Lines of Implication: Australian Short Fiction from Lawson to Palmer, and: Gender, Politics and Fiction: Twentieth Century Australian Women's Novels (review)

1987 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 392-395
Author(s):  
Fay Zwicky
1989 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 300
Author(s):  
Dorena Allen Wright ◽  
Carole Ferrier

Author(s):  
Charlotte Perkins Gilman

Charlotte Perkins Gilman was America's leading feminist intellectual of the early twentieth century. The Yellow Wall-Paper and Other Stories makes available the fullest selection of her short fiction ever printed. In addition to her pioneering masterpiece, ‘The Yellow Wall-Paper’ (1890), which draws on her own experience of depression and insanity, this edition features her Impress ‘story studies’, works in the manner of writers such as James, Twain, and Kipling. These stories, together with other fiction from her neglected California period (1890-5), throw new light on Gilman as a practitioner of the art of fiction. In her Forerunner stories she repeatedly explores the situation of ‘the woman of fifty’ and inspires reform by imagining workable solutions to a range of personal and social problems.


Author(s):  
Matthew L. Reznicek

This conclusion looks forward into the mid-twentieth-century works of Kate O’Brien in order to demonstrate the ongoing significance of Paris in Irish women’s novels. In three different bildungsromane, her protagonists experience different Parisian spaces. This analysis demonstrates that those spaces ultimately determine the type of Bildung available to those characters.


1997 ◽  
Vol 65 (3) ◽  
pp. 370
Author(s):  
David William Foster ◽  
Jill S. Kuhnheim

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