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From "A Resisting Reader" to a Builder of Feminist Literary Tradition: On Judith Fetterley's Feminist Literary Criticism |
JIN Li |
Centre for Gender Studies at Beijing Foreign Studies University, Beijing 100089, China |
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Abstract From "a resisting reader" to a forerunner of American women regionalists, Judith Fetterley has become an influential figure in the field of American feminist criticism. She starts with the subversive feminist reading of American canonical literary works, and then, strives to construct the American feminist literary tradition. Continuously expanding her critical perspectives, Fetterley has made important contribution to the development of American feminist literary criticism.
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[1] Fetterley, Judith. Introduction[A]. Provisions: A Reader from 19th-Century American Women[C]. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1985. [2] Lydia Blanchard. Women and Fiction: Literature as Politics[J]. Studies in the Novel, Spring, 1980,12(1): 65-72. [3] Fetterley, Judith. Preface[A]. Resisting Reader A Feminist Approach to American Fiction[C]. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1978. [4] Miriam N. Kotzin, Review[J]. College Literature, 1981,8(1): 111-113. [5] Sharon M. Harris. “A New Era in Female History”: Nineteenth-Century U. S. Women Writers[J]. American Literature, 2002, 74(3): 603-618. [6] Fetterley, Judith. Plenary Remarks[J]. Legacy, 2002,19(1): 5-9. [7] Fetterley and Marjorie Pryse, eds. Introduction[A]. American Women Regionalists, 1850-1910: A Norton Anthology[C]. New York: Norton, 1992. [8] Fetterley, Judith. “Not in the Least American”: Nineteenth-Century Literary Regionalism[J]. College English, 1994,56(8): 877-95. [9] Donna M. Campbell. Review[J]. Legacy, 2004,21(1): 96-97. [10] Fetterley, Judith. Writing out of Place: Regionalism, Women, and American Literary Culture [with Marjorie Pryse][M]. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 2003. |
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