy for the Greedyw: 1017" I .
- --- :You All Know the Stpry of the Other Woman": 1017
\
45 Mercy Street,: 967 ,1624 -- 3
Shadwell. Thomas The Squire of Alsati'o;; 143 ,
Shakespeare. William: 89,99,106,111,1601 ,1663 ,1673 Antony and Cleopztra : 93.212 As Yac Like Ii : 105 ,113 .1 37 The h e d y of Errors : 101 . C m i d ' m : 105 ,112
I Cpbeline : 94,101 ,113 Hamlet : 101 ,105 A
Henry VIII : 94 King Lear : 101 ,104,105 ,112 \
' f Love's tabacr's Lmt : 91 ,101 -4' Macbeth : 87 ,112 i
Measure+ Measure : 88 ,105 ,114 The Merchant oflent& : 107 ,113 A Midsummer Nights Dream : 95 ,1537 Much Ado &act NdhSng : 101 ,1537 Othello : !W ,98 ,101 ,102 ,105 ,1537 Pericles : 94 , 101 The Rape of lucrece : 81 .83
0
3 ' : 101 e Shrew : 100,108 ,1329.1678
The Tempest 794 ,101 Trailus and Cressida : 72 ,86 ,109 Tweljth Night : 113 ,1051 Two Gentlemen o f Y e r o ~ : 101 ,113 4 The Two Ndde Kinsmen : 94 The Winter's Tale : 94, % ,101 ,193 ,105 ,112 ,1678
shange, Ntozake: 1064.li90 ,1244. >
"Cornin td Terms": 1183 1, , cdaedgirls who have corfrbered suicide/when the rainbow rr e m f : 1k9 . 1042 . 1072 . 1077
,1183 %
Sharon, Sylvia: 537
Sharp, Saundra: 1064
Shaw, AMa Howard -
The Story of a Pioneer : 527
ShiRrb. FkmW lbfcc t 3 - w ~ ~ to3 thc TnoEUtr': 1W 'What Gcf'tWk Swin Fclt/Whcn SRr Walked Ezmugk a D a o m y ' : lOC18
S h W z Shcib . 'iiard Words, or Why Lesbians Wave to Be Philosophers": 9%
. - 8'
Silko, L&ie Marmon 5
'LuUabym: 1162 - -'The Man to Scnd Rain Clouds-: i 1 9 -
*Story from Bear Countsl.": 944 'Ycilow Womanm: 1162
' . d
~ i l v k r g , R O ~ R A Ttmc ofchanges : 926
Sin&r. May V Mary Ofivier: A LJ" : 169b The ~ & e ofHeaven : 675
Singer, Isaac Bashcvis: 533 ,701
Slunncr. Conrclia - -- Otis: 1322
Skinner. Mary I w i s c (Mdlic) Bleck Swim : 731 The Letten of a V . A.D. : 731 Men We Am : 731
GP
Skinntr, h q Louise (Mdfie) and D. H. Lawrence The Boy in the Bush : 731 ,863
Smcdlty. Agnes fbghtcr o/Ervrh : 526.634 ,1268 ,1278 ,1290,1478
Smith. Amanda Beny - An Arrrobr4ptaphy The Story of the h 6 s Dealing with Mrs. Amondo Smith, the Cdaed
Evangelisr : 274 a
Smith. B a y A Tree G&s rn B r d y n : 639
Smith. Beverly: 1705
Smith. Charlotte The B4ncrhed M m : 189 Ceies#ina : 170 ~raw;d : 168.170 ,189 . 191 Emmci1n.e: 168 ,189 M a r c h w : 189.191 Monralbcn : 189 The Oild M M O P t J I i : I g p 9 1 The Yowg Philosopher : 191
Smith. Gram The Dpng Mother's Legacy : 1302
-
Smith, Janet 1345
Smith. Mamie: 1345 U
Smith. Martha L Gdng to Gafs Carnrry : 1278
Smollcn. Tobias Tbc M ~ m s of Peregrine Pickle : 183
Solzhmitsyn. Alexander Tht c ~ & f r w~'ard : 1026
*
Somaize. Badaud de Lt Dictionwin dcs pcueus t s : 157
-
Sqrhoclts Antigme : 1579,1673 Oedipus Rex : 1673
Sous, Noemia de "Appeal": 1160
Southerland. Ellease Let the Lion Eat Struw : 871
Southeme. Thomas The Wives Excuse: Or, Ctrckdds Make Themselves : 1310 . 1311
Southworth. E D. E N.: 315 The Hidden Hand : 279 LFh& : 279
Spark, Muriel -. Tlre Driver's Seat : 862
. The Prime ofMiss Jean Brodie : 1450
Spence. Catherine Helen Clam M m i s o n : 332 Handpl.ored : 332 A Week in the Future : 332
. - Spencer. Anne: 1014.1612 Cording Dusk : 1164 "For Jim. Easter Evew : -1306 "Letter to My Sister": 1306
Spenser, Edmund: 1710 Amwetti : 78
1. The Foirie Qwene : 78,116
Spillane. Mickey I , the Jury : 611
i Speck, Benjamin Buby and Child Care : 656
Sprac Thomas "Life of Cowley": 125
Sprint. John The Bride-.Wcwnan's C m e l l o v : 1302
Spyri. Johanna Heidi : 1262
St John Chrymtom: 1710
Stael, Mme. de: 179 ,226 Cwinne : 235 ,351 ,1298 Delphing.AO6e
Stafford, Jean The Mauatain Lion : 526
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady et al. The Woman's Bible : 401
w .
Staton, Mary From the Legend of Biel : 807 ,808
/
Stead, Christina C* Dark Places of the H e m : 722 Fw Love Alone : 608 ,722 Letty Fox Her Lack : 722 -
f-/ The Uttle Hole1 : 722 The Man Who Loved Children : 526 ,608 ,722 ,723 ,748 ,1258 The Ruzledheaded Girl : 722
Stead. Robert J. C. Grain : 938 ,1467 The Home Steaders : 938 The Smoking flax : 938
i
Steams. Liz: 1064
The Ballad ofDan Peoples : 1041 r Birthday Suit : 1041 Scarsand Defects : 1041 A Very Personal Story : 1041
Steele. Richard The Consciacs Lovers : 218 ,1311 The Funeral : 1311
*The Tender Husband : 1311
Stein. Gertrude: 1224.1321 . 1567 ,1620 ,1629 ,1712 "Adan: 885 The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas : 657 ,885
r" Fernhurst : 885 ,1158 F w Saints in Three Acts : 657 Geography and Pfuys : 1040 How to Write : 657 Ida- A %el : 855 ,1590 "LZtmg Bellyn : 968 Lucy Chwch Amiably : 516 The Making of Americans : 885 "Miss Furr and Miss Skeene": 601
C
The Mother of U s All : 1158 "No": 968 "Not a Hole": 968 -- - ---
"Painted Lace": 968 -- , "Pink Melon Joy": 968
"Possessive Case": 968 - Q. E. D. : 885 "A Sonatha Followed by Another": 968 The Superstitions of Fred Anneday, Annday, Anday: A Novel of Real Li@ : 855 Tender Buttons : 657 Three Lives : 885 U&#l Knowledge : 615 ' 6 , ' y ;b - . "
Steinbeck. John
! The Gmps of Wrath : 648 ,781
Steinheil. Marguerite' Memoites : 1271
Steir, Pat "Kitchens 1970": 755
.\ Stephens, %m
Malaeska : 279 a
Stern, Daniel: See d'Agoult Marie
Stern, Elizabeth My M&her and I : "527 ,755
Swrne. Laurence The kfi and Opinions of Tristram Shady . Gentleman : 183
Stevenson, Anne .by
-..
Stewart, Maria: 1707
Stewart, Mary: 787 ,839 ,1671
Stimpson, Kate Class Notes : 547 ,871
Stirling, A. M. Amiric The Life Stwy of a Mawi Woman : 1174
Stockwell. Nancy Orrr Somewhere and Back Again : 1269
Stoddard Elizabeth Drew The M w g e m : 426
Stodghill. Pat Hall
@ A c ' 7
"Fonp": 1008 "In $feed of Snoww: 1008 "Names" : 1008
Stoker. B m D d a : 231 ,261 ,291 ,1303 The kwel of Seven Slurs : 231 The Ludy of the Shrad : 231 The Lair of the White Wwm : 231
a \--.---- / I J
9 ,$
the Caton L&d : 318
Stone. Francine Dead Sue ; 1064
Stone. Ruth: 978 .
Storni, Alfonsina "It May Be": 1493 "Little Man": 1184
Stowe, Harriet Elexher: 315 , 1276 Hewth ond Home : 264 The Minister's Wodng : 264 ,313 My Wifi and I : 264,313 Oldtown Fdks . 264 The Pearl of Orfs Island : 264 ,313
We and Our Neighbaus : 313
Strachey. Lytton: 1578 "Errnynuude and Esmerelda" : 685 "Truth Will Out": 685 "The Unfortunate Loversw: 685
Suain, Frances Bruce Teert Bays : 798
Sueet James Goadbye My Ludy : 696
Smndberg, August The Dunce of Denth : 1051
Stuart, Mary. Queen of Scots: 1301
Sturgeon. Theodore VenusRusX: 646
,. ?
Sturm, lacqdeline: i174 V *
-- Suckow, Ruth Catntry Peojde : 648 --
- - Sulpicia: 17
Suncircle, Pat: 1179 Cwy : 1074
Suosalmi, Kerttu-Kaaripa . The Old Bride : 1065
( Sutherland, Efua: 1439
J Eaufi : 1160 "New Life at Kyerefaso": 1160
Sutherland, Margaret: 768
Sutton, Joyce (pseud. Joyce Farmer): 11%
Swados, Elizabeth: 1064 / -
Swenson, May: 961 ,1001 -- "To Confm a Thing" : 1443 ,1444
Swiiift, Jonathan The Battle of the B& : 211 "A Beautiful Young Nymph Going to Bed": 211 ,1307 Cassinus and Peter : 211 "The Lady's Dressing Room": 211 ,1307 Strephon and Chloe : 211
d
Swinburne, Algerno~Charles: 462 ,1710 %?"
Symons. Arthur "The Unloved": 464
Taber, Gladys Anofher Path : 655 Harvest of Yesterdays : 655 Lute Climbs the Sun : 655 Stillmeadow Dpybook -655
Tafolla, Carmen: 950
Tanazaki, Junichiro The Makidca Sisters : 621' I
Tardif. Therese A Spinster's Despair @esesppolr de vieille )We) : 645
C
Tasma: See Courvieur, Je@e Catherine -=. / <
' Tasso. Torquato -- Genrralemme Liberata : 1316
,-
~a~lor:Eleanor Ross Welcome Eumenides : 1020 Wilderness of Ladies : 1020
Taylor. Pat Ell& "Qlled from the City: Home to Grandmaw's Funeral": 1008 "Crossing the River to Juarez" : 1008 "Salt Lake City: Missing the Fire and Rain": 1008
Taylor. Susie King ,
"A Brief Sketch of My Ancestors": 274
Taylor. Valerie: 537
Teer. Barbara AM The Ritual : 1211 a
Sofly C a e s a ~ h i r l w i d : 1211 W e R e d C o d : 1211 .
Tennant, Kylie The Battlers : 732 ,890 Foueaux : 732,890 The Honey Flow : 890 The Joy@ Condemned : 890 Lart Haven : 890 Ride on Stranger : 890 Tell Mwning This : 890 Tiburon : 732 ,890 Time Enacgh h e r : 890
-
Tennyson. Alfred. Lord ' Sldyls of the king^: 230 \ The Princess : 447
"St Agnes' Eve": 457 , - Terhune. Mary Virginia: 315
Terry. Lucy "Bars Fight, August 28 1746": 1306
Terry, Megan: 1W ,1217 Appazhing Sirnone : 1028 Calm Down Mother : 1028
Thackeray, William Burry Lyndon : 501 "Bluebeard's Ghost" : 501 "La Barbe '~leue" : 501
Pendennis : 501 Vanity Fair : 501
Theoret France -
Une Voix pav Odile : 1169
Thistlewaite, Bel: See W etherald, Agnes Ethel wyn A
Thomas. Audrey: 1224.1455 ;
Blown Figwes : 652 Lotokra : 814 Mrs. B l d : 652 ,1281 Songs M y Mother Taught Me : 652
Thomas, Elizabeth' Poems on Several Occasions : 1305
4'
Thompson. Eloise Bib "A Reply to the Clansmen": 1063 b
Thoreau, Henry David "Chastity and Sensuality" : 353 The /avnul of Henry David Thweau : 353 "Lovew: 353 Wdden : 353
Thurber, James and Elliot Nugent The Male Animal : 1051 .
Tibors, Lady: 71
Tiptree, James. Jr.: See Sheldon, Alice
Tolstoy, Leo Anna Karenina : 265-.. 288 ,341 Family Happiness : 303 The Kreutzer Sonata : 288
Tomasetti, Glen - Thwaghly Decent People : 1111
4
Tomlin, Lily: 905
Tonna, Charlotte Helen H e e t w d : 318 The Wrongs of Woman : 318
Toomer, Jean Cane : 565 ,1165
Tour, Guilhem de la: 55
Touranger, Zulma (pseud. Mrne. Carraud) r
7- S ?" - -
Lo- Petite kanne : 404 a - --
Tovar. Ines Hernandez: 9% ,. 'Para Teresa": 955 , 1008
= %3 . 'Resistencia": 1008 L 1 _C*
~ w n e n d , Christine t
%@ The beginning of everphing a td the id of everphing else : 674
Backwds of Canada : 380,1320
Trambiif, Estela PortiUo - W The Day of thk Swallows : 618 ,910 ,1175
""1f 1t Weren't for the Honeysuckle": 1175 "The Paris Gown": 618 ,1175 Rain of Scorpions and Other Writings : 910 "The Trees": 1175
Tremblay, Michel 2, A 701. p a r rouJwurs, tn Marie- Lar : 1043
Trilling. Diana: 1536 - .
Tristan, Flora Mephis : 375
Trollope, Anthony: 298 Barchester Towers : 428 Doctar Tharne : 428 Framely Parsonage : 428 The LPR Chronicle of Barxt : 428 Phineas Ann : 262 Phineas Redux : 262 The S d f H m e al Allington : 428 The Warden : 428 The Way W e Live Now : 339
Trollope. Frances Jessie Phillips. A Tale of the Present Day : 302 ~ i c h u e l Annstrong,bhe Factory Boy: 318
Trotter. Catherine: 151
Troyes, Chretien de Perceval : 73 Yvcrin: 73
Truss. Jan Bird ot the Window : 652
Trusts, H.: See Phelps, Elizabeth S ~ a r t , Sr.
B Tso, Agnes: 1010
- -
Tsung Ching: 592 Zi
Tubman, Hamet: 1362 -
Tudor, Elizabeth: 14%
Tuke. Thomas Discause Against Painting and Tincturing of Women : I52
Turell, Jane Colman: 207
Turgenev, Ivan On the Eve : 304
Turner, Bessie Circumstantial Evidence : 1282 A Woman in the Case : 1282
Turner, Eliza Sproat "What to Don: 448
5
Twain, Mark: 296 A Connectim Yankee in King Arthw's Caut : 263 "Eve's Diary": 263 Huckleberry Finn : 263' . . Inments Abrmd : 263 Letters,fiwn Satan : 263 Lettersfiom the &h : 617 The Mysterious Stranger : 263 The Prince and the Pauper : 263 PudcPnhedWiison : 263 Tom Sawpr : 263
Tyson, Willie: 958
Unamuno, Miguel de Abel Sanchez : 854 Dm Madres : 854 El Marques de Lumbria : 854 LA Tia Tula : 854
Undset, Sigrid ,
Kristin Luvansdatter : 1327
UzanngOctave &a Femme a Paris : 1643
Van Deventer. Enma Murdock (pseud. Lawrence L Lynch): Shadowed by Three : 1282
Van Duyn, MOM: 1001
Van Herk. Aritha M i t h : 652
Vanbrugh. John . A &my to London : 1310
,' The h & d Wifi : 1310.1311 The Relapse : 1310 ,1311
Varley, John -.
, - Demon : 797 Titan : 797
5 Wizard : 797 <
Vercheres. Madeleine de: 1291
, . Verel. Shirley
The Dark Side oflettus : 879
Vezina. France Les W n e e s rfune anthropophage : 1169
Vezina, Medje: 1324
Victor, Me- Victoria (pseud Seely Regdter) The Deod Letter : 1282
4
Vigil. Evangelins "Chicano-Gringa Bump": 1008 "Puto": 955 "Spinning on Solid Ground" : 1008
Vigny. Alfred de Chattenon : 374
Viidikas. Vicki Condition Red : 998 Wrappings : 674
Villalm Cristobal de 0
El C d t m : 1328 - El Schdastico : 1328 El Via& de Twquia : 1328
Vinge, Joan . E p s of~rnbcr : 797 The Snow Queen : 797
--
Wingoe. Mary: 1025
Viorst Judith How Did I Get to Be 40 & Other Atmities : 588 ,921 Ils Hiud to Be Hip Over Thirty : 588 PeoNe and Other Aggmvau'm : 588
Yes, Married: A Saga'of Love and ~om&nt : 588 ,921 . > 7- .. -- - s -
Virgil Aeneid : 15 ,751
Vives, Juan Luis: 1294 r
Vivien, Renee: .949 ,1567 Y
Voaden, Herman . -- - ,Emily Carr : 1320
d \
Vogel, Sir Julius A. D. 2000 w Woman's ~ e d i n ~ : 829
\
Vogelweide. Walther von der: 47 i
vomeguf' Kurt Jr. \
The Sirens ofTiran : 872 4
Waddington, Miriam: 1.224 , 1252
Wadsworth, Benjamin The Well- Ordered Fm- ly : 1302
Wakefield, Priscilla ' I
Rejections on the Present Condition of the Female* : 276
Wakoski, Diane: %1.1001.1555 "Alone": 965 "Creating a Personal Mythology ": 966 Dancing on the Gmve of a Son of a Bitch : 976 "Driving Gloves": 965 "The Father of My Country ": 965 ,/ -
The George Washington Poems : 981 Greed : 966 "In Gratitude to Beethoven": 965 "
Inside the B l d Factwy : 976 "Justice Is Reason Enough" : 966 The Moiacyde Betrapi Poemsli 965 + 974 ,1007 , 1633 "The Pink Dress" : 965 "Second -Chancew : 965 "The Storfof Richard Mafield " : 965 Virtuan, Literature jr Two and Farr Hands : 965 ,999 . 121 3 "The Water Eaement Song for Sylvia": 966
Walker, Alice: 701 ,1317 ,1493 ,1612 ,1707 "Advancing Luna - and Ida B. Wells" : 1183 "Everyday Usen: 618 ,1478 In Love and Trarble: Stories of Black Women : 1183 . 1688
* Meridiun:618.871.1477 Once : 1020 Revdutianary Petunias : 1020 ,1477
Wama, Jm Sccurd tn fbe Ram : 1274
Webb, Clhrismpbcr of thr Utter : 6%
Webb, Mary Prrciw &me : 1666 ' . w
Webb, Pbyliis: 992 Baked Poem: 1681
0
Wckr. Wendy 'One. the Orher, and": 1443
Wcbsur. Jtan The Faw Pods Mystery: 1282
*
Websler, John The Duchess o /M@ : 51 . 139.147 The Whire D e v i l : 139
W e i r a h . Anna Eisabtth The Ovrw : 1567 The Scapm : 1567
Weldon, Fay h n Among the W a e n : 709 ,
The F; ~ & n f h k e : 709 Femaie Friends : 709
., Rrmembpr Me : 709
Wells. Anna Mary . 3 : Mlrr ~'arhcurd M u Wodley : 1510
Wells. C a t h e - 'The Beautiful House': 601
- Weils. H. G. A
Ann Yerontco : 502,675 A Madern Ufopio : 403 . 1292
Welty. Eudora: 1321 'At the lmdink': 1272 - -
M a Wedding : 544 "A Mtmory": 1272 "A Worn Path': 1499
Wtntwonh. Pamcia: 688
Wcrdcn. Frieda '~arie": 1008
Wcrfel, Franz Star ofthe Unban : 532
W c k b a 1064
W m . Gwen, ed 9
Brian's W i k , Jenny's Mum : 11 11 %
' W e s t ~oroth~f 1707
W e s t Jane The Advantages of Education : 194
West. Jessamyn: 9 0 1 Cress Dclahant y : 526 .
W a r Joyce Sheep Kings : 829
3
West Rebecca The &dge : 606 The Meuning ofTretwn : 606 The New Meaning of Tream : 606
4
Wetherald. Apes Ethelwyn @cud Be1 Thistlewaite) The H a of the Trees and Other Poems : 505 The L a ! Robin. Lyics and Stmnets : 505 Lyics and S m t s : 505
The Radirrnt Rwd : 505 , Tangled in Stars : 505 - n
-
" 0 --
W harton, Edith * The Age of lnmence : 937 ,1450 -- A Backward Glagce : 639 "Beatrice Palmato Fragment": 1635 The Custom of the Country : 937 Ethan Frome : 512 ,937 dUr
The H w e ofMirth : 578 ,613 ,937 ,1275 ,1289 ,1604 New Year's'Day : 846 The Reef: 511
.Wheatley, Phillis: 206,210,1165 ,1317 ,1612 PW& on Variacs SuMcts, Religious and Moral : 130;
Wheeler. Edward Old Avalanche, The Great Annihilator, w Wild Edna, The Girl Brigand : 280
Whicher, Frances: 1321 Mary Elmer and Othersketches : 422 The Widow Bedott Papers : 296,422.
4 "Widow Bedott": 921 Widow Spriggins : 422
White, Lynn Jr. Educating Our Daughters : 798
White. ~aureen-1'025
White, Paulettq " T h e i r d Cage": 1183
Whitehead. Anne: 121
Whitehead, Joanie . , "Recipe": 1008
"Upon Receiving the Message/That YOU ad Died" : 1008 *
Whitman, Walt Leaves of Grass : 439 ,485 "Song of Myself: 439,485 , 1325
Whimey, Phyllis A: 787 ,839,1671 Listen fbr the ~ h i s k r e r : 824 Snowfire : 824 The Turquohe Mask : 824 Willow Hill : 817 ' .
Wier, Ester The b i e r : 696'
Wiggin, Kate Douglas
A Rebecca of Sunn@roak F m : 1262 -
Wiggins. Ella May "Chief Aderholt": 1356 "The Mill Mothers Lament" : 1356
Wilax, Ella Wheeler: 472
Wilde, Oscir: 685 The Picture of Dorian Gray : 502
\
Wilhelm, Kate: 1682 The Clewiston Test : 797 Fmrlr Lines : 797 The Injnity Box : 819 *
&per T h e : 797 Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang r 819. ...
Wiikins. Mary E The Long Arm : 1282
Wilkinson, Sylvia P
M m 6n the Narth Side : 526 B
-
Willard. Nancy & Nineteen Masks* the Naked Poet : 1007
Willard Samuel ' A Complete Body of Divinity in Two Hundred and FijYy Exwtary Lectures : 1302
Williams. _Jesse Lynch Why M m y ' : 1054
Williams. Sherley Anne _"Meditations on History": 1183 - P
Williams. Tennessee: 1028
Williamson, Cris: 958 -
Willis. Ellen: 12%
Wilmot. John, Earl of Rochester "The Fall": 214 "On the Women About Town": 214 "Sodom": 214 w
Wilwn7, Augusta Evans: 315
~ilsorl' Augusta Jaqe St. Elmo : 279 *
Wilson, Ethel
Hetty Darvd : 651 The Swamp Angel : 664,750,941 .
Wilson, John Harold - "On the Ladies of the Court": 214
Wilson, Richard "Mother to the World": 926
Winsloe. Christa The Child M a d a : 1567
Winther. Sophus Keith -- Mmgage Y au d e m : 769 Take All to Nebraska : 769 This Passion Never Dies : 769
Wister. Owen The Virginian : 663.. 769
Wittig, Monique: 1651 ,1694 L'Opoponax : 927 ,979 ,1599 ,1622 Les Guerilleres : 876,899,917,927,936,979,1540,1599.1618.1622 The Lesbian Bady : 927 ,979.1599 ,1622 ,1681 Lesbian Peoples. Material@ a Dictionary : 927 , 1622
,,Wojciechowska, Maia P Shadow of a Bull : 696 - -
Wolf. Christa The Quest fw Christa T. (Nachdenken uber Christa T.) : 508 ,635 ,736 . 1285
-
Wcife, G e m "T1:e Dear3 of Dr. Island" : 926
Wolfe. Thomas Of Time and the River : 639
w o k , Ruth: 1064 The Abdication : 1028
Wollstonecraft, Mary: 189 ,1496 ,1595 Letters to Irnlay.: 173 Letters Written During a Shwt Residence in Sweden, Norway and Denmark : 173 Maria, ov the Wrongs of Woman : 173 ,182 ,197 ,413 , 1264 Mary, a Fiction : 182 ,1264 , 1299 A Vindiccztion of the Rights of W m n : 173 ,177 , 182 , 197 , 199 ,276 ,405
W ong. Jade Snow
#
FGh Chinese ~ a u ~ h t e r : 540 No Chinese Stranger : 540
Wood. J3en (Mrs. Henry Wood) k& Lynne : 267 ,279,341 ,350,393 ,419,1282
Woolf. Virginia: 1224,1566,1567,1577,1578 ,1595 ,1620,1629,1685 ,1687 Between the Acts : 642 ,668 ,685 ,7291 ,771 ,934,1168 "George Eliot" : 1293 Jacob's R m : 685 ,747 ,934 " Kew Gardensw : 747 "The Lady in the Looking-GlassW : 878 "The Mark on the Wall": 747 "Mrs. Dalloway in Bond Street": 845 Mrs. Ddlawoy : 561 ,685 ,747 ,858 ,878 ,1268 ,1540 ,1599 ,1650 -
Night and Day : 542 ,569 ,675 ,747 ,934 Orlando : 657 ,668 ,685 ,782 ,934,1168 The Pargiters : 816 Roger Fry : 668 A R w m of One's Own : 561 ,604,658 ,668 ,683 ,685 ,764,765 ,843 ,878 ,903 ,1536,1650 "A Sketch of the Past": 878
-hkmghts on Peace in an Air Raid" : 878 -
561 ,562,657 ,658 ,668 ,683,685 ,764,765 ,780,816,848 ,853 ,903.1650 : 550.561 ,685,725 ,747 ,'771,838 ,878 ,903 ,934,1268 : 1318 ,1501 , ,1708 ' 8
The Vowge Oy : 561 ,583 ,685.747 ,934 The Waves : 685 ,747 ,934 ,1618 The Years : 561 ,568 ,668 ,727,747 ,762,763 ,764.765 ,771 ,780,816,848,853,934
Woolson. Constance Fenirnore Enst Angels : 427
- Fw the Ma@ : 427
Wordsworth, Dorothy: 399 The Gramere J w n a l : 1687
Wordsworth, William "Nutting" : '306 The Prelude : 306 ,480 "Tintem Abbeyw: 306
Wortley, Lady Emmeline Stuart "I Am Come but Your Spirits to Raise" : 464
Wright. Harold Bell The S&petds of the Hills : 799 When a Man's a Man : 799
Wright, Judith: 1016 .
Wright, Richard: 1707
Black Boy : 678 "Bright and Morning S t . " : 692 a
Lawd Today : 678 ,692 " "Long Black Song" : 692 The Long Dream : 692 "The Man Who Killed a Shadown: 678 ~ h t i v e Son : 678 ,692 ,923 The Outsider : 692
~ r i & Richard Bruce -
The Weekend Man : 560
Wright, Thomas The Female V e r t m : 217
Wroth, Lady Mary: 151 ,1301 The Countess of Montgomery's Urania : 156 Pamphilia to Amphilanthus : 156
Wycherley, William: 1310 The Country Wife : 140 ,218
WyKe; Elinor Angels and Earthly Creatures : 1021 Black A r m w : 1021 Cdlected Pohs : 1021 Incidental Numbers : 1021 "Jeweled Bindings" : 1021 The Venetian Glass Nephew : 1021
Wylie, Philip Generation ofvipers : 656 ,1710
Wyndham, John "Consider Her Waysn: 646
Xelina "Urban Lifen: 955
Yamada, Mitsuye: 1555
- Y ankowitz, Susan Siient Witness : 547
Yarbo, Chelsea Quinn: 1682
Y eats, William Butler "Ego Dominus Tuus" : 1308 A Vision : 1308
Y ezierska, Anzia Arrogant Beggar : 686 Bread Givers : 520,639 ,686.775
Children of lrwKlinesi : 686 "Children of Loneliness": 755 "The Fat of the Land": 755 Hungry Bearts : 639 ,686 "The Lost Beautifulness": 755 Red Ribbon on a White Horse : 686 S a h e of the Tenements : 686
h Y onge, Charlotte
The Clever Woman of the Fomily : 350 The Baisy Chain : 334 Magnwn Bonwn : 1266
Y uriko, Miyomoto The Banshu Plain : 728 "The Family of Koiwai": 728 A Flock o f P w Fdk : 728 Fuchiso : 728 Nobuko : 728 The Two Gardens : 728
Zamora. Bernice "California" : 1009 "Do You Take?": 955 "Gata Poem": 1009 Restless Serpents : 1009 "Sonnet, Freely Adapted": 1009
Zindel. Paul M y Darling, M y Hamburger : 7W
Zirimu, Elvania Namukwaya: 1439
Zola, Emile L'Asmmmdr : 347 ,1643 Lo Terre : 1327 N ~ M : 347
Zurbo. Sandra, ed. Ston'es of Her Life : 1111
INDEX OF AUTHORS OF ARTICLES
Abartis, Caesarea: 1257 'l
Abbot, Andrea and Pamela Gray: 1430
Abel, Elizabeth: 507 ,508 , 5 0 9
Adam, Elsie B: 1023
Adler, Louise and Sneja Gunew: 1534
Aers, D: 205 d *
d ,
Aers, David: 28
Aers, David and Bob Hodge: 149
Agonito, Rosemary and Joseph Agonito: 1431
Alcover. Madeleine: 117
Alexander, Bonnie L: 85
Allen, Carolyn: 1156,1157
AIM, Margaret: 1432
Allen, Paula Gum: 944
Allen, Shirley S: 29
Allentuck, Marcja: 510
Ammons. Elizabeth: 224 ,511 ,512
Andemkt Verena: 1535
Andersen, Margret: 1536
Anderson, Bonnie: 225
Anderson, Doris: 1057
Anderson, Mzry Louise: 1024
Andresen-Thorn, Martha: 1537
Andrews, Linda L: 439
Andrews, Marcia S: 945
- -
-- ~ ~ a s , Pamela J: 946 . .
Anonymous: 1025 ,1088 ,1185,1186
Anthony, Geraldine and Tina Usmiani: 1433
Applebroog, Ida: 1538 -
Applegate. AM^: 206
.l ~ p s t e i d Barbara: 258
Aptheker, Bettina: 513
Arbur. Rosemarie: 947
Archer, Jane. Sally Ann Drucker, Marily~! E Matis, D o ~ a Meek, Karen Peterson and Marcella Sherman: 1434
- - Arenal, Electa: 948
Arid. Jacqueline AM: 514
Arizpe, h k d e s : 1187
Arl6w. Phyllis and Merle Froschl: 1435 ' $
Armatage. Kay: 516.1158
Arnold. June and &rtha Harris: 1539
Arnold. June. Sandy Boucher, et al: 1540 -#
Arthu~. Marylin B: 1 , 2 , 4
Ascher. Carol: 1436
Asp. Carolyn: 86 .87 7 -
Atkinson. Colin B, and Jo Atkinson: 226
Atlas. Marilyn Judith: 517 "
Atwood, Margaret: 518 ,1541
Auerbach, Nina: 227,228 ,229 ,230 ,231 ,519,1259,1542,1343
Austen, Zelda: 1544
Austin, Kitty: 1437
Backscheider. Paula R: 1260
Badami. Mary Kenny: 521
Bailey, Nancy: 522
Bailey. Nancy I: 523
Baines. Barbara: 232
Bakerman, Jane S: 524.525
Barman, Helen M: 527
Barber, Marsha: 1188
Bardes, Barbara Ann and Suzanne Gossett: 233
Bargainnier. Earl F: 528
Bipard, Sylvia: 3
L e t c Louise K: 234
Barney, Natalie: 949
Barrett. Phyllis W: 1261
Baruch, Elaine Hoffman: 235 ,436 * I
Bate. Barbara: 1371
Bate. Barbara A: 1372 . ,,
Batsleer. Janet: 529
Ban, Sharon: 1089
Baxter, Beverly: 159
Bayard, Caroline: 1159
Baym, Nina: 1545
Bazin, Nancy Topping: 530 -
Beardon, Sue: 440
Beck, Brenda E F: 1330 -
Beck, Evelyn T: 531 .
wk, Evelyn Torton: 532 ,533
Beck. Kay: 1373
Beebe. Sandra: 1438
Beer, Frances: 30.31
Beilin. Elaine: 138
Beicber, Margaret: 118
Belkin, Roslyn: 236 ,237 ,487 ,534,1546
Bell, Roseann P: 1160
Bell. Roseann Pope: 1161
Bell. Susan Groag: 32
Benert Annette Larson: 535
Bennett. Donna A: 536
Bennett, L e m e Jr. and Margaret G. Burroughs: 1027
Berms. Susanna: 537
Benson, Peter: 492 e
Berg, Karin: 1547
Berg. Maggie: 441
Berggren, Paula S: 139 ,238
Berggren, Ruth: 33
Bergmann, Harriet F: 239 C.
Berke. Jacqueline: 240.1262
Berkman. Joyce: 241 ' e
Bernikow, Louise: 442.. 1189
Berrian, Brenda F: 1439
592
6
. Benidge. Elizabeth: 443
Berry, Linda and Judith McDaniels: $44(1 - *
Berry, Ralph: 88 ?
Bhattacharya, Bhabani: 538 %
Bieder, Maryellen: 242
Billman, Carol: 1028
Blackwell, Henry: 1190
- Blake, C, Fred: 1331
Blake, ~athlee*: 243 ,244,245 ,444
Blaubergs. Maija S: 1374.1375
Blicksilver, Edith: 539 ,1162
Blinde, Patricia Lin: 540
Blodgett, Harriet: 541 ,542 J
Blom, T. E: 543 -
W n e , Ann: 1376
Bogarad, Carley Rees: 246
Bogert, Judith: 445
Bolker. Joan: 1441
Bolsterli, Margaret: 544
Bolton, W. F: 34
Bond, Jean Carey: 545
Bond, 9 Carey and Carole E Gregory: 1548
Boos, Florence and William Boos: 160
Boring, Phyllis Zatlin: 546
Borker. David and Olga K. Gamica: 488
Bornstein, Miriam: 950
Bovenschen, Silvia: 1549 . 1550
Brydon. Diana: 1263
Burke. Linda Barney: 35
3 u r k c m Sefma and Margaret Williams: 556 1
Bums. Jane: 557
WLnon. Lydia and David Moriey: 558
mh, Robert: 252
htler , Marilyn: 12f3
Caesar. AM: 559
Call. Karen: 1447 ',
&npbtU, Sheila: 560
C a n m w . Ellen. 1265 . 1448 4 Cantor, f m e : 1334 LJ Caputi.' Jane E: 1377
Caraveli-Chaves. Anna: '1335
-Cardaro-Freeman Inez: 1336
Carlisle, Carol f : 89 r,
Carpenter. Ann: 1337 1
Carp~ler. Carof: 1449
Carr, Helen: 562
Carroll. BerenieA: 561 - - 6
Carruthes. Mary: 1560
Carter, Steven R: 1031
Carver. Larry: 150
Cary. Meredith: 1450
Casterton, Julia: 1561
Caws, Mary Ann: 954
Cheda, Shenill: 1095
Chew. Martha: 563
Childers. Mary: 254
Chinoy. Helen Krich: 1309
Christ Carol P: 564 . -
Christ Carol T: 255
Cixous, Hdcne: 1562 . 1563 ,1564 .,
Clancy. Patricia A: 162 -
Clark, J. Michael: 565 - Clark, Susan L and 3ulia.n N. Wassennan: 36 .
Clausen Jan: 1565
Cliff. Michelle: 1566
Coffey. Marilyn: 566
Cohan, Steven: 567'
Cohen, Derek: 146 I
'4
Colley. Ann C: 447
Com'ssiong, Barbara and Marjorie Thorpe: 1451
Comstock, Margaret: 568 ,569
Conley. Verena: 571
Conroy, Peter V., Jr: 215
Cook, Blanche Wiesed: 1567
Copeland, Edward W: 163
Core, Deborah: 572
Cprmier, Holly Hendricks: 1338
- Cota-Cardenas, Margarita: 955
CothFan, AM: 573
Cotton, Nancy: 37
Cowan, Ruth Schwartz: 1096
Coward, Rosalind: 1568
Cowell, Pattie: 207
Crabbe, John K: 256
Craig, Caroline: 496
Creighton, Jane, Joan L a r k and Ellen Shapiro: 1097
Creighton, Joanne V: 574
Crosby, Faye and Lynda Nyquist: 1378 .
Cruikshank, Cathy: 1569
C M a n k , Margaret: 257
Cruiksha.uk, Peg: 1098
Cullen, Constance: 1379
Culley. Margaret: 1099
Curb, Rosemary: 1032 ,1033
Curb, Rosemary K: 1034 , 1035
Curry, Jane: 258.. 259 %
Cutting, Rose Marie: 164 , 165
Daghistany. Ann: 1314 - DaGue. Elizabeth: 1266
Darnmers, Richard H: 216
Damon. Gene: 1453
Dandridge, Rita: 1454
Dandridge, Rita B: 1570 ;$b
Dandrige, Rita B: 575
Dash. Irene: 1315
Daugherty, Margaret: 5
Davidson, Cathy: 1267
Davidson, Cathy N: 576 , '577 ,578 ,1455
h v i s . Angela: 579
Davis. Cynthia: 580
Davis. Sara deSaussure: 260
Davy. Shirley: 1380
Day. Robert Adams: 151
De Magnin. Peggy Kamuf: 166
De Salvo. Louise A: 583
De Weever. Jacqueline: 584
Dean, Sharon and Erlene Stetson: 1164
Deats. Sara Munson: 90
Decker. Sharon: 956
De Koven, Marianne: 58 1
Delaney. Sheila: 38 . 3 9 ,208
Delmar. Rosalind, ed: 1571
43 <
Demeron, Pierre: 1194
Demetrakopoulos, S. A: 127
Demetrakopoulos, Stephanie: 261
Denne, Constance Ayers, Katharine M. Rogers, Elizabeth Hardwick. Erica Jong. Nancy Milford. and Elaine Showalter: 1195
L
Denton, Ramona: 167
Denton, Ramona L: 262
Desmoines, Harriet: 1100
hwald , Carolyn: 6
Diamond, Arlyn: 585 ,1572
Dichter. Nancy: 1456 ' i
Dickersin, Gail: 448
Diehl, Joanne Feit: 449,450,451 ,452 ,957
Diel, Emmanuel: 263
G d s o n , Sandra M: 454
Donovan, Josephine: 264,497 ,1573 ,1574
Doody. Margaret Anne: 168
- Doughty. Frances: 1101 . 1457
Dowling. David: 586
Downey. Linda K: 587
Doyle, James: 265
Dragu. Margaret: 1196
Dresner. Zita' Z: 958
Dresner, Zita Zatkin: 588
Drew--. Annette: 152 -- -
DuBois, Betty Lou and Isabel Crouch: 1381
DuBois, Page: 7 ,1316
DuBois, Page Ann: 78
Dun& Margo: 498
Dunn, Susan: 169 2-
DuPlessis. Rachel Blau: 589 ,959 ,960 ,1037
DuPlessis. Rachel Blau and Susan Stanford Friedman: 590
Durbin, Karen: 591
Dworkin, Susan: 1038 ,1197
Dyc, Gloria: 1102
Dyer, Joyce: 266
Eaglen, Audrey: 961
Eber. Irene: ,592 d
?%e?i?mqJane Donahue: 128
Eckhardt Caroline D: 41 A
Eder. Doris L: 593
Edrniston, Susan: 42
Edward, Sister Ann: 1165
Edwards. Lee: 595
Edwards. Lee R: 596 ,1268 ,1575
Egejuru, Phanuel and Robert Elliot Fox: 1198
Ehrenreich. Barbara: 1382
Eichler, Margrit: 597 0
Eisinger. Erica M: 598
Elgie. Kae and Pat Smith: 1103 6
Eliot, Jeffrey: 1039
Elliot, ~ e & e B: 267
Ellis, Deborah: 43
Ellis, Katherine: 170 ,268
Endxes, Robin Belitsky: 1199
Erickson, Carolly and Kathleen - b e y : 1458
- Erickson, Peter B: 91
Ernster, Virginia L: 1383
Evans, J. A. S: 599 -\
Evans. Mary: 600
Faderman, Lillian: ,269 ,455 ,456 ,601 ,962 ,1459
Faderman, Lillian and AM Williams: 602
-Fairbairns, Zoe, Claire Chapman, Margot Lunnon. Georgina Tarren, Michele Russell. Amanda C u t h b e ~ and Pauline Matthews: 1460
Fairbanks, Carol: 1269 O
Fairley, Irene R: 963
Fairweather, Eileen: 1461
Farnham, Margot: 603
Farrer. Claire R: 1339
Farrington, Jean and Cristine C. Rom: 1104
Farwell, Marilyn R: 604,1576,1577
Fass, Barbara: 457
Fassler, Barbara: 1578
Feder. Alison: 605
Feinberg, Karen: 44
Felman, Shoshana: 276 ,271
Felstiner, John: 964
Feral, Josette: 1579
--. Ferguson, Ann: 1462 1 .--
Ferguson. Mary Anne: 1580
Ferguson, Moira: 606
Ferres. Kay: 1464
Femer, Carole: 607,608,609,610.965.966.967,1200 -
Femer. Carole and Michael Coleman: 1463
Ferris, Dianne: 92
Festa-McCormick, Diana: 272
Femrley, Judith: 273 ,611 ,612 ,613
Fido. Elaine: 614
Fifer. Elizabeth: 615 ,968 ,1040
Filstrup. Jane Merrill: 616
Fishbein, 617
Fisher. Berenice: 1465 , 1581
Fisher. Elizabeth A: 8
Fisher, Jerilyn: 618
Fishrnaa. Pamela M: 1384
Fitz, L. T: 93
Fitz. Linda T: 1582
Flanders, Jane: 619
fiavell. M. Kay: 1270
Fleenor, Juliann E: 620
Flerni~lg Martha: 1041
Flood, Cynthia: 621 - - -- ~
Flora. Cornelia Butler: 1105
Flowers, Sandra Hollin: 1042
Foley, Helene P: 9 ,10
Fonseca, Mary Lydon: 1166
Fontana, Ernest I2 622 - "
Foote, Auo&ey C: 1385
Forrey, Robert: 623 %
Forsyth. Louise: 624,1043
= Forsyth, Louise H: 625
Foster, Frances: 274
Foster, Frances Smith: 1466
Foulks, Debbie: 969
Fowler, Marian: 275
Fowler. Marian E: 276
Fox-Genevese, Elizabeth: 626,627 ,1583
Fox, Susan: 209
Francescato. Martha Paley: 628
Frank, Miriam: 1106
Frankforter. A. Daniel: 45
Fraser. Kathleen: 1201
French. Marilyn: 1386
Frey, Charles: 94
Friebert, L M: 970
Friedman, Adele C: 458
Friedman, Edward: 1044
Friedman, Susan: 971 ,972 ,973
Fries, Maureen: 46'. 47 - -
Frio, Kathlyn Ann and Natalie Kaufman Hevener: 629
Fromm, Gloria G: 630
Frye, Joanne S: 631
Fulton. E Margaret: 277 ,1467
Gallant, Christine: 459
Gallop. Jane: 1584,1585
Gandy. Clara 1: 278
Gannon, Catherine and Clayton Lein: 974 #
Garbowsky, Maryanne M: 499 1 B
Gardiner, Judith K: 632
Gardiner, Judith ~ e g a n - 48 ,153 ,633 ,634 ,635 ,1586 ,1587
Gardner. Susan: 636 ,1468
Garner. Shirley Nelson: 95
Garrison. Dee: 279
Gamer. Carol B: 280
Gaston, Karen C: 637
Gaston, Kay Baker: 638
Gates. Joanne E: 1167
Gaude, Pamela: 281
Gaudin, Colette. Mary Jean Green, Lynn Anthony Higgins, Marianne Hirsch, Vivian C h d i a Reeder, and Nancy Vickers: 1588
Gearhan. Sally Miller: 1387
Gelderman, Carol W: 1589
Gelfand, Elissa: 1271
Gelfant. Blanche: 639
Gelpi, Albert: 460
Gelpi. Barbara Charlesworth: 461 ,975
George, Diana Hume: 1388,1389
Gerber. John C: 1469
Gemn, Carole: 282 ,1202
Gerstenberger, Donna: 640
-Gerver, Elisabeth: 641
Gezari. Janet K: 283
Gibbs, Anna: 1590,1591 ,1592
Giddings. Paula: 210 . U17
Gid1ow;Eisa: 1203
Gilbert,, Sandra: 1593
Gilbert,, Sandra and Susan Gubar: 1594 -
Gilbert, Sandra M: 284,285 ,976,977 ,1168 ,1595 ,1596,1597
Gilbert, Sandra M., Wendy Barker et al: 978
Gillespie, piane Filby: 642
Gillman, Linda: 979
Ginsberg, Elaine: 1272
Gladstein, Mimi R: 643
Glastonbury. Marion: 1598
Glazer, Nona: 1107
Godard, Barbara: 644,645
G6ddard, Tem and Marion Linwood: 646 1
Godwin, Gail: 1204
Goldsmith. AnQea E: 1599
Goodhart, Lynne Howard: 647
Goodman, Charlotte: 648 ,649,650,1273
Gordimer. Nadine and Susan Gardner: 1205
Gormley. Joanne: 1206
Gomick, Vivian: 1600
Gorsky. Susan R: 286
A
Gottlieb, Lois: 1045
Gottlieb. h i s C: 1046
Gottlieb, Lois C. and Wendy Keimer: 651 ,652 ,14711 t-
Gould, Karen: 653,1169
Gourlay, Patricia Southard: %
Grant, Diane: 1047
Graulich. Melody: 287
Green, Mary Jean: 654
Green, Rayna: 1340 ,1341,. 1471
Green. William H: 1390
Greenburg. Joyce: 1472
Greene. Gayle: 97 ,288 ,1601
Greenfield, Myma: 1048 .
Greenstein, Susan M: 289
Greiner. Norbert: 1049
Grenander, M. E: 290
Grier. Barbara: 655 . 1108
Griffm, Gail B: 291 ,292 .
\
Griffin, Susan: 1603
Grudal, Hanne Tang and Kirsten Busck Mellor: 656
Grossnan, Judith: 11
Gubar. Susan: 211 ,293,294,657 ,980,1318 ,1604
Gubar. Susan and Anne Hedin: 1473
Gunner. Elizabeth: 1342
Gunstmn-Vie Julia van: 658 "1"i
Habegger, Alfred: 295 ,296 I
Haberly, David T:'297 - Hacker, Marilyn: 659 I
I
Hageman. Elizabeth H: 1474 n.
Hall. Barbara: 1605
Hallett Judith P: 12
Halperin, John: 298
Hammond, Karla: 1207 ,1208 ,1209
Hammond, Karla M: 1210
Hampsten, Elizabeth: 129 ,1305
Hankin, Cherry: 1274
Hanning, Robert W: 49
Hanson-Smith. Elizabeth: 50
Harding. Susan: 1343
Harris. Bertha: 16b8 *
Harris, Janice: 660
Harris, Janice H: 16U6
Harris, Valerie: 1211 . 1212
Harrison, Anthony H: 462
( Harrison, Barbara ~ d u u t i : 661
Harrison, John R: 299
Harrison, Linda: 139;
Hart, Axme: 300
Hartley. J. M: 301
Haremann, Susan M: 1109
Harvey, A - D: 171
Hawkins, Gay: 662 '
Hili, PaPricia Liggins: 466,467
Hlm;Evclyn J: 676
H&. ?&riame: 172 4
Ho, Mar). buise: 1112
Hoagtand. Sasah W: 13%
Hobbs, Gicmb: 385 .67?
Hopwood. M i : 1051
Hornstdn, Jacqudine: 1319 *
Ham W e : €81
iforton. Susan R: 1275
Howt, Florm#: 1478 ,1479 . 1611
~ u d d l a u q Eugene L: 21:
Hucbcrf R d d : 141 1
Hull, Glaria 1: 682.983 ,934 ,1306,1612
Hurne, Robert D: 1310
Humm, Maggie: 307
Hummel, Madeline M: 683
Hunt, Linda': 684
Husserl-Kapit, Susan: 1216 f3
Eusmn, Nancy: 1613
Hutcheon, Linda: 685
Hymel, Cynthia Drew: 79
Hynes. Jo: 1217
Isaak, 30- AM^: 130
Jackson. Irene V: 1344
Jmbson, Marcia: 308
Jape- Ann: 1345
Jardine. Alice: 1617 , 1618
Jaskoski. Helen: 1346
Jay, Karla: -- 1115 - ,1218
Jehlen; Myra: 1619. '
Jelinek. Estelle C: 1480
Jenkins. Mercilee: 986
Jensen, w e : 1620
Jochmans, Beny. Bxuce Erlich. Lorraine KeFuup and Joanna lathrop: 1621
Jones. Betty H. and Alberta Arthurs: 1276
Jones. Deborah: 1347
Jones, Janet 1116 ,
Jones. Mary' Jane: 688
Jordan, June: 1219 , .
Jordon, Deborah: 1481 --
Joseph, Terri Brint: 1348
Juhasz, Suzanne: 468.469.1623.1624.1625,1626.1627
Kahane. Claire:. 1277
' Kahn, Coppelia: 81
Kaiser, Ernest and Robert ~kmirdff : 1482
Kaiser, Kathy: 1117 n Kalcik. Susan: 1349 \ , Kaledin, Eugenia: 312 \P
k
hk, Narendra Nath: 1118
Kammer, Jeanne H: 987
Kaplan, Carey: 689
Kaplan, Cora: 470 , 1628 ' Kaplan. Sydney Janet: 690 ,1629
K a g Candace~ Brook: 143
Katz, Sandra L: 691
Kaye. Melanie: 1630
Keady, Sylvia H: 692
Kearns, Judy: 693
Keizs. Marcia: 694
Kclber. Mim: 695 - -
Kelley,Mary:313,314,315 I
Kelly, G. D: 173
Kelly. Gary: 174
Kelty, Jean McClure: 6% - Kennard, Jean: 6 9
Kennard. Jean E: 1631 ,1632
Kennedy. Susan Estabrook: 11 19
Kennedy. Valerie: 316
&-my. Shirley Stnuni 1311
Kenb George E: 698
Kern. Donna Rose Casella: 493
Kessler. Carol Farley: 317
, Kesmer. Joseph: 318
Kitr, Kathleen E: 319
Kinard Lee: 1120
King Anne: 131
King ~a&aret L: 52 i
King, Margaret Leah: 53
King. Patricia M: 699
, Kingsbury, Marty: 1052
Kinnaird, Joan K: 120 (r \
Kirby. Linda and Cristine C. Rom: 1121 c
Kishwar. Madhu et al: 1053 ,135C
Kissel. Susan S: 701 t%
Kitagawa, Chisato: 1397
Klepfisz, Irena: 1122
Klotman, Phyllis R: 702 ,703
Kmetz, Gail: 320,321
Kmetz, Gail Kess1er:- 322
Knapp, Bettina L: 82
Knoepflmacher, U. C: 323
Koehler, Lyle: 1483 .
Kolb, Deborah S: 1054
Kolbenschlag. Madonna C: 704
Kolodny, Annette: 175 ,705 ,1633 ,1634.1635 ,1636,1637
Koon, Helene: 219
- Korenman, Joan S: 706
Koski, Fran and Maida Tilchen: 707
- - -
Krarner, Cheris, Barrie home and Nancy Henley: 1398
Krasno, Francine: 1484 - t
Kristew, M a : 1638
Kroller, Eva-Marie: 708 ,1320
Krouse, Agate Nesaule: 709.1055
Ksouse, A& Nesaule and Margot Peters: 710
Kuhn. Annette: 1639
Kuykendall. Eleanor: 1399
Ladden, Arlene: 55 ,1640
Ladenson, Joyce R: 711: 1172
l a d e w n , Joyce Ruddel: 324 0 Ladimer. Bethany: 712
# La~oy. Maureen: 1321
C Lakoff. Robin Tolmach: 1400
Lander, Dawn: 1278
Landy. Marcia: 132
Lanser. Susan Sniader: 713
Lanyi, Ronald Levitt: 1123
Larkin, Joan: 988
Larkin, Joan, Jan Causen, et al: 1641
Larsson, Lisbeth: 714
Lattin Patricia H: 325
Lauter. Paul: 1485
Lawrence, Karen: 715
Lawrence. Leota S: 716
Lazer. Charles and S. Dier: 1124
Le Clezio, Marguerite: 1173
Leavy. Barbara Fass: 471
Lebowitz, Andrea P: 1056
Lederman. Marie Jean: 717
Lee. Sonia: 718.1351
Lee. Valerie: 989
Lee. Valerie Gray: 719
Lefcowin, Barbara F: 720 ,990
LeGates, Marlene: 176
km, Joy: 1125
Lemay, Helen Rodnite: 56
Lennox. Sara: 1057
Lena Margaret: 326 ,327
Leventhal, AM Z:' 1279
Lever, Bernice: 1222
Levin, Carol& 76
Levin, Susan M: 328
Levine, George: 329
Levine, Joan B: 1352
Lewis, Paula Gilbert: 721
Lidoff, Joan: 722 ,723
Lifson, Martha R: 724
Lilienfeld. Jane: 725 ,991
Lindstrom, Naomi: 726 .
Linehan, Katherine Bailey: 330
Lipking, Joanna: 727
Lippard, Lucy R: 1642
Lippet, Noriko Mizuta: 728
Lippit, Noriko Mizuta: 1126
Lipton, Eunice: 1643
Little, Judith: 331
Little, Judy: 729
Livesay, Dorothy: 1223
Livesay, Dorothy, Miriam Waddington, et al: 1224
Loader. Jayne: 1486 c.
Lockwood, Betty: 332,333 ,730 ,731 ,732 , 1280
Loeb, Catherine: 1487
Lohrey, Amanda: 733
Lorde, Audre: 1644
Lorde, Audre and Adrienne Rich: 1225
Lorde, Audre, Adrienne Rich and Alice Walker: 1645
Lorsch. Susan E: 734
Lounsbeny,Barba.ra and Grace Ann Hovet 735
Love, Myra: 736 r
Lowenskin. Andrea: 1488
Lurie, Alison: 737
Lushington, Kate: 1226
~;dent&. Robin: 738
McAlexander. Patricia Jewell: 177
MacAndrew. Elizabeth and Susan Gorsky: 334 v
McCaffrey, Kathleen M: 739
McCallum, Pamela: 1127
McCauley, Carole Spearin: 741 ,742
McClung. Ellen: 1322
McConnell-Ginet, Sally: 1401 , 1402
McDamel. Judith: 335 ,1489,1490
MacDonald. Susan Peck: 336
McDowell, Deborah E: 1646
McDowell. Margaret B: 743 , 1128 . 1353
MEElhiney, Annette Bennington: 744
McGuire. Mary Ann: 154
Mclnherny, Frances: 337 ,745
Mdntyre. Sheila: 1491
MacKay, Donald G: 1403
MacKay. Donald G. and Toshi Konishi: 1404
McKewin, Carole: 99
McLaughlin, Ann L: 747
McLuskie, Kate: 100
McMahan, Elizabeth: 338 C
McMahan, Elizabeth E: 749 L
McMaster. Juliet: 501
McMaster, R. D: 339 \'
McMillan, Ann: 59
McMullen, Lorraine: 178 ,750 ,751 ,1281 -
McSweeney, Kerry: 752
Machor. James L: 472
., Mack, Molly A: 1492
Mael. Phyllis: 1058 , 1059
Ma& Nan Bauer: 753 ,754 ,755 ,1493
Maio, Kathi: 756
Maio, & M e e n L: 1282 -.
L A
Maitland, Sara: 1227 , 1648
Makward, Christiane: 1324
Mallinson, Jean: 342 ,992 i Malmsheimer. Lonna: 1283 1
~ a l m s h e h m J m m a M: 757
Malpeui. Frances: 758
Mandel. Charlotte: 993
Mandel, Dorothy: 759
Manderson, Lenore: 1649
Mandlove, Nancy B: 760 I -
Manheimer. Joan: 343 ,761
Mann. Karen B: 344
Uann, Maureen: 1060 I
Man4 Nancy p 3 4 5
Manushi Collective: 1129 I Maranda, Jeanne and Mair Verthu u . 1494
Marchdonis. Shirley: 60
Maral-Lacoste, Louise: 1M7
Marcus, Jane: 346,762,763 ,764,765 ,766,1650
Marks, Elaine: 1651 . .
Marquit, Doris Grieser: 83
Marsh, Ngaio, Axme Else, Cherry Hankin et al: 1652
Martin, Dellita L: 994
Martin. Edward A: 767
Martin, Wendy: 221
Martinez, Inez: 995 b
Wendy: 1405,1406,1495
Mattes, Eleanor: 217
Maus, Katharine Eisaman: 1653
May. Gita: 179
Mayes, Sharon S: 1654
Meese, Elizabeth A: 1655
Mehl, Jane M: 133
Meikle, Phoebe: 768
Melchiori, Barbara: 473
Meldnun, Barbara: 769
Mellick, Margo J. V: 490
Melman Deborah: 1656
Menagh. Diane: 778 - ~
Mendez. Charlotte Walker: 771
Merrnin, Dorothy: 474
Messenger, Ann: 1061 $
Messenger, AM P: 134
Metzger, Deena: 1657 3
Metzger. Deem and Barbara MyerhofE 1658
Mezei, Kathy: 1228
Michot-Dietrich, Hela: 347
Middlebrook, Diane: 1325
Midler, Marcia S: 348
Miller, Carroll: 772
Miller, Casey and Kate Swift: 1407
hym. Jeanne-Marie A: 1062 +P
Miller, Lorraine: 349
m e r , Nancy K: 180 ,181 ,1659
Miller, Pamicia McClelland: 1496 e
Millen Kate: 773 .
Milliner, Gladys: 774
Miner, Valerie: 1497
Mintz, Jacqueline A: 775
. . Mitchel, Delores: 119
Mitchell. Carol: 1354 u -. -
, Mitchell. Carol A: 1355
Mikhell, Judith: 776
Mitchell, Sally: 350
Miyamoto. Ken: '1131 .
Modrak, Deborah ,K: 13
M o m , Ellen: 351 ,352
Mohin. blian: 1229
- . ./-- Molette. Barbara,l063 w
, Moller, Mary Elkins: 353
Monaghan. David: 354
Monahan, Kathleen: 1356
dank, Patricia: 779
Montefiore, Janet: 996
re. Honor: 1.064
Moore. Madeline: 780
M o o ~ e . Patrick: 997 - -
Moorhead, Finola: 998
Morpan. Ellen: 355 ,782 ,1498
Morgan. William W: 1499 ,1660
Morley. Pamcia: 783 ,784,1230
Moms, Adalaide K: 475
Moms. Meaghau: 1661 1
Morris, Patricia: 356 - - -
Morton, Marian J: 785
Motz. Lotte: 14
Mowat, Barbara A: 101
Mowshowia Hamet. 786
Mukherjee, Meenakshif 1284
Mulford, Wendy: 1662
Musher. Andrea: 999
I Muske, Carol: 1500
Mussell. Kay J: 787
Mutch. Karl and Riemke Ensing: 1231
Myers. Mitzi: 182 ,788
Nazareth. Peter: 1232
Nebeker. Helen E: 789 4 i
Neely. Carol Thomas: 102 ,103 ,1663
Neff, Rebeccah Kinnamon: 1501
Nelson. Gayle: 790
Nemiroff. ,Greta Hoffman: 1502
Newlin, Margaret: 1000
Newton, Judith Louder: 357
Nichols. Kathleen L: 791
- Nichols, Marianna Da Vinci: 792
Nichols, Patriaa C: 1408
Niemi. Irmeli: 1065
Niemi, Judith: 793
Niemtzow, Annette: 358
Niess. Robert J: 794 <
Nittsche. Jane Chance: 795
Parker. John: 1236 7
S Parker. Rosie: 362
4- Parker. Rorsika and h d a Sebestyen: 1667
Parks, Adrienne: 1663
Pan. Carmen Sidarm 1175
Parrill. A r m S: 363 -
Patterson, Janet. 805 .
Pavtik. Katherine B: 806
P~XIDIL, Nancy L: 364
P e w . Nancy Corn: 144
Pearson. Carol: 807
Pearson Carol and Katherine Pope: 1669
. Peckenpaugh. Angela: 1003
Pcil, Nancy: 363
Pence. Ellen: 1503
Penelope (Stanley). Julia and Cyribkiiq MrGo-wan: 1410
Penelope. Julia: 1405, I ,
Perebinmff. Phillippe: 1133 ZA
'1 Perinado, L i W : 1066
Perkell. Christine G: 15
Perkins, Carol: 1504 =% q
P (
L\
Perleu, Gerry-Anne: 809
Perry. Ruth: 1326
Peters. Mores: 183
Petersen, Kirsten Hdst: 810
Peterson, Carla L: 366
Petite, Joseph: 811
Pfaelzer, Jean: 367
Pickax. Gemud Bauer: 369
Pickle. Iinda Schelbitzki: 1285
" Plaskow. Judith: 812
Plaq Carolyn V: 370 ' - - -
Plotz, Judith A: 371
Polioelli. Eugene F: 65
POW, Vivian R: 476
Pollin, Bunon R: 372
Pomeroy. Sarah B: 16 C
Poovey. Mary: 184 ,373~. ,1286
Popovich. Heien: 491
Poncr. Abioseh M: 813
Par. Dennis: 1287
Poner. Pip: 1237
Posto8. Carol H: 1327
m t Susan H: 1238
Preussner, Dee: 1239
Price, Paola Malpezzi: 66
Prince. Gerald: 1134
Purnell, Sandra E: 1412
Pyne-Timothy, Helen: 1176
Quigley, Fen: 814
Raaphorst. Madeleine R: 185
Rabine, Leslie: 374,375
Rabine. Leslie W: 67
Radford. Jean: 815
Ra& Grace: 816 4'
Radner, Rebecca: 817
Radner, Susan: 1505
Radway. Janice: 1671
Ralhm, Linda: 818
Rahmm Aishah: 1067 * Ranball. Margaret: 1240
.* ,
Rankin, Ginny: 819
. Rapping Eiayne Antler: 820
Rasporich. Beverly J: 821
Rayson, Ann: 822
Rea, Annabelle: 376 - ---
Reardon, Joan: 823 ,1177
Rebolledo. Tey Diana: 1004
Regan, Nancy: 824
Register, Cheri: 1506 . 1672
. Reich. Wendy. Rosaiie Buss. Ellen Fein and Terry K m : 1358
Relyea. Suzanne: 825
Rhodes. Jewel1 Parker: 68
Rice. Mary: 826
Rich, Adr ie~e : 477 ,= ,1507
Rich, Cynthia: 1135
Richard. Michel: 1508
Richman. Michele: 827 ,1674
Richmond, Velrna Bourgeois: 110,111 ,1288 ,1675 . - - -
Rickey, Carrie: 69 -
Ridgeway. Jaqueline: 1005
Rigsbee. Sally Adair: 828 r Roberts, Bern B: 186 ,187
Roberts. Heather: 829
Roberts. J. R: 1509
Roberts. Josephine A: 156
Roberts. Michele: 1676
Robinson, Lillian S: 1677
Roe. Jill: 1178
Rogers. Elizabeth S: 1069 -
Rogers, Katharine: 377
Rogers, Katharine M: 188 ,189.190.191 ,1678
Rcnnan, Christine M: 378
Rooke, Constance: 831 ,1289 ,1679
Root, Robert L Jr: 146
Rose, Ellep Cronan: 832.833
Rose, Maxine S: 1413
Rosen, Ellen I: 834
Rosenbaum, J-: 1006
Rosenfelt, Deborah: 835
Roskies, David G: 379
Rosowski. Susan J: 836 ,1290
Ross, Catherine Sheldrick: 837
Rouslin, Virginia Watson; 380 ,381
Rouyer, Maire-Claire and Ann Cipriani: 1070
Rowan, Mary M: 122
Rowe, Karen E: 1360
Rowe, Margaret Moan: 382
Rowley, Hazel and Renate Reismann: 1241 / '
Royals, Demetria B: 1071 ,1680
Rdzencwajg, Iris: 1242
Rubinger. Catherine: 1291
Ruddick, Sara: 838
Ruggiero, Josephine A. and Louise C. Weston: 839
Rule, Jane: 1681
Runte, Roseam: 192
Rupp, Leila: 1510
Rupprecht, Nancy E: 840
Rushing, Andrea Benton: 1072
Russell, Michele: 1361 ,1511 . 1512.1513.1514
Ryan, Kieman: 841
a Ryder, Georgia A:. 1362
Rymell. Heather: 1137
Rysman, Alexander: 1414
Sacks, Karen: 842
Sadoff, Dianne Y3 - lW7 Sage, Frances: 1008
Salem, J. Christine: 843
Sanchez, Marta E: 1009
. Sand. Cy-Thea: 384 ,844
Santirocco. Matthew S: 17
Sargenc Lyman Tower: J292
Sargent, Pamela, Marge Piercy et al: 1682 _C
Saundep, Judith: 845
Scanlon, Leone: 502
scarberry, Susan J: 1010 -.
Scarupa, Hanie t Jackson:
Scharfman. Ronnie: 847
Schibanoff, Susan: 1515
Schlack. Beverly Ann: 478 ,848
Schleiner. Winfiied: 116
Schmucker. Carol Fox: 849
Schniedewind, Nancy: 1516 , 1517 .
Schnorrenberg. Barbara Brandon: 1518
Schott, Penelope Scambly : 1519 '
%otter, AM^ Howland: 70
Schribcr, Mary Suzanne: 385
Schulz, Joan: 1520
Schib: Muriel R: 1415
Schuster, Marilyn R: 850
Schwarz, Judith: 1011 -
Schyfter, Sara E: 851
Scott, Kathryn P: 1416
Scott. Marilyn: 386
Scura, Dorothy McImis: 852
Sears, Sallie: 853
Seaton, Esta: 1138 ,1312
Seator, Lynette Hubbard: 854
Secor, Cynthia: 855
Secor. Marie: 856
Sear, Marie and Robert W r : 857
Segal. Charles: 18 5
Seidel. Kathryn L: 387
Senf, Carol A: 388
Shadoian. Jack: 1139
Shakir, Evelyn: 389
Shanahan, Thomazine: 1012
Shange, Ntozake: 1244.1683
Shapiro, Marianne: 71
Shapiro, Susan C: '112
Sharistanian, Janet: 1521
Shefrin, Jill: 859
Shelley, Dolores: 1245
Shelm. Frank W: 860
Shockley. Ann Allen: 1179 1
Shor, Naorni: 1684
Shore, R i m : 1013
Shores. Lucille P: 391
Showalter. Elaine: 392,393 ,394.861.862,1293.1685,1686
Showalter, Elaine and Carol Smith: 1246 , 1247
Shteir, Ann B: 1522
Silveira, Jeanette: 1417
Simms. Madeleine: 395
Simon, Sherry: 1180
Simpson, Hilaxy Croxford: 863
Sims. Edna N: 1328 b
Sisley. Emily L: 1074
- -- -- Siven Eileen Boyd: 3%
Sizemore. Christine W: 123 . 1294
Skaggs. Peggy: 397
~kene, F&: 864 i
Skidmore. Patricia: 1313
Sledge. Linda ching: 865
Sloman. Judith: 1687
Smart Patricia: 1181
Smith. Barbara: 866,1523,1524,1688 ,1689
Smith, Catherine F: 1140'
Smith, Della: 124
Smith, Don D: 867
Smith, Dorothy E: 1690
Smith. J. Jerome: 1418
Smith. LeRoy W: 398 -5, mith, , Pat: 399 - L
Smith, Philip E II and Susan Harris Smith: 479
Smith. Rebecca: 868 - -
Smith, Robert P., Jr: 869
Smith, Susan H a n k 400
' Smylie, James H: 401
Smyth, Donna E: 1248 ,1295
Snitow, Ann Bart 870.871
Soule, Janet: 1141 0 '
Spacks, Patricia Meyer: 402 ,1296 ,1691
Spector, Judith A: 872 . 1692
'Spencer, Sharon: 873
, Spivack, Charlotte: 147
Spivak, Gayatri: 874,1308 ,1693
Spivak, Gayatri Chahvorty: 480 ,875 ,1694
Spraggins. Mary Pringle: 876 '
. Springer, Marlene: 877
Spunner. Suzanne: 1075
Squiek Susan: 878
St John, Jacqueline D: 1363
Stanley, Julia P: 879 ,1419 ,1696
Stanley. Julia P. and Susan W. Robbins: 1420.1421
Stanley, Julia Penelope and Susan J. Wolfe (Robbins): 1697
Stansbury, Sherry A: 1525
Stanton, Domna C: 148 ,157
Stars, Elizabeth: 1364
I -
Staton, Shirley F: 113 ,881 '
Staves, Susan: 193 ,194 e -- - Steeves, Edna L: 1695
- Stein, Karen F: 882
Steinem, Gloria: 1422
Steiner. Dorothea: 481
Stephenson. Marylee: 1423
Stetson, Erlene: 883 ,1014 ,1015
Stewart, Grace: 1698 7
Stewm Joan Hinde: 884
Stewart, Pe*: 1142
Stigers, Eva Stehle: 19 .20
Stiller, Nikki: 72
Stimpson, Catharine R: 885 ,886,1143 ,1144
Stineman, Esther: 1145
Stineman, Esther F: 887
Stock. Phyllis H: 195
Stockinger, Jacob: 888
Stoeltje, Beverly J: 1297
Stone. Kay: 1365
Strauss, Jennifer: 1016,1526 -
Straw Sylvia: 403
Smbel, Margaret: 1527
Strumingher, Laura S: 404
Sullivan, Patricia A: 125
Sullivan, Victoria: 889 B
Sulloway. Alison G: 405
Sundelson, David: 114 i
Sunderland, Jane: 890 ,891 ,1146
Sussman, Linda S: 21
Sutherland, Cynthia: 1076
Swaffield, Audrey-Claire: 892 Y Swallow, Noreen J: 406
$
Sweetapple, Rosemary: 893
Sylvander, Carolyn W: 894
Taggart, James M: 1366
Talbert Linda Lee: 1077
Tamm, Merike: 407
Tanenhaus, Beverly: 1017
Tannen, Deborah: 895 ."896
Taplin, Gardner B: 482 - ~
Tate. Claudia: 897 r
Tate, Claudia C: 1249
Taylor, Anne Robinson: 196
Taylor, Helen: 408 9 I
Taylor. Sheila Ortiz: 15 2#
Tener, Robert L: 1078
Texmo, Dell: 898
Theriot, Nancy M: 1699
Thomas, Clara: 1298
Thomas, Deborah A: 409
Th uel J: 495
Thornson,' Pamcia: 410
Thorn. Arline R: 901
Thornton. Lawrence: 411
Thornton. Patricia Pacey: 902
Thorson, Gerald: 412
Throne, Sara R: 903
rzzlurmas Judith: 84 ,904
Tiger, Virginia: 1299
Tilchen, Maida: 1147
Timm, Lenora A: 1424 --
Tiwary. K. M: 1367
Todd. Janet: 197 , 198 1 Todd. Janet M: 413
Toth. Emily: 414,415,416,417 ,905.906,1182.1300
Toth, Susan Allen: 1250
Travitsky. Betty S: 1301
Treichler, Paula A: 907
Trenfield, Karen: 908 -
Trible. Phyllis: 22
Trofmenkoff, Susan Mann: 1701
Trujillo, Marcella: 1702
Tuchman, Gaye: 1703
Tuchmaa Gaye and Nina Fortin: 418
Tully, Sheila A: 503
Uirich. Laurel -tcher: 1302
Underwoo& June 0: 909
. Vallejos. Tomas: 910
Van Gelder. Iindsy: 911 ,1148
Van Varseveld. Gail: 1251 'h Vanita, Ruth: 1079
Venables. Clare: 1080
Vicinus, Martha: 419
Vicinus. Martha and Cynthia Kinnard: 1529
Vickers. Nancy J: 74 , . $>
Viemeisel. Karen: 1530 E L
Vincent, Sybil KorfF 483
Vipond, M: 913
Vlasopolos. Anca: 1W
Voloshin, Beverly: 420
Wachtel, Eleanor: 914,1252 , 1253
Wade, Rosalind: 421
Waelti-Walters, Jennifer: 915 ,916 ,917 , 1368
Wagner, Linda W: 918
Walcot, Peter: 23
Walker, Alice: 919.920,1704,1705
Walker. Nancy: 422 ,921
Walker, S. Jay: 922
Wheeler, Otis B: 430
Whitehouse. Jeanne: 1370 , a
-L , *
Whitehurst, Carol A: 930 6
w&tridge. Margaret (%by: 505 . 1
Whittier, Gayle: 931 ,932 ,933 v
Wiggers, Nancy: 24
Wilcoxon, Reba: 214
Wilkerson, Margaret B: 1085 e Williams, Brooke: 1150
Williams. David: 201 ',
William$, Edith Whitehdt: 75 5
Williams, Juanita H: 1710
~illiams, Mary C: 1020
Williams, Patrick: 431 B
Williamson, Marilyn L: 202
Wilson, Bruce L: 203
Wilson, J. J: 934 \ Wilson, James D: 506
Wilt, Judith: 115 ,432 ,433 .
A W' er, Karen; 1153 L .
s .
Wiseman, Adele: 434 - . P
Wglf. Donrla M: 1184 - , *.
Wolfe (Kobbins). Susan J: 936
Wdfe. JWgant Riplty: 935
Wdfe. Margte: 1154
Wdfe, Swim J: 1426,142l
Woife. Susn 1. and M a Pcnelopc Stanley: 1423
WdfT. Cynthia Grimn: 937
~ d f f ~ u t h : 1086
Wood, John A: 218
Waod, Susan: 938.
Woodcock, George: 158 ,204
Wchdward. Kathtm: 939
WoQFtwoman. Libby: 1255 _ - _ _ - -
W w l f d John: 484 w
Worby. DiaM Zacbaria: i4B i
W fight, Celeste furnet: f 021 +
. . U
Wrobel. Arthur: 485
. . timmerman. Bonnie: 437 ,1533 . ni l . 1712
, - . . 4 ; Q p . Zimra, Clarisc: ?40 . .
\
tonailo. &lyn: 941 ,942 . .
, - Zom Marilyn: 943.1022
Werg ~atherinc H: 438 . . - *