Showing 1 - 10 results of 10 for search '"Feminism"', query time: 0.05s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Romanticism and feminism / by PALCI EBSCO books

    Published: Indiana University Press, 1988
    Table of Contents: “…On romanticism and feminism / Anne K. Mellor -- Silencing the female. …”
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    Walking the Victorian streets : women, representation, and the city / by Nord, Deborah Epstein, 1949-

    Published: Cornell University Press, 1995
    Table of Contents: “…Introduction: Rambling in the Nineteenth Century -- Ch.1 -- The City as Theater: London in the 1820s -- Ch.2 -- Sketches by Boz: The Middle-Class City and the Quarantine of Urban Suffering -- Ch.3 -- "Vitiated Air": The Polluted City and Female Sexuality in Dombey and Son and Bleak House -- Ch.4 -- The Female Pariah: Flora Tristan's London Promenades -- Ch.5 -- Elbowed in the Streets: Exposure and Authority in Elizabeth Gaskell's Urban Fictions -- Ch.6 -- "Neither Pairs Nor Odd": Women, Urban Community, and Writing in the 1880s -- Ch.7 -- The Female Social Investigator: Maternalism, Feminism, and Women's Work -- Conclusion: Esther Summerson's Veil.…”
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    Home and harem : nation, gender, empire, and the cultures of travel / by Grewal, Inderpal, Duke gender collection

    Published: Duke University Press, 1996
    Table of Contents: “…Pandita Ramabai and Parvati Athavale: Homes for Women, Feminism, and Nationalism.…”
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    Women and Victorian theatre / by Powell, Kerry, PALCI EBSCO books

    Published: Cambridge University Press, 1997
    Table of Contents: “…Actresses, managers, and feminized theatre --…”
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    Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Robert Browning Interviews and Recollections / by PALCI EBSCO books

    Table of Contents: “…Cover -- Half-Title -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Abbreviations -- Introduction -- Part 1: Elizabeth Barrett 1806-46 -- 'Glimpses Into My Own Literary Character' -- Religious Imagination -- More 'Glimpses' -- 'Happy influences' -- 'Dearest Papa would be sorry to think how much he grieved me' -- 'My first acquaintance with Elizabeth Barrett' -- 'The fatal event which saddened her bloom of youth' -- Miss Barrett at Thirty-Five -- 'The duties belonging to my femineity' -- On Poetry I: 'the object of the intellectual part of me'…”
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