Monday 8 June 2015

New book publication: Influence and Inheritance in Feminist English Studies

Influence and Inheritance in Feminist English Studies, edited by Emily J. Hogg and Clara Jones (Palgrave, 2015) 

Including essays on Virginia Woolf and inherited wealth, Roger Scruton's anti-feminism and Slut Walk and the politics of flippancy, this collection offers a snapshot view of the diverse feminist research being conducted in English studies today and locates this work in the context of the rich, complex and extensive history of feminist literary criticism. Despite the current, very exciting, popular resurgence of interest in feminism, there have been relatively few attempts to reconsider the range and depth of the feminist scholarship produced in the discipline of English studies, particularly from the 1970s onwards. Through six distinct, individual pieces of rigorous and innovative new work, this collection provides a specific focus on the contemporary influence of the substantial inheritance of feminist literary criticism and considers the dynamics of intellectual inheritance within a feminist literary tradition. 

For more information, click here. 

Table of contents:

Introduction 

1. Marion Shaw – 'Old Feminism, New Feminism' 
2. Clara Jones – 'Virginia Woolf's A Room of One's Own and the Problem of Inherited Wealth' 
3. Lydia Fellgett – 'Amazons and Afterwards: Correspondence as Feminist Practice'
4. Emily J. Hogg – 'Progress and Feminist Literary Criticism: The 'New Eras' of Nadine Gordimer' 
5. Prudence Chamberlain 'The Inheritance of Irony and Development of Flippancy'
6. Niall Gildea – 'Roger Scruton's Daughters: Feminism and Parasitism in the Idea of a University'