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NOTES

            129. P.Bourdieu, Distinction: a social critique of the judgement of taste, tr. R.Nice
               (London, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1984), p. 495.


                                    Chapter 5

             1. cf. M.Maclean, Revolution and exclusion: the other voice, in Discourse and
               difference: post-structuralism, feminism and the moment of history, eds.
               A.Milner & C.Worth (Melbourne, Centre for General and Comparative
               Literature, 1990); M.Wollstonecraft, A vindication of the rights of women
               (New York, Norton, 1975).
             2. cf. J.S.Mill and H.Taylor Mill, Essays on sex equality (Chicago, University of
               Chicago Press, 1970).
             3. J.Hole and E.Levine, The first feminists, in Notes from the third year: women’s
               liberation, eds. A.Koedt & S.Firestone (New York, Notes from the Second Year
               Inc., 1971), p. 10.
             4. G.Greer, The female eunuch (London, MacGibbon & Kee, 1971).
             5. cf. V.Woolf,  A room of one’s own (St Albans, Panther, 1977); N.T.Bazin,
               Virginia Woolf and androgynous vision (New Brunswick, Rutgers University
               Press, 1973).
             6. V.Woolf, Women and writing (London, Women’s Press, 1979), p. 191.
             7. cf. S.M.Gilbert & S.Gubar, No man’s land: the place of the woman writer in
               the twentieth century, vol. 1: the war of the words (New Haven, Yale University
               Press, 1988).
             8. S.de Beauvoir, The second sex, tr. H.M.Parshley (Harmondsworth, Penguin,
               1972), p. 29.
             9. Ibid., p. 21.
             10. S.de Beauvoir, From an interview, tr. H.Eustis, in New french feminisms: an
               anthology, eds. E.Marks & I.de Courtivron (Brighton, Harvester, 1981), pp.
               142–3, 150.
             11. M.Barrett, Women’s oppression today: problems in Marxist feminist analysis
               (London, Verso, 1980), p. 84.
             12. E.Showalter, A criticism of our own: autonomy and assimilation in Afro-
               American and feminist literary theory,  The future of literary theory, ed.
               R.Cohen (London, Routledge, 1989), p. 366; K.K.Ruthven, Feminist literary
               studies: an introduction (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1984), ch. 2.
             13. cf. M.Stone, The paradise papers: the suppression of women’s rites (London,
               Virago, 1979).
             14. E.Showalter, Feminist criticism in the wilderness, in The new feminist criticism:
               essays on women, literature, and theory, ed. E.Showalter (New York, Pantheon
               Books, 1985), p. 249.
             15. K.Millett, Sexual politics (London, Virago, 1977), ch. 4.
             16. Ibid., p. 233.
             17. Ibid., p. 238.
             18. cf. A.Dworkin, Woman hating (New York, Dutton, 1974).
             19. Showalter, Feminist criticism in the wilderness, p. 128.
             20. E.Showalter, A literature of their own: British women novelists from Brontë to
               Lessing (London, Virago, 1978), p. 319.
             21. E.Moers, Literary women (London, Women’s Press, 1978), p. 67.
             22. Showalter, Feminist criticism in the wilderness, p. 260.



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