Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers, Volume 5,Masalah 1-2;Volume 5Department of English, University of Massachusetts, 1988 |
Dari dalam buku
Hasil 1-3 dari 44
Halaman 3
... poetry , virtually no new revi- sionist work has been done on American women poets . Apparently , most scholars feel that there was no American woman poet worth reading between Wheatley and Dickinson , or between Dickinson and H.D. The ...
... poetry , virtually no new revi- sionist work has been done on American women poets . Apparently , most scholars feel that there was no American woman poet worth reading between Wheatley and Dickinson , or between Dickinson and H.D. The ...
Halaman 4
... poetry is based on the male - defined poetic tradition of romanticism , within which many of the currently canonized female poets establish- ed themselves with great difficulty . Since the poetesses , for the most part , did not ...
... poetry is based on the male - defined poetic tradition of romanticism , within which many of the currently canonized female poets establish- ed themselves with great difficulty . Since the poetesses , for the most part , did not ...
Halaman 5
... poetic subjectivity . Their poetry rarely projects the self into metaphorical readings of the world ; it does not effuse from a " poet " in the traditional sense of a seer or " priest " for whom nature is important only insofar as it ...
... poetic subjectivity . Their poetry rarely projects the self into metaphorical readings of the world ; it does not effuse from a " poet " in the traditional sense of a seer or " priest " for whom nature is important only insofar as it ...
Isi
Male and Female Mysteries in The Yellow Wallpaper | 3 |
Harris | 33 |
Lucy Larcom 18241893 | 45 |
2 bagian lainnya tidak diperlihatkan
Edisi yang lain - Lihat semua
Istilah dan frasa umum
Alice American American Women become Boston Brown called central century character Child collection critical Culture daughter described Dickinson discussion domestic edited editor Elizabeth Ella Wheeler Wilcox Elsie Emily England essay experience fact father female feminist fiction Frances friends gender genre girls Gothic Harper Harriet heroine husband issues Jacobs John Journal LEGACY Letters Library literary Literature lives Lydia Lydia Maria Child male Margaret Mary means metaphor mother mystery narrative narrator nature nineteenth-century novel object Oxford poem poet poetess poetic poetry political popular presents published Quarterly questions readers Review Romance Sarah sense sentimental Sigourney slave Smith social society speak story Studies subversion Susan thou tion tradition University voice woman women writers York young