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LEADER: 08387cam 2200493 a 4500
001 ocm39606075
003 OCoLC
005 20220608204244.0
008 980720s1997 enka 001 0 eng
040 $aUKM$beng$cUKM$dYDXCP$dOCLCG$dTULIB$dOCLCF$dDEBSZ$dOCLCQ$dOCLCO$dOCLCA$dOCLCQ$dUKUOY$dOCLCQ$dOCLCO$dLG0
015 $aGB9852215$2bnb
020 $a0333690990
020 $a9780333690994
035 $a(OCoLC)39606075
050 4 $aPN98.W64$bF43 1997
082 04 $a809.89287$221
245 00 $aFeminisms :$ban anthology of literary theory and criticism /$cedited by Robyn R. Warhol and Diane Price Herndl.
250 $aRev. ed.
260 $aBasingstoke :$bMacmillan,$c©1997.
300 $axx, 1207 pages :$billustrations ;$c24 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
338 $avolume$bnc$2rdacarrier
500 $aPrevious edition: 1991.
500 $aIncludes indexes.
505 00 $tAbout Feminism /$rRobyn R. Warhol and Diane Price Herndl --$tWomen and Madness: The Critical Phallacy /$rShoshana Felman --$tInfection in the Sentence: The Woman Writer and the Anxiety of Authorship /$rSandra M. Gilbert and Susan Gubar --$tA Mindless Man-driven Theory Machine: Intellectuality, Sexuality, and the Institution of Criticism /$rJames J. Sosnoski --$tThe Highs and Lows of Black Feminist Criticism /$rBarbara Christian --$tConfinements: The Domestic in the Discourses of Upper-Middle-Class Pregnancy /$rHelena Michie --$tWhat Has Never Been: An Overview of Lesbian Feminist Literary Criticism /$rBonnie Zimmerman --$t"Anomalousness" and "Aesthetics" from How to Supress Women's Writing /$rJoanna Russ --$tTreason Our Text: Feminist Challenges to the Literary Canon /$rLillian S. Robinson --$tCaste, Class, and Canon /$rPaul Lauter --$tReflections on Black Women Writers: Revising the Literary Canon /$rNellie McKay --$tDancing Through the Minefield: Some Observations on the Theory, Practice, and Politics of a Feminist Literary Criticism /$rAnnette Kolodny --$tArchimedes and the Paradox of a Feminist Criticism /$rMyra Jehlen --$tA Criticism of Our Own: Autonomy and Assimilation in Afro-American and Feminist Literary Theory /$rElaine Showalter --$tRecycling: Race, Gender, and the Practice of Theory /$rDeborah E. McDowell --$tThe 'Wild Zone' Thesis as Gloss in Chicana Literary Study /$rCordelia Chavez Candelaria --$tStorming the Toolshed /$rJane Marcus --$tThe Madwoman and Her Languages: Why I Don't Do Feminist Literary Theory /$rNina Baym --$tFeminist Politics: What's Home Got to Do with It? /$rBiddy Martin and Chandra Talpade Mohanty --$tBlack Feminist Theory and the Representation of the 'Other' /$rValerie Smith --$tUpping the Anti (sic) in Feminist Theory /$rTeresa de Lauretis --$tThe Laugh of the Medusa /$rHelene Cixous --$t"This Sex Which Is Not One" from This Sex Which Is Not One /$rLuce Irigaray --$tWriting the Body: Toward an Understanding of l'Ecriture feminine /$rAnn Rosalind Jones --$tMama's Baby, Papa's Maybe: An American Grammar Book /$rHortense J. Spillers --$t"Women of Color' Writers and Feminist Theory" /$rMargaret Homans --$t"Another 'Cause' -- Castration" from Speculum of the Other Woman /$rLuce Irigaray --$tVisual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema /$rLaura Mulvey --$t'The Situation of the Looker-On': Gender, Narration, and Gaze in Wuthering Heights /$rBeth Newman --$tWhen Virginia Looked at Vita, What Did She See; or, Lesbian: Feminist: Woman -- What's the Differ(e/a)nce? /$rElizabeth Meese --$t"The Father's Seduction" from The Daughter's Seduction /$rJane Gallop --$t"Introduction" and "Gender Asymmetry and Erotic Triangles" from Between Men: English Literature and Male Homosexual Desire /$rEve Kosofsky Sedgwick --$tSylvia Townsend Warner and the Counterplot of Lesbian Fiction /$rTerry Castle --$tMale Heroes and Female Sex Objects: Sexism in Spike Lee's Malcolm X /$rBell Hooks --$tIntroduction: On the Politics of Literature /$rJudith Fetterley --$t"The Readers and Their Romances" from Reading the Romance /$rJanice Radway --$tReading Ourselves: Toward a Feminist Theory of Reading /$rPatrocinio P. Schweickart --$tFeminism, New Historicism, and the Reader /$rWai-Chee Dimock --$tConstructing the Subject: Deconstructing the Text /$rCatherine Belsey --$tToward a Feminist Narratology /$rSusan S. Lanser --$tApostrophe, Animation, and Abortion /$rBarbara Johnson --$t"Gender in Bakhtin's Carnival" from Feminist Dialogics /$rDale Bauer --$tWhen a 'Long' Poem Is a 'Big' Poem: Self-Authorizing Strategies in Women's Twentieth-Century 'Long Poems' /$rSusan Stanford Friedman --$t"Kochinnenako in Academe: Three Approaches to Interpreting a Keres Indian Tale" from The Sacred Hoop /$rPaula Gunn Allen --$tLa conciencia de la mestiza: Towards a New Consciousness /$rGloria Anzaldua --$tI'm Here: An Asian American Woman's Response /$rAmy Ling --$tThe Truth That Never Hurts: Black Lesbians in Fiction in the 1980s /$rBarbara Smith --$tFeminist and Ethnic Theories in Asian American Literature /$rShirley Geok-lin Lim --$tBlack Writing, White Reading: Race and the Politics of Feminist Interpretation /$rElizabeth Abel --$tWomen's Time /$rJulia Kristeva --$t"Power and the Ideology of Woman's Sphere" from Women, Power, and Subversion: Social Strategies in British Fiction, 1778-1860 /$rJudith Lowder Newton --$tThree Women's Texts and a Critique of Imperialism /$rGayatri Chakraworty Spivak --$tSome Call It Fiction: On the Politics of Domesticity /$rNancy Armstrong --$tThe Queen of America Goes to Washington City: Harriet Jacobs, Frances Harper, Anita Hill /$rLauren Berlant --$tPandora's Box: Subjectivity, Class and Sexuality in Socialist Feminist Criticism /$rCora Kaplan --$tRomance in the Age of Electronics: Harlequin Enterprises /$rLeslie Rabine --$tI Shop Therefore I Am: Is There a Place for Afro-American Culture in Commodity Culture? /$rSusan Willis --$tDiscourses of Gender, Ethnicity and Class in Chicano Literature /$rRosaura Sanchez --$t"Reading Woman (Reading)" from Reading Woman /$rMary Jacobus --$tMasculinity as Excess in Vietnam Films: The Father/Son Dynamic of American Culture /$rSusan Jeffords --$tCreation by the Father's Fiat: Paternal Narrative, Sexual Anxiety, and the Deauthorizing Designs of Absalom, Absalom! /$rJoseph A. Boone --$tPedagogy and Sexuality /$rJoseph Litvak --$tMe and My Shadow /$rJane Tompkins --$t"Maxine Hong Kingston's Woman Warrior: Filiality and Woman's Autobiographical Storytelling" from A Poetics of Women's Autobiography /$rSidonie Smith --$tAuthorizing the Autobiographical /$rShari Benstock --$tThe Long Goodbye: Against Personal Testimony, or an Infant Grifter Grows Up /$rLinda S. Kauffman.
520 $aIn the landmark 1991 edition of Feminisms, Robyn Warhol and Diane Price Herndl assembled the most comprehensive collection of American and British feminist literary criticism ever published. In this revised edition, the editors have updated the volume, in keeping with the expanding parameters of feminist literary discourse. With the inclusion of more than two dozen new essays, along with a major reorganization of the sections in which they appear, Warhol and Price Herndl have again established the measure for representing the latest developments in the field of feminist literary theory. Believing that the feminist movement can only move forward "where difference commands attention, not dismissal or negativism," they have continued the original collection's mission of providing a multiplicity of perspectives and approaches. This revised edition contains three new sections ("Conflict," "Gaze," and "Practice") and includes more selections by and about women of color and lesbians.
650 0 $aFeminist literary criticism.
650 0 $aFeminism and literature.
650 0 $aWomen and literature.
650 6 $aCritique féministe.
650 6 $aFemmes et littérature.
650 7 $aFeminism and literature.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00922735
650 7 $aFeminist literary criticism.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00922779
650 7 $aWomen and literature.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01177093
700 1 $aWarhol, Robyn R.
700 1 $aPrice Herndl, Diane,$d1959-
938 $aYBP Library Services$bYANK$n100219431
029 1 $aAU@$b000013315832
029 1 $aDEBSZ$b072466510
029 1 $aNZ1$b4760705
029 1 $aUNITY$b079657362
994 $aZ0$bIME
948 $hNO HOLDINGS IN IME - 86 OTHER HOLDINGS