Southern writer Ellen Glasgow once told an audience that “the longer one lives in this world of hazard and disaster, the more reckless one should become . . . in the matter of words.” Between the 1880s and the 1940s, opportunities for southern women writers like Glasgow increased dramatically, first bolstered by readership demands for southern stories in northern periodicals and followed by their acceptance into the southern literary canon during the 1920s-30s Southern Renaissance movement. And yet, it remained difficult for southern women writers to be reckless with words. Confined by magazine requirements and sociocultural expectations, writers often used regional settings to attract publishers and readers. Once a readership was establish...
In this thesis I argue for a repositioning of Edith Wharton’s short stories in relation to both the ...
This study examines the Southern female character's search for autonomy in the works of Kate Chopin,...
© 2015 Dr. Natasha Amy StoryWho was the American New Woman and why was she important to female liter...
Southern writer Ellen Glasgow once told an audience that “the longer one lives in this world of haza...
My dissertation examines the ways in which the short-story cycle has provided a unique generic frame...
In my paper I propose to investigate the short story series which Annie S. Swan published in the wom...
Inspired by the work of Continental European, particularly French, writers of the second half of the...
“Assembled Authorship: American Women Writers and the Culture of Commonplacing” interrogates monolit...
textThe short story was the most profitable literary form for most fiction-writers of the late-nine...
I am examining Gothic short stories written by women during the late nineteenth and early twentieth ...
The resurgence of modern periodical studies has expanded our understanding of “littleqrdquo; magazin...
The period traditionally called the Harlem Renaissance was an era in which African American women ...
When Ellen Douglas started writing, she drew inspiration from the way William Faulkner and other sou...
Nineteenth-century editors frequently discussed their work in public forums (including their own per...
The New Woman writing of the 1890s grappled with the legacy of mid-nineteenth century constructions ...
In this thesis I argue for a repositioning of Edith Wharton’s short stories in relation to both the ...
This study examines the Southern female character's search for autonomy in the works of Kate Chopin,...
© 2015 Dr. Natasha Amy StoryWho was the American New Woman and why was she important to female liter...
Southern writer Ellen Glasgow once told an audience that “the longer one lives in this world of haza...
My dissertation examines the ways in which the short-story cycle has provided a unique generic frame...
In my paper I propose to investigate the short story series which Annie S. Swan published in the wom...
Inspired by the work of Continental European, particularly French, writers of the second half of the...
“Assembled Authorship: American Women Writers and the Culture of Commonplacing” interrogates monolit...
textThe short story was the most profitable literary form for most fiction-writers of the late-nine...
I am examining Gothic short stories written by women during the late nineteenth and early twentieth ...
The resurgence of modern periodical studies has expanded our understanding of “littleqrdquo; magazin...
The period traditionally called the Harlem Renaissance was an era in which African American women ...
When Ellen Douglas started writing, she drew inspiration from the way William Faulkner and other sou...
Nineteenth-century editors frequently discussed their work in public forums (including their own per...
The New Woman writing of the 1890s grappled with the legacy of mid-nineteenth century constructions ...
In this thesis I argue for a repositioning of Edith Wharton’s short stories in relation to both the ...
This study examines the Southern female character's search for autonomy in the works of Kate Chopin,...
© 2015 Dr. Natasha Amy StoryWho was the American New Woman and why was she important to female liter...