Since its publication in 1892, Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wall-paper" has always been recognized as a powerful statement about the victimization of a woman whose neurasthenic condition is completely misdiagnosed, mistreated, and misunderstood, leaving her to face insanity alone, as a prisoner in her own bedroom. Never before, however, has the story itself been portrayed as victimized. In this first critical edition of Gilman's "The Yellow Wall-paper," accompanied by contemporary reviews and previously unpublished letters. Julie Bates Dock examines the various myth-frames that have been used to legitimize Gilman's story. The editor discusses how modern feminist critics' readings (and misreadings) of the available documents uphold a set of legends that originated with Gilman herself and that promulgate an almost saintly view of the pioneering feminist author. The documents made available in the collection enable scholars and students to evaluate firsthand Gilman's claims regarding the story's impact on its first audiences. Dock presents an authoritative text of "The Yellow Wall-paper" for the first time since its initial publication. Included are a textual commentary, full descriptions of all relevant texts, lists of editorial emendations and pre-copy-text substantive variants, a complete historical collation that documents all the variants found in important editions after 1892, and a listing of textual sources for more than one hundred reprintings of the story in anthologies and textbooks.
... T.S. Eliot Louise Erdrich F. Scott Fitzgerald William Golding Nathaniel Hawthorne Ernest Hemingway David Henry Hwang Henry James John Keats Maxine Hong Kingston Joy Kogawa Norman Mailer Herman Melville John Milton N. Scott Momaday ...
A critical edition of Gilman's turn-of-the-century feminist novel presents both manuscript and magazine versions, critically edited, and printed in parallel.
The dragon's blood: Feminist Intertextuality in Eudora Welty's The Golden Apples
Vocation and Desire: George Eliot's Heroines
A Dialogue of Voices: Feminist Literary Theory and Bakhtin
Examines the French feminist's memoirs and philosophical writings, discusses her essential beliefs, and assesses her influence on the Women's movement
Ferguson , Priscilla Parkhurst , Philippe Desau , and Wendy Griswold , eds . Critical Inquiry , special issue , The Sociology of Literature 14.3 ( Spring 1988 ) . Flaubert , Gustave . Correspondance , 3 vols . Jean Bruneau , ed .
San Francisco : Harper , 1987 . Elizabeth . The Poems of Queen Elizabeth I. Ed . Leicester Bradner . Providence : Brown UP , 1964 . Elshtain , Jean Bethke . Public Man , Private Woman . Princeton : Princeton UP , 1987 . Elyot , Thomas .
Rosenbaum presents The Early Literary History of the Bloomsbury Group, a subtle and powerful picture of the Bloomsbury Group, showing clearly what has been vague--their beginnings in the Victorian era, before 'human character changed' (as ...
Frances Burney: The World of 'female Difficulties'