Legacy, Volume 2,Masalah 2Department of English, University of Massachusetts, 1985 |
Dari dalam buku
Hasil 1-3 dari 37
Halaman 8
... readers , and its move from formal features to pre- sumptions about reader response . Of course such vulnerabilities are not unique to formalism ; all interpretation is finally guess . The interpretation in Woman's Fic- tion derived ...
... readers , and its move from formal features to pre- sumptions about reader response . Of course such vulnerabilities are not unique to formalism ; all interpretation is finally guess . The interpretation in Woman's Fic- tion derived ...
Halaman 14
... readers of Hale's fiction were likely to hold certain attitudes towards politics and government : reverence for the Founders , belief in the importance of the small property - owner , and the view that partisan politics was men's ...
... readers of Hale's fiction were likely to hold certain attitudes towards politics and government : reverence for the Founders , belief in the importance of the small property - owner , and the view that partisan politics was men's ...
Halaman 78
... readers are sensational as well . She aims at nothing less than upsetting canons and canon makers , at changing the way we think about art - what it is , how we know it , why it is important . Her reading of " sensa- tional " texts in ...
... readers are sensational as well . She aims at nothing less than upsetting canons and canon makers , at changing the way we think about art - what it is , how we know it , why it is important . Her reading of " sensa- tional " texts in ...
Isi
A Journal of NineteenthCentury American Women Writers | 2 |
Patriarchal Society and Matriarchal Family | 31 |
Literary | 41 |
Hak Cipta | |
4 bagian lainnya tidak diperlihatkan
Edisi yang lain - Lihat semua
Istilah dan frasa umum
Alerik American Fiction American literature American Women Writers Anthology believe Boston Brenda Brothers canon Catharine Catharine Maria Sedgwick century character Child coll culture Daring to Dream daughter death edition Emily Dickinson essays Everell Eystein Fanny Fern fantasy Father Hansen female feminist Feminist Criticism Fetterley gender Hale Hale's Harper heart heroine HILDA SILFVERLING Holley Hope Leslie Indian Irving Jane Judith Fetterley Kelley's Kessler LEGACY letters Magawisca maiden male Maria marriage married Mary Kelley ment mother myths never Nina Baym nineteenth nineteenth-century Northwood novel patriarchal poems political popular Press Private Woman Public Stage readers republic Rip Van Winkle Rip's Romelee Rose Terry Cooke Ruth Hall Sarah Hale Sarah Josepha Hale Sedgwick sexual sleep social society Stowe Susan tell texts thee thou tion Tompkins tradition ture Uncle Tom's Cabin Univ Utopias village Woman's Fiction women authors Wright writing wrote York young