An Olive Schreiner reader : writings on women and South Africa / edited and introduced by Carol Barash ; afterword by Nadine Gordimer.
Materialtyp:
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 0863581188
- 9780863581182
- Essays Selections
- Schreiner, Olive, 1855-1920
- 1800-talet
- 1900-talet
- 1800-talet
- 1900-talet
- 19th century
- 20th century
- Kvinnor
- Kvinnliga författare
- Politiska och sociala åsikter
- prose in English
- Litteraturvetenskap
- Politisk verksamhet
- Feminism
- Rasism
- Kolonialism
- Literary studies
- Political activities
- Feminism
- Racism
- Colonialism
- Women
- Women authors
- Sydafrika
- Sydafrika
- South Africa
- 828 19
Innehåll:
Prelude. The child's day -- Gender, class and science. The woman question -- Three dreams in a desert -- The Buddhist priest's wife -- 'The policy in favour of protection--'.
Fantasy and the female body. Dream life and real life : a little African story -- five pieces from Dreams. The gardens of pleasure ; A dream of wild bees ; Life's gifts ; The artists secret ; I thought I stood.
Gender, race and politics. Eighteen nintey-nine -- The native question -- Woman and war -- The dawn of civilisation.
Afterword : 'the prison-house of colonialism' / Nadine Gordimer.
Exemplartyp | Aktuellt bibliotek | Hyllsignatur | Status | Streckkod | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bok | Högskolan Väst Övre plan / Upper floor | 828.8 Schreiner | Tillgänglig | 250049546122 |
Antal reservationer: 0
Includes bibliographical references (pages 251-258) and index.
Prelude. The child's day -- Gender, class and science. The woman question -- Three dreams in a desert -- The Buddhist priest's wife -- 'The policy in favour of protection--'.
Fantasy and the female body. Dream life and real life : a little African story -- five pieces from Dreams. The gardens of pleasure ; A dream of wild bees ; Life's gifts ; The artists secret ; I thought I stood.
Gender, race and politics. Eighteen nintey-nine -- The native question -- Woman and war -- The dawn of civilisation.
Afterword : 'the prison-house of colonialism' / Nadine Gordimer.