The conflict between woman’s desire for autonomy and her internalization of society’s conservative values in May Sinclair’s The Three Sisters
The conflict between woman’s desire for autonomy and her internalization of society’s conservative values in May Sinclair’s The Three Sisters To be a woman in the Edwardian age, was to live a double life, one that was alternately Victorian and modern, repressive and liberating, traditional and rad...
Main Author: | Brygida Pudełko |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | deu |
Published: |
Pomeranian University Publishing House
2018-10-01
|
Series: | Polilog: Studia Neofilologiczne |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://polilog.pl/index.php/polilog/article/view/46 |
Similar Items
-
The suffragette movement in H.G. Wells’s Ann Veronica and May Sinclair’s The Tree of Heaven
by: Brygida Pudełko
Published: (2016-11-01) -
Sinclair spectrum : pocket guide /
by: 328908 Vickers, Steven
Published: (1984) -
May Sinclair’s Literary Criticism: A Commitment to Modernity
by: Isabelle BRASME
Published: (2018-06-01) -
The Alien in Greenwich - Iain Sinclair & the Millennium Dome
by: Nicoletta Vallorani
Published: (2009-12-01) -
« I was the only one of the family who wasn't quite sane » : être femme, épouse, mère et artiste dans The Creators (1910) de May Sinclair
by: Leslie de Bont
Published: (2014-06-01)