Women writers in English literature / Aruna Sharma.
Material type:
- 978-93-81385-06-7
- 23 820.99287 SHA
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Tetso College Library English Literature | Non-fiction | 820.99287 SHA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 8025 |
Browsing Tetso College Library shelves, Shelving location: English Literature, Collection: Non-fiction Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
820.9033 DHA British Literature: 18th Century/ | 820.954 IYE Indian writing in English: 1800s-1980/ | 820.99287 GIL The woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination:/ | 820.99287 SHA Women writers in English literature / | 820.992870954 BAB Indian Women Literature : A montage of leitmotiv / | 820.992870954 PUR Selfhood and Agency in post -1990 : | 820.992870954 SIN Post-Feminism in India: Myth or Reality ? / |
1. Alice Walker
2. Anita Loos
3. Anne Rice
4. Audre Lorde
5. Ayn Rand
6. C.J.Cherryh
7. Christine de Pizan
8. Clare Boothe Luce
9. Delarivier Manley
10. Edith Sodergran
11.Elizabeth Wagele
12. Emilie Loring
13. Eve Langley
14. Flannery O'Connor
15. Gabriela Zapolska
16. George Sand
17. Harriet Ann Jacobs
18. Hisaye Yamamoto
19. Ingrid Jonker
20. Jenny Uglow
21. Jo Sinclair
22. Kamala Surayya
23. Lady Florence Dixie
24. Leigh Brackett
25.Lydia Maria Child
26. Madeleine L 'Engle
27. Margaret Mitchell
28. Mari Sandoz
29. Maria Dabrowska
30. Martha Wadsworth Brewster
31. Mary Sidney
32. Naomi Mitchison
33. Olympe de Gouges
34. Phillis Wheatley
35. Sappho
36. Suzanne Lilar
Women's writing in the 20th century moved towards a medium of modernism in which womanist and feminist statements were combined with political messages. The writings of women such as Hamsa Wadkar conveyed an honest impression of a world of professional women whose careers in television and stage segregated them as a class apart, yet subjected them to the same brutality and force of patriarchy.
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