Misogynism in Literature: Any Place, Any TimeChurch Pub Incorporated, 2004 - 232 Seiten Thirteen scholars from ten different national backgrounds offer their diverse commentaries on misogynism in literature. The diversity is intentional as it shows how much misogyny has been able to permeate centuries and literatures, but it also shows that those trying to resist it are just as cosmopolitan. The collection discloses the negative sameness of different peoples and cultures in their misogyny found in such celebrated authors as Boccaccio, Byron, Chaucer, Gallegos, Gide, D.H. Lawrence, Melville, Mungan, Pushkin, Salih, Shakespeare, and Swift. |
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Seite 19
... Dioneo concludes the one hundred stories with an extreme example of misogyny which , I argue , testifies to nothing less than the unresolved hiatus between the garden and the city or , in more metaphorical terms , between narrative and ...
... Dioneo concludes the one hundred stories with an extreme example of misogyny which , I argue , testifies to nothing less than the unresolved hiatus between the garden and the city or , in more metaphorical terms , between narrative and ...
Seite 21
... Dioneo's initial skepticism about the outcome of the plot , for the husband acts : " not [ ... ] of liberality , it was the work of an utter brute , even though it came out all right in the end . And I'm not suggesting that anyone ...
... Dioneo's initial skepticism about the outcome of the plot , for the husband acts : " not [ ... ] of liberality , it was the work of an utter brute , even though it came out all right in the end . And I'm not suggesting that anyone ...
Seite 30
... Dioneo's personality in this sense is similar to the persona speaking in Boccaccio's name as narrator , as Shirley Allen remarks : " Boccaccio , like Dioneo , appears to offer with one hand what he takes away with the other . " 47 In ...
... Dioneo's personality in this sense is similar to the persona speaking in Boccaccio's name as narrator , as Shirley Allen remarks : " Boccaccio , like Dioneo , appears to offer with one hand what he takes away with the other . " 47 In ...
Inhalt
Introduction | 9 |
Britta Zangen | 39 |
Yahuei | 59 |
Urheberrecht | |
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allegory André Gide Arab Bethsabé Birkin Boccaccio's body Byron Cambridge Canterbury Canterbury Tales Chaucer colonial critics cultural D.H. Lawrence d'André Darkness Decameron desire Dioneo discourse Doña Bárbara essay fairy fairy tales female characters feminine Feminism feminist femme fiction Franklin's Tale French Freud Gallegos Gallimard gender Gerald Gide's Gidean Griselda Gualtieri Gudrun High Heels homosexuality husband ideology Islam Knight's Tale Lady Mary Wortley Lady's Dressing Room language Larnac Lawrence's literature littérature lover Ludmila Luzardo male Marcelle Tinayre Marisela marriage married Mary Wortley Montagu masculine Maurras Melville Melville's metaphor misogynist misogyny Moby Dick mother narrative narrator nature novel novella numbers Oxford Paris patriarchal poem political publ Pushkin reader Reeve's Tale relationship Roi Candaule Ruslan Sa'eed Sa'eed's Saül Season of Migration sexual Shakespeare Shipman's Tale social society stereotypes story Studies Swift symbolic tradition trans tropes violence wife woman Women in Love women writers writing York