YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Mary Wollstonecraft Virginia Woolf and Early Feminism
Essays 1 - 30
(Woolf, 2002). Written for a largely female readership over a hundred years after Wollstonecraft, Woolf can afford to be more cri...
treatment of women. Her novel, Sense and Sensibility considers the social position of the early nineteenth-century woman, and thr...
and mother. Nor does she seem to have regretted that - basically, she had no choice in the matter. Mr. Ramsay...
to resurrect and preserve (Gordon 4). Woolf, a manic-depressive, found herself constantly searching for approval...Battling with a...
In a paper consisting of 7 pages social class as it is represented in the intellectualism of Tom Stoppard's Arcadia and the femini...
her day and age, women were of two types, generally speaking: bad and good. The good were set upon pedestals and were seen as the ...
This paper examines the works and life of Wollstonecraft in terms of her impact on women's suffrage and the women's rights movemen...
is basically no place for an intellectual woman within the university environment. On a visit to a university, Woolf is told she i...
them to this necessity. Wollstonecraft attacks each one of Rousseaus principles, showing them to be illogical, inconsistent and ul...
In five pages this essay considers feminism and how the life of Mary Wollstonecraft shaped her women's rights activism. There are...
which you are now for the first time entering?"(Woolf). And, even in the modern era, most women still find this to be a certainty,...
Virginia Woolf's 1928 novel is the focus of attention here. Gender is discussed in this context. Woolf seems to claim that gende...
This paper examines Virginia Woolf's feminist ideology in her various novels and essays. The author contends that Woolf believed ...
however, the lives of the fictional Frankenstein and the author of the book had many similarities. Both were treated as objects r...
speaks of the position of women in society, elements of a womans life that can often lead to a position where she is seen as littl...
She further notes, for example, how "The sensualist, indeed, has been the most dangerous of tyrants, and women have been duped by ...
are locked out of the creative heart of society is addressed quite literally by Woolf in her first chapter. The narrator is medita...
In five pages this paper examines the characters in this Virginia Woolf novel in terms of how they reflect changing social moods o...
In five pages this paper examines the Romantic Age and considers the writings of female authors Mary Wollstonecraft, Ann Radcliffe...
This paper consisting of six pages analyzes early Virginia's demographic and economic development as it is depicted in American Sl...
In sixteen pages this paper discusses how duality and death are represented in the characterizations of Septimus Smith and Clariss...
In six pages this paper examines 20th century modernist literature in a consideration of such concepts as impressionism, postmoder...
In 5 page this paper defines modernism and then critically applies the concept to T.S. Eliot's 'The Waste Land,' and 'Tradition an...
on love, but rather an arrangement. This book sheds light on the cruelty of arranged marriages, but things get worse. It is not me...
increased recognition and familiarity for the strangeness to be lost....
be possible to establish what is absolute truth, and that the only way in which she can proceed with her exploration into women an...
In five pages this tutorial essay considers Virginia Woolf's use of stream of consciousness in Mrs. Dalloway, T.S. Eliot's free ve...
reader is not really sure about the couple until at one point the reader learns that the woman died "hundreds of years ago" and th...
that she is a woman, and the narrator states, "it may have been observed that Orlando hid her manuscripts when interrupted. Next, ...
been quoted as saying, "Probably nothing we had as children was quite so important to us as our summers in Cornwall...to hear the ...