ArticleParallelism Between Women, Nature, and Features of Their Oppression in Selected Novels: An Ecofeminist Study
ArticleParallelism Between Women, Nature, and Features of Their Oppression in Selected Novels: An Ecofeminist Study
Article“The Genie Must Remain in the Bottle”: Locating the Tradition of “True” Womanhood in Colonial and Early National American Fiction
Article“The Genie Must Remain in the Bottle”: Locating the Tradition of “True” Womanhood in Colonial and Early National American Fiction
ArticleThe Myth of Gender Essentialism in Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth and Henry James's Daisy Miller
ArticleThe Myth of Gender Essentialism in Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth and Henry James's Daisy Miller
ArticleDealing with Feminism, according to Virginia Woolf and Elain Showalter: concerning the poetry of Emily Dickinson and Fadwa Tawqan.
ArticleDealing with Feminism, according to Virginia Woolf and Elain Showalter: concerning the poetry of Emily Dickinson and Fadwa Tawqan.
ArticleThe Conceptualization of Rape in Modern English Novels: Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, and Naomi Alderman's The Power
ArticleThe Conceptualization of Rape in Modern English Novels: Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, and Naomi Alderman's The Power
ArticleNarrative Representation of War Diaspora in selected works by male and female Ethnic American writers: A Gynocritical Study
ArticleNarrative Representation of War Diaspora in selected works by male and female Ethnic American writers: A Gynocritical Study
ArticleReturning to Mother Nature as Manifest in Edith Nesbit’s The Railway Children and Elizabeth Enright’s Gone-Away Lake
ArticleReturning to Mother Nature as Manifest in Edith Nesbit’s The Railway Children and Elizabeth Enright’s Gone-Away Lake