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- Digital Price: $12.00 USD (All sales final)
- Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature
- The University of Tulsa
- Article
- Writing and Traveling in Colonial Algeria after Isabelle Eberhardt: Henriette Celarié’s French (Cross) Dressing Volume 36, Number 1, Spring 2017, pp. 75-98
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $26.00 USD.
This issue contains 23 articles in total
- Books Received
- The Future of Silence: Fiction by Korean Women trans. by Bruce and Ju-Chan Fulton (review)
- The Complete Stories by Clarice Lispector (review)
- Algerian Imprints: Ethical Space in the Work of Assia Djebar and Hélène Cixous by Brigitte Weltman-Aron (review)
- Of Women Borne: A Literary Ethics of Suffering by Cynthia R. Wallace (review)
- Words of Witness: Black Women’s Autobiography in the Post-Brown Era by Angela A. Ards, and: Bridges to Memory: Postmemory in Contemporary Ethnic American Women’s Fiction by Maria Rice Bellamy (review)
- Lydia Ginzburg’s Prose: Reality in Search of Literature by Emily Van Buskirk (review)
- Opening Acts: Narrative Beginnings in Twentieth-Century Feminist Fiction by Catherine Romagnolo (review)
- Mamas of Dada: Women of the European Avant-Garde by Paula K. Kamenish (review)
- Westerns: A Women’s History by Victoria Lamont (review)
- Vision in the Novels of George Sand by Manon Mathias (review)
- Baptist Women’s Writings in Revolutionary Culture, 1640-1680 by Rachel Adcock (review)
- Hands That War I. In The Midlands
- “Hands That War: In the Midlands”: Rebecca West’s Rediscovered Article on First World War Munitions Workers
- Profile of Eleanor Early: Negotiating Women’s Popular Writing in the Mid-Twentieth Century
- Toward a New Poetics of Witness: Juliana Spahr’s This Connection of Everyone with Lungs
- Native American Literature and L’Écriture Féminine: The Case of Louise Erdrich
- Repetition and Embodiment: Performative Reading in Kathy Acker’s The Childlike Life of the Black Tarantula by the Black Tarantula
- Modernism, Egyptian Nationalism, and “other disorders of a revolutionary character”: H. D., Bryher, and Tutankhamun
- Writing and Traveling in Colonial Algeria after Isabelle Eberhardt: Henriette Celarié’s French (Cross) Dressing
- “Too recent to be innocuous”: An Interwar View of Women’s Suffrage in Edith Ayrton Zangwill’s The Call
- “These Gentlemens ill Treatment of our Mother Tongue”: Female Grammarians and the Power of the Vernacular
- From the Editor: TSWL and the REF
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