This paper aims to reflect what means to become a writer in the 19th century, considering the literary production of Louisa May Alcott, specifically her novel called Little Women and the specific context of the time. We sought to discuss the literary production of female authorship through the movement of Alcott and her main character, from the aforementioned novel, in a period in which women were introduced into the academic environments of literature studies. We presented a brief overview of the rise of literature, novel in particular, based on Eagleton's (2006) text, to better understand how and when women could attend to this literary formal space. Furthermore, we developed a discussion concerning the process of identity construction of...
This is a study of Louisa May Alcott's conceptions of female identity in her sensational and sentime...
This thesis examines Little Women’s feminist reception from the perspectives of social and radical f...
American fiction writer best known as the author of the girls’ novel Little Women (1868-1869). Alcot...
The purpose of this essay is to argue the point that the fictional Jo in Little Women (1868), repres...
This project analyzes the ways that Louis May Alcott portrays authors in several texts, including Ho...
Louisa May Alcotts Little Women, regardless of its vast success in the publishing market, has been d...
This research aims to analyze the novels Little Women (1868; 2005), by Louisa May Alcott and The Sh...
By learning literary works, students do not only improve their vocabulary and grammar, but also broa...
This paper examines the roles of women in Louisa May Alcott’s children’s novels and the ways the aut...
This dissertation focuses on the first generation of American women writers to adopt identities as s...
Abstract This study aims at revealing the traditional women values reflected in Victorian era and ho...
Louisa May Alcott also belonged to the group of those woman writers, who recognized the possibility...
Little Women by Louisa May Alcott is a classic novel loved by adults and children alike. Come laugh ...
The study concerns on the way the writer explores the concepts of women survival to express her ide...
_Little Women_ is a work composed piecemeal and narrated in more than one generic mode. Alcott's com...
This is a study of Louisa May Alcott's conceptions of female identity in her sensational and sentime...
This thesis examines Little Women’s feminist reception from the perspectives of social and radical f...
American fiction writer best known as the author of the girls’ novel Little Women (1868-1869). Alcot...
The purpose of this essay is to argue the point that the fictional Jo in Little Women (1868), repres...
This project analyzes the ways that Louis May Alcott portrays authors in several texts, including Ho...
Louisa May Alcotts Little Women, regardless of its vast success in the publishing market, has been d...
This research aims to analyze the novels Little Women (1868; 2005), by Louisa May Alcott and The Sh...
By learning literary works, students do not only improve their vocabulary and grammar, but also broa...
This paper examines the roles of women in Louisa May Alcott’s children’s novels and the ways the aut...
This dissertation focuses on the first generation of American women writers to adopt identities as s...
Abstract This study aims at revealing the traditional women values reflected in Victorian era and ho...
Louisa May Alcott also belonged to the group of those woman writers, who recognized the possibility...
Little Women by Louisa May Alcott is a classic novel loved by adults and children alike. Come laugh ...
The study concerns on the way the writer explores the concepts of women survival to express her ide...
_Little Women_ is a work composed piecemeal and narrated in more than one generic mode. Alcott's com...
This is a study of Louisa May Alcott's conceptions of female identity in her sensational and sentime...
This thesis examines Little Women’s feminist reception from the perspectives of social and radical f...
American fiction writer best known as the author of the girls’ novel Little Women (1868-1869). Alcot...