000 | 01576nam a22001697a 4500 | ||
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999 |
_c4651 _d4651 |
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008 | 180417b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
020 | _a978-93-81385-06-7 | ||
082 |
_223 _a820.99287 _bSHA |
||
100 | _aSharma Aruna | ||
245 |
_aWomen writers in English literature / _cAruna Sharma. |
||
250 |
_a1st ed. _b2011. |
||
260 |
_aDelhi. _bAncient Publishing House; _c2011. |
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300 |
_a292 p . ; _bhardbound _c14x22cm |
||
505 | _a1. 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 | ||
520 | _aWomen'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. | ||
942 |
_2ddc _cBK |