
- A
Celebration of Women Writers
- Links to information
and some online texts from a variety of sources. Some of the authors have
homepages. A selection of collections and bibliographies at the bottom of
this very long page.
- African
American Women Writers the 19th Century (NYPL Digital Schomburg)
- Full texts, facsimiles
of some pages and images. "The texts in the collection include essays, works
of fiction and poetry, and autobiography and biography--among them, Anna
Julia Cooper's A Voice from the South; Phillis Wheatley's Poems on Various
Subjects, Religious and Moral; and Harriet Jacobs' Incidents in the Life
of a Slave Girl. The materials are drawn primarily from The New York Public
Library's Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, one of the world's
leading research facilities devoted to the preservation of materials on
the global African and African diasporan experiences."
- Alice
Walker
- Anniina's Alice Walker
Page features a biographical sketch, links to interviews, bibliographies,
"Poetry, Short Stories, and Excerpts," "Essays, Articles, and Criticism"
and more. See also: Lit
Chat, Salon Magazine and Alice
Walker, "Roselily", Censorship & the Religious Right
- Anais
Nin
- Of primary interest
here are a few academic essays and a page devoted to personal recollections
by people who knew Nin. A fairly extensive set of links to books by and
about Nin as well as related topics and people.
- Ana
Castillo -- anacastillo.com
- This site by and about poet,
essayist and novelist Ana Castillo provides a rich sampling of her poetry,
excerpts from her latest novel Peel My Love Like an Onion, a bibliography,
a biography and much more. "Ana de Web" links to many articles
about and some by Castillo in Web publications like Salon, LatinoLink,
etc.
- Aphra
Behn Page
- "Aphra Behn, the first
professional woman writer in English, lived from 1640 to 1689. After John
Dryden, she was the most prolific dramatist of the Restoration, but it is
for her pioneering work in prose narrative that she achieved her place in
literary history."
- Ariadne
(German language site)
- A service by Helga
Hofmann-Weinberger and Christa Wille of the Austrian national library which
offers a Database, a NewsLetter, Bibliographies, Historical magazines (until
1918) , Historical magazines (1918 to 1934), and links to other Internet
resources.
- Audre
Lorde
- The Modern American Poetry set of pages devoted to Lorde's biography,
articles about her work and links to other sites. See Also: A
Tribute to Audre Lorde and a bibliography
as well as the PBS documentary
A Litany for Survival.
- Bluestocking
Archive (La Belle Assemblée: Romanticism, Bluestockings
and the Virtual Salon)
- "This archive assumes
a deep relation between the intellectual and social movement of the Bluestockings,
the culture and cult of Sensibility and High Romanticism. It is an archive
of texts by or relating to the eighteenth-century British Bluestocking Circle
and the second generation Blues, including predecessor texts, and literature
of sensibility as it is derived from the Bluestockings' concerns with aesthetics,
and with women's aesthetic achievements." --Elizabeth Fay, Associate Professor
of English at The University of Massachusetts, Boston.
- Bonnie
Proudfoot reads a few of her favorite poems
Part
of the Poetry Online from Wired for Books site. Click Realplayer button
to download free player.
- The
Book of Margery Kempe
- Edited by Lynn Staley.
An excellent introduction
and the full
text is available via The Consortium for the
Teaching of the Middle Ages (TEAMS ) Texts Online Project. "Written probably
in the late 1430s, The Book of Margery Kempe is one of the most astonishing
documents of late medieval English life. Its protagonist, who represents
herself as its ultimate author, was not simply a woman but a woman thoroughly
rooted in the world." See also:
Margery Kempe
- British
Women Romantic Poets, 1789-1832
- An Electronic Collection
from the Shields Library, University of California, Davis. "The goal of
this project is the design and development of highly accurate and reliable
electronic editions of works published by British women poets between 1789
and 1832." Note
to U. Iowa users: The Information Arcade in the Library has software that
will allow you to read and search the SGML texts included here.
- The
Brontë Sisters
- Cecilia Falk, a Swedish/English
translator of literature, put together this collection of images, bibliographies,
biographical sketches and links to other pages on Charlotte, Emily and Anne
Brontë.
- Brown
University Women Writers Project
- An electronic textbase
of women's writing in English before 1830. "The WWP provides access to texts
that would not ordinarily be available for study. Anyone may order drafts-in-process
of almost 200 texts which are printed directly from our textbase."
- Charlotte
Perkins Gilman's "Cupid in the Kitchen"
- The Rhetorical Situation
of "Cupid in the Kitchen:" Topicality in the 1890's and the 1990's by Alan
Taylor, U. of Texas at Arlington, 1993. " Gilman's vision is revolutionary,
and in some respects, prophetic. She proposes that the domestic chores of
cleaning and nutrition be professionalized."
- Chicana
Feminist Homepage - Making Face, Making Soul
- See especially "Suggested
reading in Chicana/o
literature," "Chicana/o poetry on the 'Net."
and "Other links to Chicana/o and Latina/o literature." Created by Susana
Gallardo, a doctoral candidate in the department of Religious Studies at
Stanford University. A deserving winner of the "Lycos Top 5% of the Web"
award.
- Chick-Lit:
Postfeminist Fiction
- "Reviewers ask, what
is chick-lit? What is postfeminist fiction? They are annoyed when the editors
of this new anthology, Cris Mazza and Jeffrey DeShell, fail to answer those
questions adequately (or obviously) in their separate introductions. But
if we are capable of reading the book, aren't we capable of figuring out
what its titles and introductions might mean?"
- Chitra
Banerjee Divakaruni
- A biographical sketch
with links to other resources by Nilu N. Patel, Emory University for their
Postcolonial
Studies site
- Daughters of Fire
- Children’s Author Fran Manushkin in Conversation with Kathleen O’Grady (2001). Daughters of Fire is
a collection of ten illustrated stories based on central female figures in the Hebrew Bible.
O’Grady is a Research Associate at the Simone de Beauvoir Institute, Concordia University, Montreal.
- Domestic
Goddesses (a.k.a. Scribbling Women)
- A moderated E-journal,
devoted to women writers, beginning in the 19th century, who wrote "domestic
fiction."
- Doris
Lessing: A Retrospective
- A well done tribute
to Lessing with a gallery of portraits that begin in 1950, interviews with
the writer, a biographical sketch and a bibliography. Her books are also
described and cross-referenced by several classifications. News on the upcoming
Opera by Philip Glass and Lessing due to premiere in May, 1997. Also, if
you have the free plug-in RealAudio installed, you can listen to this short
excerpt of Lessing giving a Massey Lecture
for the Canadian Broadcast System - later published in its entirety as Prisons
We Choose To Live Inside.
- Emily
Dickinson
- This is primarily
a page of links to other sites -- a large page of many links -- created
by Paul E. Black and kept up to date by Kris Selander.
- Emily
Dickinson read by Laura Lee Parrotti
Part of the Poetry Online from Wired for Books site -- over 40 poems you
can listen to. You will need realplayer to hear the readings. Click the
button to download.
- Emory
Women Writers Resource Project
- "The Emory Women Writers
Resource Project is a collection of edited and unedited texts by women writing
in English from the seventeenth century through the nineteenth century."
- Exoticize
My Fist (Asian-American Feminist Resources)
- "I should explain
why I --an already burdened feminist graduate student with multiple 'zines,
articles, and other media projects in both development & production--
felt inordinately compelled to pick up the gauntlet and tackle this Xenian
task (yes, I am a rabid Xena fan): I got annoyed. That is, I got exceedingly
irritated trying to find rad Asian/American women's work on the web and
figured everybody else must be sick of it too." See especially "Articles
and Essays," "Academics," and "Bibliographies."
- Feminist
Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Utopia
- Biographies, bibliographies,
non-print media, Internet links, scholars directory. Moving soon. If the
link above does not work try http://feministsf.org
- Gabriela
Mistral
- A brief biography
at a prestigious site, the Nobel (Prize) Foundation. You will also find
the text of her speech at the Nobel Banquet, 1945.Another, slightly longer
biography at the Books & Writers
site. Two
poems can be found here and several selections
from Desolation here (student translations
by Lucy Lim ). See also: Selected
Poems translated by Ursula K. Le Guin. Otherwise
there is very little available in English.
- Gloria Anzaldúa
- Co-editor with Cherrie Moraga of This Bridge Called My Back, one
of the most used books in women's studies classes and author of another
classic, La Frontera/Borderlands was widely known as an important
cultural theorist. She died of complications related to diabetes in 2004.
See Also Voices
From the Gaps entry.
- H.D.
(Hilda Doolittle)
- "These pages are written
and maintained as a volunteer effort by Heather Hawkins, Cataloging Librarian
at the University of San Francisco Law Library by day and H.D. fan by night."
Biography, bibliographic lists, links to resources, reviews, links to archive
holdings, information and links to resources about H.D.'s friends and associates.
Also: The
Pink Month: Hilda Doolittle
- Isle
of Lesbos: Lesbian Poetry
- Alexandria North,
"created this site to honor the works of those poets who, over the ages,
have written eloquently about romantic love between women."
- Jamaica
Kincaid
- A biographical sketch
with links to other resources by Vanessa Pupello, Emory University for their
Postcolonial
Studies site. See also: Salon
Magazine interview. and an interview in Mother
Jones Magazine.
- Jewish
Women's Resources (Bibliography)
- Compiled by Tsiporah
Wexler-Pashkoff. Mostly unannotated. Categories: General, Liturgy, Synagogue
and Worship, Holidays, Life Cycle, Biblical and Talmudic Women, Post-Talmudic
and Modern Women, History, Holocaust, Fiction, Bibliographies and Course
Guides, and Web Sites
- Joy Harjo
- A graduate of the Univ. of Iowa Writer's Workshop,and best known perhaps
for her poetry, Harjo is an artistic polymath. This is her own official
site where you can download a sample MP3 track from her new CD and a video
clip of Eagle Song or follow her thoughts on her Web Log.
- Joyce
Carol Oates
- A dedicated and glowing
effort by Randy Souther, a Reference Librarian at the University of San
Francisco. Some of the more unusual features include a gallery of book-jacket
portraits, Oates on various writers and others, and sound files of Oates
reading, along with a rich collection of bibliographies, excerpts, full
texts, reviews and more.
- Kate
Chopin as Feminist: Subverting the French Androcentric Influence
- "Chopin's uniqueness
as a woman writer, at its best, speaks out well beyond the French influence
and it is a voice which is strikingly female. The French male form and style
she adopts from Maupassant are adapted to suit her own purpose, to explore
a position unique to woman. She exerts literary individuality and originality
and, ultimately, speaks in a truly feminist voice." --Jane Le Marquand Massey
University Palmerston North, New Zealand originally published in Deep
South v.2. n.3. (Spring 1996).
- Leslie
Marmon Silko
- This work-in-progress
endeavors to provide links to all relevant information regarding Leslie
Marmon Silko available on the WWW. Bibliography, interview, online essays
& poetry, book reviews ...
- Louise Erdrich
- This site provided by her publisher HarperCollins naturally presents
all of her books for sale but there is a lot more here -- reading guides,
interviews, and biographic information. Also see the Louise Erdrich page
on the Voices
From the Gaps site at the Univ. of Minnesota.
- Literary
Resources -- Feminism and Women's Literature
- Part of the Literary
Resources collection maintained by Jack Lynch, this page is devoted to sites
specifically on women's literature and feminist criticism.
- Ntozake
Shange
- This set of pages
by Jody F. Kerr includes a bio, bibliography, criticisms, and world wide
web links.
- Octavia
Butler
- A page from the Voices
From the Gaps web site at the University of Minnesotta featuring a photo,
biographical and bibliographic information on the multiple Hugo and Nebula
prize-winning science fiction author.
- Paula Gunn Allen
- Emeritus professor of English at UCLA, winner of an American Book Award
for Spider Woman's Granddaughters. prolific writer and cousin
to Leslie Marmon Silko. This page on the Storytellers site is chock full
of links to resources.
- Paris
Press
- "Paris Press publishes
fine feminist literary work in all genres from the experimental and politically
radical to work by worthy yet neglected writers." This page features their
publications with extended book jacket text. Muriel Rukeyser, Ruth Stone
and Jan Freeman are among the authors.
- Rita
Dove: Lady Freedom Among Us
- Both text and audio
versions of this poem, published as a special edition of one hundred by
Janus Press. Images and movies of the book are also online here.
- Sapphic
Ink
- A lesbian literary
journal devoted to bringing quality lesbian writing to a broader audience
via the World Wide Web.
- South
Asian Women's Network - Books by and for South Asian Women
- Books, Magazines,
Cookbooks, bibliographies, biographical sketches and photos of writers mostly
from India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka but also includes Bangladesh, Bhutan,
Burma, Nepal and Malayasia. Part of the larger SAWNet
site.
- Spinsters
Ink
- A feminist publishing
house: "We are committed to publishing works by women writing from the periphery:
fat women, Jewish women, lesbians, old women, poor women, rural women, women
examining classism, women of color, women with disabilities, women who are
writing books that help make the best in our lives more possible."
- Third
World Women Bibliography/Webliography: Literature
- A page from a much
larger site by Anacaona Makandal, this page is mostly bibliography with
only a few webliography entries.
- Toni
Morrison
- This site by Jody
F. Kerr contains a short biography, a bibliography of Morrison's works and
what appears to be the results of a MLA or other database search for critical
writing about Morrison, and finally, a page of links to other Toni Morrison
Web sites.
- Ursula K. Le Guin
- Le Guin's richly loaded "official" site which was designed
by a science fiction compatriot, Vonda
N. McIntyre.
- Victorian
Women Writers Project
- "The goal of the Victorian
Women Writers Project is to produce highly accurate, SGML-encoded transcriptions
of literary works by British women writers in the late Victorian period."
- Voices
from the Gaps: Women Writers of Color
- The University of
Minnesota offers a growing source of information on women writers of color
in the US. Includes biographical and bibliographic information, annotated
lists of Internet resources relating to each writer, and, when available,
images and audio files. Writers can be browsed by name, birthplace, racial
or ethnic background, and significant historical dates.
- Vonda N. McIntyre
- Nebula and Hugo award winner McIntyre presents her own bibliography,
biography and collections of essays, reviews and interviews
- White Teeth: A Conversation with Author Zadie Smith
- An interview with Zadie Smith, well-known British-Jamaican
author by Kathleen O'Grady, Research Associate, Simone de Beauvoir Institute, Concordia (Montreal). Originally Published in Atlantis: A Women’s Studies Journal, Vol. 27.1 (Fall 2002): 105-111.
- Women
and Literature
- Not the whole canon
by any means, but a good start on some of the top women writers.
- Women's
Poetry from World War I
- "Many of these poems
are the products of direct experience of the processes of war -- making
weapons, nursing the wounded, the loss of brothers, sons, or lovers in the
trenches -- by women on active service in the battle areas as well as by
women involved in the war effort at home." Five selections from a larger
British site devoted to text analysis and the analysis of WWI poetry.
- Zora
Neale Hurston
- This substantive site
features texts, photos, bibliography, chronology, essays and links to other
Zora web pages, the Harlem Renaissance and related authors. Also: Conjured
into Being
An essay on Their Eyes Were Watching God by Rita Hooks.