The English novel was not invented by men. Neither was the Indian one. A look at how literary history keeps quietly erasing the women who got there first.
The Yorkshire Post: Malachi Whitaker: The often overlooked Yorkshire writer who 'fills a gap in English literary history'
Malachi Whitaker: The often overlooked Yorkshire writer who 'fills a gap in English literary history'
A HISTORY of English literature 1 in several large volumes, published under the auspices, and bearing the name, of Cambridge University, and edited in chief by the master of one of its oldest colleges ...
CU Boulder News & Events: ENGL 2504: British Literary History After 1660 (Spring 2020)
Marc Bousquet, an English Professor at Emory University, lit a powder keg with his 2014 Chronicle of Higher Education jeremiad, “The Moral Panic in Literary Studies.” Bousquet warned: “Combined with ...
Times Now on MSN: How literary history keeps erasing women who got there first
Explore our campus, meet lecturers and current students, and learn more about what it's like to study at Manchester. Ranked sixth in the UK for English language and literature by the QS World ...
This inaugural volume of the new ELN takes on the so-called Religious Turn over the last decade in the study of literary history. As Stanley Fish remarked in a widely-cited piece published early in ...
The American Spectator: The Road Well Traveled: Exploring the History of Literary Journeys
John McMurtrie introduces Literary Journeys: Mapping Fictional Travels Across The World of Literature with the famous Robert Frost quote: “Two roads diverged in a wood, and I— I took the road less ...