The Woman's Part: Feminist Criticism of ShakespeareCarolyn Ruth Swift Lenz, Gayle Greene, Carol Thomas Neely University of Illinois Press, 1980 - 348 ページ |
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... social structures that shape them . Such criticism may be written by men ; female critics , even when focusing on women characters , are not necessarily feminist nor should we demand that they be so . Feminist criticism is more a matter ...
... social structures that shape them . Such criticism may be written by men ; female critics , even when focusing on women characters , are not necessarily feminist nor should we demand that they be so . Feminist criticism is more a matter ...
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... social causes of women's oppression . Critics in this anthology find that patriarchal order takes different forms and is portrayed with varying degrees of emphasis throughout the Shakespearean canon . In some comedies it weighs lightly ...
... social causes of women's oppression . Critics in this anthology find that patriarchal order takes different forms and is portrayed with varying degrees of emphasis throughout the Shakespearean canon . In some comedies it weighs lightly ...
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... social restrictions while subduing the threat posed by their sexuality . They note that in tragedy , where women are without benefit of disguise , their roles are at once more varied , more constricted , and more precarious . While in ...
... social restrictions while subduing the threat posed by their sexuality . They note that in tragedy , where women are without benefit of disguise , their roles are at once more varied , more constricted , and more precarious . While in ...
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... social , cultural , and demographic structure of marriage and the family in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries ; feminist historians like Joan Kelly - Gadol , Kathleen Casey , and Natalie Zemon Davis ex- plore the relative position ...
... social , cultural , and demographic structure of marriage and the family in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries ; feminist historians like Joan Kelly - Gadol , Kathleen Casey , and Natalie Zemon Davis ex- plore the relative position ...
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... social documents ; historical data cannot simply be imported into them or derived from them . Demographic historians , for example , postulate a late age of men- arche and a very late average marriage age for women ( 24 ) and men ( 28 ) ...
... social documents ; historical data cannot simply be imported into them or derived from them . Demographic historians , for example , postulate a late age of men- arche and a very late average marriage age for women ( 24 ) and men ( 28 ) ...
目次
Female Sexuality as Power in Shakespeares Plays | 17 |
The Roles of Women in Richard III | 35 |
Shakespeare and the Soil of Rape | 56 |
Comic Structure and the Humanizing of Kate in The Taming of the Shrew | 65 |
Much Ado and the Distrust of Women | 79 |
How a Girl Can Be Smart and Still Popular | 100 |
Intimate Conversations between Women in Shakespeares Plays | 117 |
A kind of self | 133 |
What should such a fool Do with so good a woman? | 211 |
Infirm of purpose | 240 |
Shakespeares Female Characters as Actors and Audience | 256 |
A Penchant for Perdita on the Eighteenth Century English Stage | 271 |
Sexism and Racism in Shakespeares Tempest | 285 |
Shakespeares Imperiled and Chastening Daughters of Romance | 295 |
A Selective Bibliography | 314 |
Contributors | 337 |
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