Results for ' Feminist poetry'

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  1. Тип: Статья в журнале язык: Английский том: 25 номер: 3 год: 1999 страницы: 662-670 цит. В ринц®: 0.Ruth--Poetry Stone - 1999 - Feminist Studies 25 (3):662-670.
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  2.  36
    Allusion and Broken VAW: The Hermeneutics in Cebuano-Visayan Feminist Poetry.Kathleen B. Solon-Villaneza - 2014 - Iamure International Journal of Literature, Philosophy and Religion 5 (1).
    Violence against women is a global stigma. At least two conditionsstirred the global community: Malala Yousafzai who took a bullet in 2012 andwho advocate girl’s education to date, and the 2014 reported kidnap of 300Nigerian girls by Boko Haram. There are oppressive stereotypes of women.Violence can come in different forms. These can come as verbal abuse, intimatepartners violence, non-intimate partner violence, trafficking, forced prostitution,exploitation of labor, debt bondage, physical and sexual violence, sex selectiveabortion, female infanticide and femicide, deliberate neglect and (...)
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  3.  33
    Denise Levertov’s Ambivalence about Feminist Poetry.Donna Krolik Hollenberg - 2010 - Renascence 62 (2):141-155.
  4.  11
    Love Poetry, Women’s Bonding and Feminist Consciousness: The Complex Interaction between Edna St Vincent Millay and Adrienne Rich.Artemis Michailidou - 2006 - European Journal of Women's Studies 13 (1):39-57.
    This article examines Adrienne Rich’s Twenty-One Love Poems in relation to Edna St Vincent Millay’s Fatal Interview. Discussing notions such as lyric voice and innovation within traditional genres, the author analyses how Millay’s attempts to challenge commonplace definitions of female sexuality impacted on Rich’s articulation of sexual desire. The intertextual dialogue between the above works reveals that Millay and Rich produced two remarkably similar erotic narratives, which resist masculinist conceptions of literary history and comment on the self-referentiality of poetic composition. (...)
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  5.  13
    Looking back at Feminism and Poetry: An interview with Jan Montefiore.Isabel Castelao-Gómez - 2016 - European Journal of Women's Studies 23 (1):93-105.
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  6.  18
    ‘To Persistently not Know Something Important’: Feminist Science and the Poetry of Wislawa Szymborska.Justyna Kostkowska - 2004 - Feminist Theory 5 (2):185-203.
    This essay examines the poetry of Wislawa Szymborska as sharing key similarities with modern feminist practice in science. Szymborska’s poetry invites such an analysis because of its interest in anthropology and the natural sciences, and because of its preoccupation with the creation, limitations, and effects of knowledge. I argue that Szymborska’s privileging of uncertainty, of the personal, the particular, and the ‘insignificant’, as well as her process- and question-oriented method of creating meaning aligns her with feminist (...)
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  7.  65
    Feminism as a radical ethics? Questions for feminist researchers in the humanities.Marie Carrière - 2006 - Journal of Academic Ethics 4 (1-4):245-260.
    A feminist perspective on selfhood – bound to a perspective on otherness – is the main concern of this article. The resonance of this notion of selfhood both with ethical philosophy and with the language of humanism enables a deeper understanding of a feminist ethics as well as its internal tensions. The article considers the relationship of feminism and humanism as one of “paradoxical fluidity” rather than antithetical polarization, to explore the ways in which feminism’s alliance with contemporary (...)
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  8.  18
    Care Ethics and Poetry.Maurice Hamington & Ce Rosenow - 2019 - Springer Verlag.
    Care Ethics and Poetry is the first book to address the relationship between poetry and feminist care ethics. The authors argue that morality, and more specifically, moral progress, is a product of inquiry, imagination, and confronting new experiences. Engaging poetry, therefore, can contribute to the habits necessary for a robust moral life—specifically, caring. Each chapter offers poems that can provoke considerations of moral relations without explicitly moralizing. The book contributes to valorizing poetry and aesthetic experience (...)
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  9.  53
    Feminism and Literary Study: A Reply to Annette Kolodny.William W. Morgan - 1976 - Critical Inquiry 2 (4):807-816.
    Like Kolodny, I think feminism one of the most vital and energizing forces in literary criticism today, but for two reasons I found her exposition of the topic disappointing. It seems to me that she underplays the most crucial of the many aesthetic and pedagogical issues raised by feminist literary study, and she endorses a kind of intellectual defeatism when, in the conclusion of her essay, she places a "Posted" sign between the male readers of Critical Inquiry and her (...)
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  10.  55
    Contemporary Poetry, Alternate Routes.Jerome J. McGann - 1987 - Critical Inquiry 13 (3):624-647.
    What is the significance of that loose collective enterprise, sprung up in the aftermath of the sixties, known as L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E Writing? To answer this question I will be taking, initially, a somewhat oblique route. And I shall assume an agreement on several important social and political matters: first, that the United States, following the Second World War, assumed definitive leadership of a capitalist empire; second, that its position of leadership generated a network of internal social contradictions which persist to this (...)
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  11.  11
    Poetry, myth and storytelling in the history of political theory.Sophie Smith - forthcoming - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy.
    Tae-Yeoun Keum begins her beautifully written book, Plato and the Mythic Tradition in Political Thought, clear-eyed about how the contested definitions of myth we find in the literature – especiall...
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  12.  10
    A poetics of being-two: Irigaray's ethics and post-symbolist poetry.M. F. Simone Roberts - 2011 - Lanham, Md.: Lexington Books/Rowman & Littlefield.
    "M. F. Simone Roberts's A Poetics of Being-Two is animated by a lively and engaging voice, drawing readers in with a sense of serious purpose working (delightfully) in tandem with a sense of humor. Roberts's aesthetics and her close readings of Yves Bonnefoy, St-John Perse, and Jorie Graham clearly demonstrate the literary effectiveness of Irigarayan sexual difference as an analytic trope, even as they emphasize the philosophical and political possibilities sexual difference opens up for feminism, environmentalism, and all levels of (...)
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  13.  14
    Feminist Styles of Immanent Critique: Judith Butler and Denise Riley.Anna Moser - 2022 - Diacritics 50 (1):90-111.
    Abstract:Taking up the question of style, I argue that this term provides a generative framework for reassessing the historical challenges of feminist writing and politics. To develop my argument, I read Judith Butler's philosophy alongside Denise Riley's poems, historical criticism, and philosophical prose, proposing that both writers are inventive participants in the tradition of immanent critique. I demonstrate how feminist questioning of linguistic conventions and social norms is enfolded in Butler's paratextual reflections on philosophical grammar and in Riley's (...)
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  14.  25
    Poetry in the Wake.Deborah Rosenfelt, Rosamond S. King, Ashwini Tambe, Yvette Christiansë, Amanda Solomon Amorao & Carmen Giménez Smith - 2016 - Feminist Studies 42 (3):563.
    Abstract:“Poetry in the Wake” series: (pp. 563 - 574)Deborah Rosenfelt, I Need a Poem (pp. 565)Rosamond S. King, This Was Always Going to Be a Poem about Work (pp. 566 - 567)Ashwini Tambe, November 9; One Week Later (pp. 568 – 569)Yvette Christianse, Eve (pp. 570 - 571)Amanda Solomon Amorao, To My Student Who Is an Immigrant (pp. 572 - 573)Carmen Gimenez Smith, Ethos (pp. 574).
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  15.  51
    Feminist Auto/biography as a Means of Empowering Women: A Case Study of Sylvia Plath’s Bell Jar and Janet Frame’s Faces in the Water.Tomasz Fisiak - 2011 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 1 (1):183-197.
    Feminist Auto/biography as a Means of Empowering Women: A Case Study of Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar and Janet Frame's Faces in the Water Feminism, as a political, social and cultural movement, pays much attention to the importance of text. Text is the carrier of important thoughts, truths, ideas. It becomes a means of empowering women, a support in their fight for free expression, equality, intellectual emancipation. By "text" one should understand not only official documents, manifestos or articles. The (...)
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  16. Pragmatism, Feminism, and the Sentimental Subject.Sean Epstein-Corbin - 2014 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 50 (2):220.
    In trying to connect a primarily literary account of sentimental history and theory to a primarily philosophical account of feminist pragmatism,1 certain dangers emerge. One is to unintentionally privilege the genre of philosophy over the genres of poetry or sentimental fiction. In H.S. Thayer’s insightful Meaning and Action: A Critical History of Pragmatism, as but one example, philosophical writing subordinates other genres, such as poetry or novels, leading to readings of Dewey and James that disproportionately weight the (...)
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  17.  47
    Believing Ancient Women: Feminist Epistemologies for Greece and Rome.Megan Elena Bowen, Mary Hamil Gilbert & Edith Gwendolyn Nally (eds.) - 2023 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    This volume deploys recent feminist epistemological frameworks to analyze how concepts like knowledge, authority, rationality, objectivity and testimony were constructed in Greece and Rome. The introduction serves as a field guide to feminist epistemological interpretations of classical sources, and the following sixteen chapters treat a variety of genres and time periods, from Greek poetry, tragedy, philosophy, oratory, historiography and material culture to Roman comedy, epic, oratory, letters, law and their reception. By using an intersectional approach to demonstrate (...)
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  18.  12
    Intimate internationalisms: 1970s ‘Third World’ queer feminist solidarity with Chile.Tamara Lea Spira - 2014 - Feminist Theory 15 (2):119-140.
    This article theorises the relationship between 1970s US Third World queer and feminist movements and Latin American anti-imperialist revolutions of the late twentieth century. I focus upon the historically occluded relationships between Third World feminists and queers in Chile and the United States throughout the transition to neoliberalism. My archive includes June Jordan’s little-known writings on Chile, the writings of Audre Lorde, and, primarily, a 1973 Third World feminist poetry reading staged in San Francisco shortly after the (...)
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  19. (1 other version)Virgil’s Feminist Counterforce: Juno’s Furor as Matter of Imperium's Unjust Forms.Joshua M. Hall - 2024 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 58 (2):12-29.
    In this article, I offer a new philosophical interpretation of Virgil’s Aeneid, dually centered on the queens of Olympus and Carthage. More specifically, I show how the philosopher-poet Virgil deploys Dido’s Junonian furor as the Aristotelian matter of the unjust Roman imperium, the feminist counterforce to the patriarchal force disguised as peaceful order. The first section explores Virgil’s political and biographical background for the raw materials for a feminist, anti-imperial political philosophy. The second section, following Marilynn Desmond, situates (...)
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  20.  22
    Focal Length; Poetry for Beginners; ID Photos.Gabeba Baderoon - 2015 - Feminist Studies 41 (1):134.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:134 Feminist Studies 41, no. 1. © 2015 by Gabeba Baderoon Focal Length Gabeba Baderoon I take out the black and white photos I brought with me from Cape Town and haven’t looked at for years and stand them next to one another on the dining room table. In one, my mother in her white coat at the hospital looks up from her notes, distracted, in the grainy (...)
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  21.  17
    Women, Gays, and the Constitution: The Grounds for Feminism and Gay Rights in Culture and Law.David A. J. Richards - 1998 - University of Chicago Press.
    In this remarkable study, David A. J. Richards combines an interpretive history of culture and law, political philosophy, and constitutional analysis to explain the background, development, and growing impact of two of the most important and challenging human rights movements of our time, feminism and gay rights. Richards argues that both movements are extensions of rights-based dissent, rooted in antebellum abolitionist feminism that condemned both American racism and sexism. He sees the progressive role of such radical dissent as an emancipated (...)
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  22.  23
    Doing Murga, Undoing Gender: Feminist Carnival in Argentina.Michael S. O’Brien & Julia Mcreynolds-Pérez - 2020 - Gender and Society 34 (3):413-436.
    Murga porteña, the satirical street theatre tradition associated with Carnival in Buenos Aires, Argentina, is historically a strongly patriarchal institution. Prominent roles such as reciting poetry, singing, and playing percussion instruments have been reserved exclusively for men. As the feminist movement in Argentina has grown in visibility and importance in recent years, feminist murga participants disrupted these patriarchal patterns. Women murga performers have begun to use murga as a space for feminist practice, both by creating women-only (...)
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  23.  11
    Feminist Genealogical Methodologies.Anne Keary - 2013 - Feminist Theology 21 (2):126-144.
    This paper describes the multi-methodological approach employed in a partial, situated, contingent and interpretive feminist political analysis of Catholic mothers and daughters. The study draws on a number of sources including transcripts of mother-daughter interviews, autobiographical anecdotes, photographs, music, icons of Catholicism and poetry. It is argued in this paper that a feminist multi-methodological approach is valuable to feminist research as it disrupts the linear and logocentric construct of traditional social science research. Moreover, a multi-methodological and (...)
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  24.  33
    Readings in Chinese Women’s Philosophical and Feminist Thought: From the Late 13th to Early 21st Century.Ann A. Pang-White - 2022 - London: Bloomsbury. Edited by Ann Pang-White. Translated by Ann Pang-White.
    Readings in Chinese Women's Philosophical and Feminist Thought gathers 40 original writings on women by 32 authors (many of whom are women) from the Yuan dynasty to the Republics, an important 700-year historical period during which women's learning in China blossomed as a result of economic prosperity, the development of commercial printing, and the interaction between East and West. -/- Selections are made not only from canonical texts on women's virtues, but also from less orthodox literary works such as (...)
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  25. Vedanta and Cosmopolitanism in Contemporary Indian Poetry.Subhasis Chattopadhyay - 2016 - Prabuddha Bharata or Awakened India 121 (September):648-55.
    Bashabi Fraser is known the world over as a Scottish-Bengali aka diasporic writer. Further she has also been slotted as a feminist scholar with a huge corpus on Tagore. This essay proves the fallacy of such pigeon-holeing of Fraser and shows that she is as mainstream as Yeats and even before that, like unto Blake. The essay also makes a point for rejecting every other mode of poetry except the Romantic mode. It established the Vedantic nature of the (...)
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  26.  7
    Stories/poetry Distance.Barbara Bridger - 2004 - Feminist Review 78 (1):181-186.
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  27. Reconfiguring Feminism: Bernardine Evaristo’s Girl, Woman, Other.Merve Sarıkaya-Şen - 2021 - The European Legacy 26 (3-4):303-315.
    ABSTRACT In this article I discuss Bernardine Evaristo’s Girl, Woman, Other as a transmodern narrative that gives voice to a marginalised group of black women living in Britain. Written in a hybrid style that combines prose and poetry and eschewing punctuation and long sentences, the novel interweaves sundry stories from the late nineteenth to the twenty-first century set in countries ranging from Africa, the Caribbean, and America to Britain. This networked structure exposes transtemporal and transnational patterns of diversity, connectedness (...)
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  28.  32
    Time and the Erotic in Horace's Odes, and: Horace: Behind the Public Poetry (review).Kenneth J. Reckford - 1996 - American Journal of Philology 117 (4):657-660.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Time and the Erotic in Horace’s Odes, and: Horace: Behind the Public PoetryKenneth ReckfordRonnie Ancona. Time and the Erotic in Horace’s Odes. Durham, N.C. and London: Duke University Press, 1994. xii + 186Cloth, $39.95.R. O. A. M. Lyne. Horace: Behind the Public Poetry. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1995. viii + 230 pp. Cloth, $30.Horace’s love poetry has generally been undervalued, if not actively (...)
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  29.  29
    Poetics of Advocacy: Womanhood and Feminist Identity in Patricia Jabbeh Wesley’s Where the Road Turns.Bartholomew Chizoba Akpah - 2020 - SOCRATES 8 (2spl):14-25.
    The crux of feminist ideological alignments is the struggle for the woman’s liberation from patriarchal subjectivities. This study investigates the utilization of poetry by Patricia Jabbeh Wesley to challenge patriarchal dominance and expose the gimmicks of female devaluation by hegemonic imperialism. Wesley’s poems: “Inequality in Hell” and “My Auntie’s Woman-Lappa Husband” which sufficiently explore feminist consciousness from Wesley’s poetry collection, Where the Road Turns, were purposively selected and subjected to close reading and qualitative analysis. The poems (...)
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  30.  50
    Trans-appropriations: Transgendering Nationness in Piotr Odmieniec Włast’s “In Grabow During the War: Book of Idyllic Poetry”.Karolina Krasuska - 2010 - Dialogue and Universalism 20 (5-6):119-137.
    This article examines the performance of masculinity by Piotr Odmieniec Włast in the poetry manuscript “In Grabów during the War:Book of Idyllic Poetry”. Following feminist arguments about the interdependence of the categories of gender and nationness, it argues that Włast uses Polish Romantic messianic discourse to make credible his staging of masculinity. Consequently, it participates in the discussions about the relations between nationness and non-normative gender scenarios.
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  31. Inheriting the Poetry of Survival: Caleb Ward reviews Survival Is a Promise: The Eternal Life of Audre Lorde by Alexis Pauline Gumbs. [REVIEW]Caleb Ward - 2024 - The Philosopher 112 (2):99-104.
    A long-form review essay on Alexis Pauline Gumbs's Survival Is a Promise: The Eternal Life of Audre Lorde (2024) and the task of reading Audre Lorde as a philosopher.
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  32.  56
    Engineering is not a luxury: Black feminists and logical positivists on conceptual engineering.Matthew J. Cull - 2021 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 64 (1-2):227-248.
    ABSTRACT Recent historical discussion of conceptual engineering by analytic philosophers has largely focused on precedents for contemporary conceptual engineering within the history of analytic philosophy. However, I suggest that we can and should look outside of the analytic tradition for further examples of conceptual engineering, and inspiration for further work in conceptual engineering. Here I will look to one such other tradition – American Black feminism. I do this by considering the work of Audre Lorde and Patricia Hill Collins in (...)
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  33.  20
    Gender at the Crossing: Ideological Travelings of US and French Thought in Montreal Feminism.Geneviève Pagé - 2016 - Feminist Studies 42 (3):575.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Feminist Studies 42, no. 3. © 2016 by Feminist Studies, Inc. 575 Geneviève Pagé Gender at the Crossing: Ideological Travelings of US and French Thought in Montreal Feminism This article recounts a story about Montreal feminism using the narrative thread of its conceptual language. It is a story of language as a political choice that guides our actions, but also language as a political issue, a barrier, (...)
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  34.  50
    That’s why we came here: Feminist cinema(s) at greenham common.Sophie Mayer - 2017 - Angelaki 22 (3):67-76.
    This paper argues for a feminist genealogy of anti-nuclear protest art, around the nucleus of the women’s camp at Greenham Common, 1981–87, a coherent account of whose significance is missing from both feminist film history and left protest history. Drawing on Adrienne Rich’s poetics as a thread connecting the larger anti-nuclear and non-violent/anti-military feminist movement specifically to aesthetic and political formations that informed films made at and about Greenham, the paper constellates a number of experimental works in (...)
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  35.  24
    Spinoza’s Conception of Personal and Political Change: A Feminist Perspective.Janice Richardson - 2020 - Law and Critique 31 (2):145-162.
    By focusing upon three figures: a trade unionist, who can no longer understand or reconcile himself with his past misogynist behaviour; Spinoza’s Spanish poet, who loses his memory and can no longer write poetry or even recognise his earlier work; and Spinoza’s lost friend, Burgh, who became a devout Catholic, I draw out Spinoza’s description of radical change in beliefs. I explore how, for Spinoza, radical changes that involve an increase in our powers of acting are conceived differently from (...)
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  36.  39
    ‘Every Poem Breaks a Silence that Had to be Overcome’*: The Therapeutic Power of Poetry Writing.Gillie Bolton - 1999 - Feminist Review 62 (1):118-133.
    The creation of poetry can be an intensely healing process, as therapeutic as the other arts and talking therapies. This paper examines three areas. First, it sets out some opinions about the specific qualities of poetry that make it particularly valuable as part of a therapeutic process. It goes on to give exemplified information about how poetry is used within healthcare in Britain. Finally, it indicates the current growth of interest in this area, with brief descriptions of (...)
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  37.  14
    Making of Our Lives a Study: Feminist Theology and Women’s Creative Writing.Roxanne Harde - 2006 - Feminist Theology 15 (1):48-69.
    This article examines the relationship between feminist theologies and women’s poetry and fiction. Using Sheila Hassell Hughes’ work on this same relationship as a point of departure, I contend that feminist theologians rely on literature by women for a variety of reasons, and I focus on how literature by women offers feminist theologies a multitude of examples of women’s experience, embodied experience in particular. If women’s experience is the starting point for a truly feminist theology, (...)
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  38.  42
    Selves, Diverse and Divided: Can Feminists Have Diversity without Multiplicity?Amy Mullin - 1995 - Hypatia 10 (4):1 - 31.
    I explore connections between social divisions and diversity within the self, while striving to differentiate internal diversity and multiplicity. When the person is understood as composite or multiple, she is seen as divided into several distinct agent-like aspects. This view is found in ancient, modern, and postmodern philosophy, psychology, poetry, and lay people's accounts of their experience. I argue for a conception of the self as diverse but not composite or multiple.
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  39. Planetary activism at the end of the world: Feminist and posthumanist imaginaries beyond Man.Sanna Karkulehto, Aino-Kaisa Koistinen & Nóra Ugron - 2022 - European Journal of Women's Studies 29 (4):577-592.
    We are currently experiencing a planetary crisis that will lead, if worst comes to worst, to the end of the entire world as we know it. Several feminist scholars have suggested that if the Earth is to stay livable for humans and nonhumans alike, the ways in which many human beings – particularly in the wealthy parts of the world, infested with Eurocentrism, colonialism, neoliberalism, and capitalism – inhabit this planet requires radical, ethical, and political transformation. In this article, (...)
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  40.  18
    Book Review: Women's Poetry in the Enlightenment: The Making of a Canon, 1730–1820. [REVIEW]Clare Brant - 2003 - Feminist Review 74 (1):121-122.
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  41.  23
    Supposed Persons: Modernist Poetry and the Female SubjectWomen Writers and Poetic IdentityThe Last Lunar BaedekerMarianne Moore: Imaginary PossessionsLaura Riding's Pursuit of Truth. [REVIEW]Carolyn Burke, Margaret Homans, Mina Loy, Roger L. Conover, Bonnie Costello & Joyce Piell Wexler - 1985 - Feminist Studies 11 (1):131.
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  42.  10
    Reading the Scar in Breast Cancer Poetry.Stephanie Hartman - 2004 - Feminist Studies 30:155-177.
  43.  16
    Book Review: Poetry by Women in Ireland: A Critical Anthology 1870–1970. [REVIEW]Sarah Harsh - 2015 - Feminist Review 110 (1):e12-e14.
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  44.  25
    More Than Just Words: Women's Poetry and Resistance at Cook County Jail.Ann Folwell Stanford - 2004 - Feminist Studies 30 (2):277-301.
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  45.  30
    "Artifacts for Survival": Remapping the Contours of Poetry with Audre Lorde.Sagri Dhairyam - 1992 - Feminist Studies 18 (2):229.
  46.  34
    Women's Bibles: Biblical Interpretation in Nineteenth-Century American Women's Poetry.Shira Wolosky - 2002 - Feminist Studies 28 (1):191-211.
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  47.  17
    ‘Always another breath in my breath’: on Denise Riley, the polyvocality of the subject and poetry.Vikki Bell - 2020 - Feminist Theory 21 (3):317-329.
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  48.  17
    A Round-Table Discussion on Poetry in Performance.Vicki Bertram, Ruth Harrison, Jillian Tipene, Patience Agbabi & Jean Binta Breeze - 1999 - Feminist Review 62 (1):24-54.
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  49.  39
    Kinship and Resemblances: Women on WomenBlack Sister: Poetry by Black American Women, 1746-1980Black Women Novelists: The Development of a Tradition, 1892-1976Mother of the Blues: A Study of Ma Rainey. [REVIEW]Hortense J. Spillers, Erlene Stetson, Barbara Christian & Sandra R. Lieb - 1985 - Feminist Studies 11 (1):111.
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  50.  19
    Book Review: Contemporary Women's Poetry and Urban Space: Experimental Cities. [REVIEW]Snežana Žabić - 2016 - Feminist Review 113 (1):e14-e15.
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