Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Authors - Wroth Mary
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 70    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Wroth Mary:     more books (36)
  1. The Poems of Lady Mary Wroth by Lady Mary; Roberts, Josephine A. Wroth, 1983-01-01
  2. Pamphilia to Amphilanthus by Lady Mary Wroth, 2007
  3. The Sidney Family Romance: Mary Wroth, William Herbert, and the Early Modern Construction of Gender.: An article from: Renaissance Quarterly by Barbara K. Lewalski, 1996-09-22
  4. Changing the Subject: Mary Wroth and Figurations of Gender in Early Modern England.: An article from: Renaissance Quarterly by Bernadette Andrea, 1998-06-22
  5. The Early Modern Englishwoman: A Facsimile Library of Essential Works : Printed Writings, 1500-1640 : Mary Wroth (Early Modern Englishwoman Vol. 10)
  6. "Pamphilia to Amphilanthus" and "Salmacis and Hermaphroditus" by Lady Mary Wroth, Francis Beaumont, 2007
  7. Pamphilia to Amphilanthus by Lady Mary Wroth, 2007
  8. Lady Mary Wroth by Sue Taylor, 2005-11-25
  9. Love Sonnets of Lady Mary Wroth: A Critical Introduction by May Nelson Paulissen, 1983-04
  10. Lady Mary Wroth's Love's victory: The Penshurst manuscript by Mary Wroth, 1988
  11. Lady Mary Wroth's Urania (Proceedings of the Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society : Literary and Historical Section ; v. 16, pt. 4) by Graham Parry, 1975
  12. Imaginary dialogue between Lady Elizabeth Carey and Lady Mary Wroth about the AAUW Fellow Ruth Hughey by Elizabeth Macintire, 1942
  13. THE POEMS OF LADY MARY WROTH. Ldited by Josephine A. Roberts by Mary. Wroth, 1996
  14. Petrarchan hagiography, gender, and subjectivity in Lady Mary Wroth's Pamphilia to Amphilanthus by Gene C Fant, 1995

21. Renaissance Forum: Volume 1, Number 1, March 1996: Janet Clare
In the poetry and prose of Lady mary wroth there is some exposure of the cultural codes and networks which constrain women. Finally, and perhaps most
http://www.hull.ac.uk/renforum/v1no1/clare.htm
Transgressing Boundaries
Women's Writing in the Renaissance and Reformation
JANET CLARE
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE DUBLIN
  • 'I perceive that learned women be suspected of many', wrote Juan Luis Vives in his Instructions of a Christian Woman (Vives 1529, D2v). Vives is here articulating just one of the cultural assumptions which inhibited women's reading and, by extension, writing during the Renaissance. In positioning women as subjects, male humanists such as Vives, Erasmus, Thomas More, Thomas Elyot and Roger Ascham held comparatively advanced views on the education of women, specifically noblewomen; nonetheless the aim of female learning was narrowly perceived as personal cultivation rather than the acquisition of formal skills. In Instructions of a Christian Woman , Vives's declared purpose is to provide 'precepts and rules howe to lyve' (Vyves 1529, B1r) and his emphasis accordingly is on the practical application of knowledge in the constitution of a moral and pious life. Women were excluded from rhetorical training on the assumption that its performative element conflicted with notions of female decorum. Reading material was carefully regulated. Certain works - including, for example, romance literature, with its emphasis on knightly conduct - should be prohibited, for 'it can not lightly be a chaste mayde that is occupied with thynknge on armour' (Vives 1529, E3r-E3v). Instructions of a Christian Woman was commissioned by Catherine of Aragon for her daughter Mary, later Mary Tudor, but ideas directed at royal and aristocratic learning filtered gradually through to other social classes as the work became a popular conduct book, reaching its ninth edition in 1592.
  • 22. Women Writers In The English Renaissance
    McLean and Prescott (Norton); Woolf, Virginia, A Room of One s Own (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich); wroth, mary, The Poems of Lady mary wroth, ed.
    http://www.wwp.brown.edu/texts/syllabi/thickstun1999.html
    Margaret Thickstun
    English 425, Spring 1999
    Hamilton College
    mthickst@hamilton.edu
    Women Writers in the English Renaissance
    Required Texts
    • Ezell, Margaret, Writing Women's Literary History (Johns Hopkins)
    • Fitzmaurice, ed., Major Women Writers of Seventeenth-Century England (Michigan)
    • Hobby, Elaine, ed., Her Own Life: Autobiographical Writings by seventeenth-century Englishwomen (Routledge)
    • Lanier, Aemelia, The Poems of Aemilia Lanyer, ed. Woods (Oxford)
    • Spenser, Edmund, Edmund Spenser's Poetry, ed. McLean and Prescott (Norton)
    • Woolf, Virginia, A Room of One's Own (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich)
    • Wroth, Mary, The Poems of Lady Mary Wroth, ed. Roberts (Louisiana)
    • handouts from the NEH-Brown Women Writers Project
    Course Requirements and Procedures
    Participation: This class will be conducted as a seminar, which means that each person must not only have read the assigned material, but should have considered it carefully enough to raise questions, to point out interesting issues, to listen attentively, and to respond productively to others' observations. Absences should be reserved for true emergencies. To help facilitate preparedness, students will be expected to participate in a bulletin board forum, via our class website. I will suggest topics to address on a weekly basis, but I hope that we will not limit ourselves to my areas of interest. You should consider this discussion list a forum through which to raise questionsfrom the cosmic to the minuteas you are reading. If your question is factual, I will respond as promptly as possible.

    23. Reading Mary Wroth By Miller, Naomi J., And Gary Waller, Eds.
    In the past decade increasing critical and scholarly attention has been devoted to the writings of Lady mary wroth (ca. 15871653).
    http://utpress.org/a/searchdetails.php?jobno=T00248

    24. Excite España - Arts - Literature - Authors - W - Wroth, Mary
    Directorio Arts Literature Authors wroth, mary Renascence Editions text of the sonnet sequence from Lady mary wroth s The Countesse of
    http://www.excite.es/directory/Arts/Literature/Authors/W/Wroth,_Mary
    Excite Mail MIX Excite A-Z all channels Directorio Horoscopo Hoy Info Juegos MIX Postales Rutas Sitemap Tiempo Traducir Viajes Web Web Noticias Noticias Directorio en toda la Red powered by Ask.com et("sr1","1"); Directorio Arts Literature Authors Wroth, Mary 4 sitios web en Wroth, Mary
    Bibliography: Lady Mary Wroth
    Guarder Compiled by Ron Cooley of the University of Saskatchewan. http://www.usask.ca/english/phoenix/w... Lady Mary Wroth Guarder By Arnie Sanders of Goucher College. Provides an overview of "The Countess of Montgomery''s Urania" and "Pamphilia to Amphialanthus," as well as a set of research questions. http://faculty.goucher.edu/eng211/lad... Lady Mary Wroth (1587?-1651?) Guarder "Biography, works, and web resources for the renowned lady poet." Webpages at luminarium.org. http://www.luminarium.org/sevenlit/wr... Pamphilia to Amphilanthus Guarder Renascence Editions text of the sonnet sequence from Lady Mary Wroth''s "The Countesse of Mountgomeries Urania" (1621). http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~rbear/ma... Sugerir un sitio web Open Directory Project Excite A-Z ... Excite USA

    25. Calvert Royal Ancestry
    John wroth 15. Thomas wroth m. Joan Newdigate 16. Robert wroth m. Jane Hawte 17. Sir Thomas wroth m. mary Rich 18. Elizabeth wroth m. George Mynne
    http://www.ronsattic.com/royal.htm
    Calvert Royal Ancestry
    Here are three Calvert Royalty Lines........... 1. Edward III, King of England, d. 1377 m. Philippa of Hainault
    2. John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster m. Catherine Roet
    3. Joan Beaufort m. Ralph Neville, 1st Earl of Westmoreland
    4. Richard Neville, 1st Earl of Salisbury, m. Alice Montagu
    5. Catherine Neville, m. William Bonville, Baron Harington and Bonville
    6. Cecily Bonville, Baroness Harington and Bonville, m. Thomas Grey, 1st Marquess of Dorset
    7. Thomas Grey, 2nd Marquess of Dorset m. Margaret Wotton
    8. Anne Grey m. Sir Henry Willoughby
    9. Margaret Willoughby m. Sir Matthew Arundell. Matthew was son of Sir Thomas Arundell and Margaret Howard. Sir Thomas Arundell was son of Sir John Arundell and Eleanor Grey. Eleanor Grey was daughter of Thomas Grey, 1st Marquess of Dorset and Cecily Bonville above, making Margaret Willoughby and Matthew Arundell cousins
    10. Thomas Arundell, 1st Baron Arundell of Wardour m. Anne Philipson
    11. Hon. Anne Arundell m. Cecil Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore, proprietor of Maryland

    26. JSTOR The Currency Of The Beloved And The Authority Of Lady Mary
    The words and works, perhaps the style, give evidence that mary wroth conceived a book, . Dubrow argues that when mary wroth ap proaches the sonnet,
    http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0047-7729(199923)29:2<73:TCOTBA>2.0.CO;2-P

    27. Pembroke Mary Herbert Countess Of: Free Encyclopedia Articles At Questia.com Onl
    Lamb gives an extensive account of how wroths circumstances may vertuous and learned Aunt The Countess of Pembroke as a Mentor to mary wroth, in Reading
    http://www.questia.com/library/encyclopedia/101263842
    Highlight the text above with the cursor. Use (ctrl + c) to copy and (ctrl + v) to paste. Mac users use (cmd + c) to copy and (cmd + v) to paste. Login Bookmark this page Link to this page Home ... Encyclopedia Index
    PEMBROKE, MARY HERBERT, COUNTESS OF
    Arcadia Top Search the Library Books
    Journals
    Magazines
    Newspapers
    Encyclopedia Advanced Search About Questia Questia is the world's largest online academic library offering full-text books, journals, and articles on thousands of topics.
    Join Now...
    Questia Books and Articles on: Pembroke Mary Herbert Countess Of We found: results By media type:
    Books:
    Journal articles:
    Magazine articles:
    Newspaper articles:
    Encyclopedia articles:
    books on: Pembroke Mary Herbert Countess Of - 1300 results More book Results: The Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion: A Sect in Action in Eighteenth-Century England Book by Alan Harding ; Oxford University Press, 2003 Subjects: Countess Of Huntingdon's Connexion EnglandChurch History18th Century Huntingdon, Selina HastingsCountess Of1707-1791 ...1760, however, his involvement with the Countesss work was to increase. He was ministering...more regularly involved after the opening

    28. Experience And Interests Database - Results For 'Wroth, Mary, Lady, Ca. 1586-ca.
    Search results for wroth, mary, Lady, ca. 1586ca. 1640. in Author Names. Dr Amina Alyal, Trinity and All Saints College, University of Leeds
    http://www.english.heacademy.ac.uk/find/colleagues/experience_Results.php?search

    29. Blackwell Synergy - Literature Compass, Volume 4 Issue 2 Page 384-406, March 200
    Taking Aemilia Lanyer, Esther Inglis, and mary wroth as its primary examples, .. While mary wroth s situation differed from that of Lanyer and Inglis,
    http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1741-4113.2007.00415.x
    Email: Password:
    Journal Menu
    Tools
    Publication history
    Published article online:
    23 Jan 2007
    Issue online:
    12 Mar 2007
    Literature Compass 4/2 (2007): 384406, 10.1111/j.1741-4113.2007.00415.x
    Literature Compass
    Volume 4 Issue 2 Page 384-406, March 2007 To cite this article: Theresa D. Kemp (2007)
    Women's Patronage-Seeking as Familial Enterprise: Aemilia Lanyer, Esther Inglis, and Mary Wroth
    doi:10.1111/j.1741-4113.2007.00415.x Prev Article Next Article Abstract
    Women's Patronage-Seeking as Familial Enterprise: Aemilia Lanyer, Esther Inglis, and Mary Wroth
    • Theresa D. Kemp
    Abstract
    Taking Aemilia Lanyer, Esther Inglis, and Mary Wroth as its primary examples, this article looks at how early modern women writers in Britain used the literary patronage system to promote not only personal ambitions but familial ones as well.
    This Article
    Search
    In Synergy CrossRef By author Theresa D. Kemp

    30. Sabine Schülting Courses And Seminars 2004
    In the seminar, we shall have a look at a large variety of early modern women’s writing, including Lady mary wroth’s appropriation of Petrarchan love poetry
    http://www.philologie.fu-berlin.de/~schuelt/courses_1.html

    31. Claire Jowitt . "'Et In Arcadia Ego': The Politics Of Pirates In The Old Arcadia
    wroth, mary. The First Part of the Countess of Montgomery s Urania. ed. Josephine A. Roberts, Temple, Arizona Renaissance English Text Society, 1995.
    http://extra.shu.ac.uk/emls/si-16/jowiarca.htm
    "Et in Arcadia Ego": The Politics of Pirates in the Old Arcadia New Arcadia and Urania Claire Jowitt
    Nottingham Trent University
    claire.jowitt@ntu.ac.uk
    Claire Jowitt . "'Et in Arcadia Ego': The Politics of Pirates in the Old Arcadia, New Arcadia and Urania". Early Modern Literary Studies Special Issue 16 (October, 2007) 5.1-36 URL: http://purl.oclc.org/emls/si-16/jowiarca.htm
  • This article explores the increasing sophistication of representations of pirates in three of the greatest prose romances and key cultural documents of  the "Long 1590s" Philip Sidney's late-Elizabethan texts Old Arcadia (1580) and New Arcadia (1590), and his niece Mary Wroth's two-part Jacobean prose romance Urania (1621 and 1621-6?). I suggest in what follows that the treatment of piracy in these romances becomes more complex, both as a result of generic developments and changing political circumstances. The alterations in genre coincided with a period of intense English piracy: in the last decades of the sixteenth century Elizabeth Tudor regularly used extreme violence at sea as foreign policy, and in the early years of the seventeenth century – despite James Stuart's hostility to piracy – England was known internationally as "a nation of pirates". As a result political changes concerning attitudes to the ideology and material practice of piracy affected the treatment of seaborne crime in the work of late sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century prose romance writers. However, as this article establishes, depictions of piracy in prose romance do not merely reflect, or alter in tandem with, government policy regarding violence at sea. Rather, it seems that piracy becomes a key motif, or "meme" as Helen Cooper terms it, for prose romance in the "Long 1590s".
  • 32. ELH, Volume 74, 2007 - Table Of Contents
    mary wroth’s Urania registers a widening fissure in seventeenthcentury England between royal claims to discretionary authority and a communitarian view of
    http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/elh/toc/elh74.2.html
    ELH
    Volume 74, Number 2, Summer 2007
    C ONTENTS
      Branch, Lori.
    • "As blood is forced out of flesh": Spontaneity and the Wounds of Exchange in Grace Abounding and The Pilgrim's Progress
      [Access article in HTML]
      [Access article in PDF]
      Subject Headings:
      • Bunyan, John, 1628-1688. Grace abounding to the chief of sinners. Bunyan, John, 1628-1688. Pilgrim's progress. Spiritual life Puritans.
      Abstract:
        A full third of Grace Abounding recounts one traumatic experience: a voice coaxing Bunyan for over a year to “ Sell him ,” to sell Christ, “for this or that.” Criticism has ignored the economic form of this episode. I argue that in it we see the symptom of an early modern religious subjectivity coming to understand itself in evidentiary, economic terms; “Sell him” marks the incommensurability between economic logic and personal relation. Where criticism has long recognized the relationship between Grace Abounding and Pilgrim’s Progress as “creative reworking,” I argue that Pilgrim’s Progress relieves the particular wounds described in Grace Abounding Choi, Tina Young.

    33. Law And Empire In English Renaissance Literature - Cambridge University Press
    wroth, mary, Lady. The Countess of Montgomery’s Urania;. Part One;. compromise between laws of love and marriage within;. importance of love within;
    http://www.cambridge.org/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780511243172&ss=ind

    34. TrueFresco.com Search
    Lady mary wroth By Arnie Sanders of Goucher College. Provides an overview of The Countess of Montgomery s Urania and Pamphilia to Amphialanthus, as well
    http://www.truefresco.com/cgidir/odp/index.cgi?/Arts/Literature/Authors/W/Wroth,

    35. WROTH, Lady Mary (Sidney) [~1586-~1653] -- English Writer
    Gender and Genre in the Sonnet Sequences of Philip Sidney and mary wroth Jennifer Laws, Norton Topics Online Portrait of Lady mary wroth
    http://freepages.history.rootsweb.com/~dav4is/people/SIDN18.htm

    Directory

    Help
    Search Indices: Home Pedigrees ODTs Sources ... Annex Gallery Misc document.getElementById('FLAG').src = '../COM/loading.gif';
    THIS IS A FREE SITE
    http://freepages.history.rootsweb.com/~dav4is/people/index.html
    SIDNEY pages Pedigrees ODTs Sources Celebs Annex Gallery A B C D ... Z
    My Celebrity Relations
    WROTH, Lady Mary (Sidney) [~1586-~1653] English writer
    Relationship to me: Unknown
    SIDNEY family ODT Contents: A niece of Sir Philip Sidney She was a noted patroness of the arts, with works dedicated to her by Ben Jonson, George Chapman, George Wither and William Gamage. Her first and only major work, a pastoral romance, was published in 1621, possibly as an attempt to support herself, since she had been left an impoverished widow. The Countesse of Montgomeries Urania is a long prose narrative with interpolated lyrics, written in imitation of her uncle's Arcadia University of Victoria
    Selected Works
  • The Countess of Montgomery's Urania
  • Love's Victory (a play in 5 acts)
  • Pamphilia to Amphilanthus
    Bookmarks (off-site links)
    • Works by
      • Analyses, critiques and interpretations
  • 36. 17th Century British Women Writers
    Delariviére Manley Manley, Mrs. (mary de la Riviére), 16631724 Katherine Philips Philips, Katherine, mary wroth wroth, mary, Lady ca. 1586-ca. 1640
    http://ils.unc.edu/~wootk/writers/lcauthor.htm
    Library of Congress (LC) Author Headings
    Aphra Behn: Behn, Aphra, 1640-1689
    Elizabeth Cary: Cary, Elizabeth, Lady, 1585 or 6-1639
    Margaret Cavendish: Newcastle, Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of, 1624?-1674
    Mary Chudleigh: Chudleigh, Mary Lee, Lady, 1656-1710
    Anne Finch: Winchilsea, Anne Kingsmill Finch, Countess of 1661-1720
    Delariviére Manley: Manley, Mrs. (Mary de la Riviére), 1663-1724
    Katherine Philips: Philips, Katherine, 1631-1664
    Mary Pix : Pix, Mary, 1666-1720
    Mary Wroth: Wroth, Mary, Lady ca. 1586-ca. 1640
    LC Subject Headings Biographical Sources

    37. G29
    Marguerite de Navarre, Cassandra Fedele, Hélisenne de Crenne, Laura Cereta, Gaspara Stampa, Louise Labé, Anne Askew, mary Sidney, mary wroth, Elizabeth Cary
    http://www.nyu.edu/fas/dept/complit/graduate/200320042005/statusw05.htm
    G29.2310: Reiss email: timothy.reiss@nyu.edu campus ph: 998-8795 office 19 University Place Spring Semester 2005, Weds. 3.30-6.10 p.m. Literature, Politics, and the Cultural Status of Women in Europe The last twenty or so years have seen a huge upswing in the knowledge and availability of writing by women in the sixteenth- and seventeenth centuries in Europe Starting with a rapid overview of the cultural situation of women in the later Middle Ages (considering Christine de Pisan and the debate over the Roman de la Rose ), the seminar will examine various moments in the querelle des femmes as it developed in the literature from 1500-1620, in the context of a general social and economic crisis and ongoing series of political struggles. More particularly, though, these debates and arguments by such as Agrippa, Erasmus, Vives and Elyot and writers of the C16-17th Swetnam controversy ( Speght Sowernam , and Constantia Munda ) will form a background to the study of women’s poetry, letters, critical and political thought, and perhaps theatre. Marguerite de Navarre, Cassandra Fedele Hélisenne de Crenne , Laura Cereta Gaspara Stampa , Louise Labé , Anne Askew, Mary Sidney, Mary Wroth, Elizabeth Cary, Aemilia Lanyer Lucrezia Marinella , Catalina Erausa , Marie de Gournay Arcangela Tarabotti and Anna Maria van Schurman will be among the principal authors of the Renaissance whose writings will be studied closely, or at least taken into accountstudents may also wish to include texts such as

    38. Microhistory And Cultural Geography: Ben Jonson's "To Sir Robert Wroth" And The
    See mary wroth s letter to Queen Anne in wroth, 23334. mary wroth s letter asking Queen Anne to help wroth receive permission to buy Loughton is
    http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Microhistory and Cultural Geography: Ben Jonson's
    CacheBuster('') Printer Friendly
    over 3,000,000 articles and books Periodicals Literature Keyword Title Author Topic Member login User name Password Remember me Join us Forgot password? Submit articles free The Free Library ... Renaissance Quarterly artId=65285981;usrSelf=false;
    Microhistory and Cultural Geography: Ben Jonson's "To Sir Robert Wroth" and the Absorption of Local Community in the Commonwealth [*].
    Recent interest in the relation between Renaissance cartography and literature provides an opportunity to ask how a literary work projects the geographic place from which it is written. [1] Geographic position as the starting point of literary interpretation is especially interesting during times of geographical change when borders shift across people, when people shift across borders, when borders move centripetally to create a large political formation out of smaller ones, when borders move centrifugally to create smaller formations out of a larger one. Shifts such as these result in changes in the location of personal, social, and political identity as well as changes in the location of cultural authority, especially among rival claimants for the authenticity of centralizing and decentralizing tendencies in politico-geographical formations.
    Though there may still be disagreement, historians have come to emphasize the symbiotic rather than adversarial relationship between country and court, and this realignment has opened the way for literary historians to see connections rather than contrasts between court and country in late sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century literature about the country. Leah Marcus has done the most to reconfigure our understanding of the country-court axis in English literature when she argued that the literary representation of the country promoted James's policy of "repastoralization," a policy aimed at keeping the gentry in the country so they could provide hospitality instead of seeking city pleasures. [3] Kevin Sharpe and Peter Lake state the larger case as follows:

    39. Syllabus - Summer Institute 2003
    Laura Anna Stortoni, trans. eadem and mary Prentice Lillie (New York Italica Press, 1997). wroth, mary, The Poems of Lady mary wroth, ed.
    http://www.albertrabil.com/projects 2003/Syllabus.html
    Home Summer Institute 2003 Syllabus July 6-August 2, 2003
    Sun, July 6: Arrival; reception 5-6 PM, dinner together, 7 PM Getting Acquainted; Logistics; Other Voice; SVHE; Bibliography Mon, July 7: Personal Agendas, etc. Session 1: Getting Acquainted Session 2: Photos, UNC-1 Cards Session 3: Library Tour Unit 1 (July 8-15) Women Writers in Venice Recommended reading prior to the institute: Patricia Fortini Brown, Art and Life in Renaissance Venice (entire) Tu, July 8: Venice: The Setting Session 1: The Myth of Venice Edward Muir, Civic Ritual in Renaissance Venice , ch. 1, "The Myth of Venice" (Reader) James S. Grubb, "When Myths Lose Power: Four Decades of Venetian Historiography" (Reader) Jutta Gisela Sperling, Convents and the Body Politic in Late Renaissance Venice Session 2: The Political Scene David Chambers and Brian Pullan, eds., Venice: A Documentary History, 1450-1630 Session 3: The Cultural Scene Published Writings by Italian Women, Reception, Cultural Attitudes (Reader) Carlo Dionisotti, "La letteratura italiana nell'etá del Concilio di Trento" (trans. for Reader by Anne Schutte)

    40. ENG700Abstracts
    Jeffrey Tinley, Building Rooms of Resistance Demythologizing and Demystifying the Lover and Beloved in mary wroth’s Love Sonnets
    http://people.cohums.ohio-state.edu/herman145/ENG700Abstracts.html
    Panel I: The Medieval Period to the 18th Century: Feminist Approaches
    References
    • Beauvoir, Simone de. The Second Sex. ed. and trans. H. M. Parshley. New York: Alfred A Knopf, Inc.,1953 Chaucer, Geoffrey. The Riverside Chaucer. 3rd ed.. gen. ed. Larry D. Benson. New York: Houghton Mifflin,1987. Hanson, Elaine Tuttle. Chaucer and The Fictions of Gender. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press,1992. Marks, Elaine. 1973. Simone de Beauvoir: Encounters with Death New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1973. Moi, Toril. What is a Woman? And Other Essays. New York: Oxford, 1999. Simons, Maragret A.. Beauvoir and the Second Sex: Feminism, Race and the Origins of Existentialism. Lanham, MD.: Rowman and Littlefield Publishing, 1999. Women Defamed and Women Defended: An Anthology of Medieval Texts. ed. Alcuin Blamires with Karen Pratt and C.W. Marks. New York: Oxford, 1992.

    References
    • Ed. Peter Brown. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999. Renaissance Women Poets. Ed. Danielle Clark. London: Penguin Books, 2000. Reading Dreams. Ed. Peter Brown. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999.

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 2     21-40 of 70    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | Next 20

    free hit counter