Legacy, Volume 4,Masalah 2Department of English, University of Massachusetts, 1988 |
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Halaman 5
agination as audience or as peers . We must remember that the emphasis on social uplift by educated black nine- teenth - century women was the direct result of their own perilous social position . As Mary Church Terrell explains , the ...
agination as audience or as peers . We must remember that the emphasis on social uplift by educated black nine- teenth - century women was the direct result of their own perilous social position . As Mary Church Terrell explains , the ...
Halaman 28
... social expectations . By leading readers to assume that the story they are reading is one whose basic outline they already know — that is , by situating a literary work within a specific literary tradi- tion - and then disappointing ...
... social expectations . By leading readers to assume that the story they are reading is one whose basic outline they already know — that is , by situating a literary work within a specific literary tradi- tion - and then disappointing ...
Halaman 31
... social climate in general in the period just before and after the First World War in- cluded a sharp reaction against America's legacy of Victorian feminine values . Social Darwinism , Muscular Christianity , and Teddy Roosevelt's " big ...
... social climate in general in the period just before and after the First World War in- cluded a sharp reaction against America's legacy of Victorian feminine values . Social Darwinism , Muscular Christianity , and Teddy Roosevelt's " big ...
Isi
CONTENTS | 2 |
Houses and Heroines | 17 |
One Hundred Years of Criticism | 31 |
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Istilah dan frasa umum
Afterword Alcott's American Literature American Women Writers autobiography Bible class biography black women Buell cadets career century characters child Color Constitution Island Cooper Cottage cultural Deserted Wife Dodge Edith Wharton Elaw Ellen Emily Emily Dickinson England essays female Feminization Frances Harper Freeman criticism Freeman's stories Gail Hamilton gender girl Grimké Hagar Harriet Beecher Stowe Hawthorne Heath Hall heroine intellectual Judith Fetterley LEGACY letters literary lives Louisa male marriage marry Mary Church Terrell Mary Wilkins Freeman MELUS ment Miss Wilkins moral mother narrative Negro Nineteenth nineteenth-century Noyes Noyes's papers political popular published Puritan Quarterly race Raymond readers Rosalia Sarah Orne Jewett Short Fiction short stories sion Sisters social Sophie Sophie's Southworth spiritual Stowe Susan Warner teaching teenth-Century tion Tompkins U.S. Military Academy Uncle Tom's Cabin University Voice Washington Wide World Withers woman Women's Studies wrote York