Hi I'm looking for Feminist Short Stories from different cultures. Can you please help me to find them.
Thank you very much in advance.![]()
Hi I'm looking for Feminist Short Stories from different cultures. Can you please help me to find them.
Thank you very much in advance.![]()
Angela Carter's short story collection The Bloody Chamber gives a female perspective on well known fables, fairy tales and stories such as Dracula, Little Red Riding Hood, Beauty and the Beast and the like. It's an excellent read too![]()
Want to know what I think about books? Check out https://biisbooks.wordpress.com/
Wow thank you for the information
The Yellow Wallpaper is a 19th century longish short story about a woman with post-depression who is locked up and slowly starts to go mad.
Uncles by Margaret Atwood takes on a fairly modern feminist viewpoint. I think it's set in Canada or atleast in a similar country. It follows the story of a women being promoted through the workplace. Her relationships with men illustrate gender roles in a nice typically Atwood fashion. And by that I mean she besmirches our fine masculinity by creating male characters that act villainously. I read it in a collection of short stories she wrote called Wilderness Tips. A pretty strange book. Anyway, I think in Uncles, Atwood represents her take on feminism in an entertaining way.
George Sand's novella "Marianne." Like George Elliot, a woman author. What did these two see in the name George?
Without doubt, you need to familiarise yourself with the work of the 19th century female writer George Egerton. I focused on some of her short stories for my BA dissertation- Fascinating!
You could also try Simone de Beauvoir's The Woman Destroyed. It is a novel, but consists of three separate short stories. Definitely a feminist work, and very moving (and French!).
Want to know what I think about books? Check out https://biisbooks.wordpress.com/
Tillie Olsen's "I Stand Here Ironing" delineates the struggle of an American mother during the 1950s, might be of interest!
If the fool would persist in his folly he would become wise.
-W.Blake