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Showing posts from September, 2020
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Women’s health: a short European approach to Women’s literature Abstract This article endeavors to draw a parallel between various women writings of the twentieth century (and even a scarce part of the nineteenth) and to question their authenticity within the study of contemporary post (modern) writing. The issue is thus raised to what an appeal these syncretic ideas launched by two rather revolutionary women writers, as it is the case of Woolf and Jane Rhys (and even George Elliot, earlier in time), have on current vivid readers and even students of English literature by women. The author allows thus a very open and hopefully not biased (subjective) challenge of the promoted literary canon in so far and to propose newer more lax and less stringent criteria and a lens of interpreting women literature that very much promoted women as solely husband hunters, rather feeble minded and highly influential by outside influences of different kinds, as it was the case of the Bronte sisters
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