In Her Own Voice: Nineteenth-century American Women EssayistsSherry Lee Linkon Taylor & Francis, 1997 - 163 էջ In Her Own Voice examines the literary history of women's nonfiction writing through studies of individual writers, their works, and their careers. The essays in this collection consider the development of women's public voices, relationships between women essayists and their editors and readers. |
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Conversation as Rhetoric in Margaret Fullers Woman 22 | 27 |
Anna Julia Cooper | 61 |
I Thought From the Way You Writ That You Were a Great | 81 |
Margaret Fullers | 97 |
Ann Sophia Stephens | 113 |
Gail Hamiltons Antisuffrage Prophecy | 127 |
The American Indian Story of ZitkalaSa | 141 |
Contributors Notes | 157 |
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In Her Own Voice: Nineteenth-Century American Women Essayists Sherry L. Linkon Դիտել հնարավոր չէ - 2019 |
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African-American African-American woman American Indian American Women Writers Ann Sophia Stephens Anna Julia Cooper argues Arthur Fuller Atlantic Monthly audience autobiographical Bonnin Boston century commentary contemporary conversation Cooper create critical culture describes discourse edition editor experience Fanny Fern female feminine feminist Fern's fiction Gail Hamilton gender genre Gertrude's Ginger Snaps Harriet Higginson Houghton informal intellectual jeremiad Jonathan Slick Karcher Lakes letters literary history literature Lowell Lydia Maria Child M. A. DeWolfe magazine male Margaret Fuller Mary masculine mother narrative Native American newspaper essay nineteenth nineteenth-century American nonfiction novel offer paleface passage political Preston prose public voice published readers reveal rhetorical role Rose Terry Cooke Sam Slick self-representation sentimental social society speak speaker Stephens Stephens's story strategies style suggests Summer Thomas Wentworth Higginson tion topic shift traditional truth Willis woman essayist writing wrote Yankee York Zitkala-Sa